Ivory Coast unrest
Last reviewed: 06-11-2008
DIVIDED COUNTRY INCHES TOWARDS PEACE

A member of the Young Patriots movement, a militant youth group loyal to Ivory Coast's president, in Abidjan, March 2005.
REUTERS/Thierry Gouegnon
REUTERS/Thierry Gouegnon
COCOA BOOM YEARS

A worker holds cocoa beans in an Abidjan warehouse, November 2002.
REUTERS/Luc Gnago
REUTERS/Luc Gnago
POWER STRUGGLE
The ensuing power struggle after Houphouet-Boigny's death in 1993 exposed deep divisions between the north and south along ethnic, political and religious lines. It culminated in a 1999 coup overthrowing Houphouet-Boigny's successor, Henri Konan Bedie. "The coup sent an already deteriorating situation completely off the tracks. And since then there has been a gradual process of ethnic cleansing taking place," explained Mike McGovern, West Africa Project Director for the Belgian-based think tank International Crisis Group. Immigrants and their descendants, as well as people from northern Ivory Coast, were targeted in sporadic massacres and gradually forced away from their cocoa plantations. These were then taken over by people claiming to be natives of the southwest. The leader of the 1999 coup, General Robert Guei, introduced a new constitution barring people from running for president unless both parents were Ivorian. This was used to exclude his main rival, Alassane Ouattara, a former prime minister and a Muslim from the north whose mother was from Burkina Faso. Despite these efforts, Guei lost the 2000 elections to the current president, Laurent Gbagbo, a Christian from the south and leader of the Ivorian Popular Front (FPI). The 2001 municipal elections marked a turning point in the political power struggle, as all political parties were allowed to stand. Once Ouattara's Rally of the Republicans (RDR) party had won the largest number of communes in the vote, Gbagbo began to pursue a policy of reconciliation, culminating in a January 2002 summit at which Bedie, Guei, Gbagbo and Ouattara agreed to form a new government of national unity and set up a body to address questions over land ownership, especially acute in the southwest. The new government was formed in August 2002. The controversial issue of Ouattara's nationality was resolved and he was given a nationality certificate.
A COUNTRY DIVIDED
An unsuccessful coup attempt in September 2002 put an early end to the unity government. The coup failed but the accompanying violence escalated into a full-scale rebellion that split the country in two. Rebels seized the north of the country and the south remained under the control of Gbagbo's government. Guei was killed in the unrest. Amid rumours that the coup was supported by foreign agents, thousands of migrant workers and refugees were targeted by security forces. According to the United Nations, 20,000 people - mostly foreign workers - were displaced from Abidjan, the commercial capital.
PEACE TALKS

Rebels patrol in the western region of Danane, May 2003.
REUTERS/Luc Gnago
REUTERS/Luc Gnago
THE HUMANITARIAN PICTURE
The primary challenge for humanitarian agencies since 2002 has been reaching people in need. The poor state of roads and bridges has made access difficult and security has been a major problem. It's preventing some 709,000 displaced people from returning home, especially in the west, according to the U.N. refugee agency, UNHCR. Most uprooted people - 90 percent - live in communities who've taken them in, but after years of economic crisis and insecurity many host families can no longer cope, according to the Internal Displacement Monitoring Centre (IDMC). It says thousands of displaced people live in deplorable conditions in shanty towns around the commercial capital Abidjan. More than 20,000 Ivorians were still refugees in other countries in mid-2008, UNHCR said. The United Nations says displaced people are particularly vulnerable to murder, rape and other forms of violence and sexual exploitation in the climate of lawlessness and impunity. Pro-government militia groups have wrought havoc on the civilian population. Some began disarming in mid-2007, but they're still feared in western villages, where people blame them for murders, violence, stealing and attacks on cocoa-carrying trucks. The local population argues that disarming the militias is paramount, and fears they will disrupt elections if left unchecked. The United Nations says the large number of illegal light weapons and small arms is partly to blame for the climate of violence and persistent state of insecurity across the country. An amnesty declared in April 2007 for crimes committed by soldiers and civilians against the state has also been widely welcomed as a boost to the peace deal, but aid workers in the field report that there are still outbreaks of localised violence, often over land disputes. Most government staff - including medical workers and teachers - fled the north during the 2002 clashes. Health, education, water and sewage services collapsed in the areas controlled by the New Forces rebel group, which covered about 60 percent of the country.
RESTORING HEALTH CARE
Most health centres are now open in the north and west of the country, and the two sides have been working to pick up the pieces at hospitals and clinics that were abandoned, looted or destroyed. Medical supplies are flowing again, after drying up during the conflict, and in 2005 the Ministry of Health organised a country-wide measles and polio vaccination programme. MSF Holland says that in the west there are high levels of malaria, malnutrition and other diseases, and an "alarmingly high number" of sexually transmitted diseases, with the infection rate rising to 20 percent of adults attending its clinics. The conflict made it virtually impossible to compile country-wide health statistics, but the Joint U.N. Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS) says Ivory Coast has one of the highest HIV prevalence rates in West Africa, with almost 4 per cent of adults living with the virus in 2007, according to its 2008 report. The country's economic collapse, continued insecurity and a large influx of national and international soldiers mean that an increasing number of women are offering sex in exchange for food, protection or money. Poor water supply is another major concern, with acute water shortages in the north and poor quality water in urban areas. More than half the population does not have proper sewage systems, putting them at risk of diarrhoea, cholera, typhoid fever, dysentery, measles and poliomyelitis.
SUFFERING CHILDREN
More than a million children, most of them girls, missed out on school when education collapsed in the north after government staff fled in 2002 and school supplies became scarce, according to the U.N. Children's Fund, UNICEF. By 2006, thousands were back in class and sitting exams. Government forces, pro-government militia and rebel groups all recruited children, including Liberian refugees, to fight during the war. The Coalition to Stop the Use of Child Soldiers says many were sent to the frontline, and girls have been used as sex slaves. There's no way of pinning down exact numbers, but aid agency Save the Children estimates there were 8,000 child soldiers at the height of the conflict. Although some of the children have been gradually re-integrated into their communities, continuing instability means that armed groups are reluctant to dispense with their child armies. In 2006, UNICEF put the numbers of child soldiers at 5,000, and warned that other children ran the risk of re-recruitment in the absence of lasting peace.
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