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Thursday 28 April 2011

Ivory Coast renegate warlord Ibrahim Coulibaly killed

Ibrahim Coulibaly (file image from 19 April 2011) Mr Coulibaly and his men had refused to obey an order to disarm

An Ivory Coast militia leader has been killed by forces of the country's new President Alassane Ouattara.

The leader of the so-called Invisible Commandos, Ibrahim Coulibaly, was killed in an offensive on Wednesday, a defence ministry spokesman said.

The Commandos had helped Mr Ouattara gain control of parts of Abidjan during a post-poll dispute.

But they had since fallen out and their respective forces clashed on Wednesday in the city, Ivory Coast's largest.

"I can confirm that Ibrahim Coulibaly was killed during fighting today," defence ministry spokesman Capt Alla Kouakou Leon told Reuters.

A comander of the defence ministry's fighters said they had found Mr Coulibaly's body when they seized his headquarters.

Order to disarm

Mr Coulibaly, who had said he wanted recognition for his role in overthrowing former President Laurent Gbagbo, had sought an audience with Mr Ouattara. But he refused a presidential order to disarm beforehand.

Government forces launched an offensive in Abidjan's northern Abobo district to dislodge Mr Coulibaly's forces.

Ivorian turmoil

  • 28 Nov 2010: Incumbent Laurent Gbagbo and challenger Alassane Ouattara in election run-off
  • 2 Dec: Electoral commission announces that Ouattara won 54% of vote
  • 3 Dec: Constitutional Council declaring Gbagbo the winner; UN says Ouattara was victor
  • 30 Mar 2011: Pro-Ouattara forces enter the capital, Yamoussoukro
  • 4 Apr: UN launches air strikes on Gbagbo in main city, Abidjan
  • 11 Apr: Gbagbo seized from his official residence

Mr Kouakou added that two government troops and six fighters loyal to Mr Coulibaly men were also killed during the raid, which took place in a poor neighbourhood in the district.

His fighters had begun battling the troops of Mr Gbagbo in February, after they fired mortar shells and rockets into Abobo.

Mr Gbagbo was captured two weeks ago by pro-Ouattara forces after he refused to step down following his defeat in last November's presidential elections.

The former president and his wife Simone have been put under house arrest in separate towns in the north of the country.

Thousands are believed to have been killed and wounded during the recent crisis.

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