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UN lauds Jonathan over Cote d’Ivoire intervention

Posted on 06 June, 2011 Back to news home

 

 

 

UN lauds Jonathan over Cote d’Ivoire intervention

 

A Special Representative of the UN Secretary-General in Cote d’Ivoire, Young-jin Choi, has praised Nigeria’s President Goodluck Jonathan for his early intervention in the Ivorian crisis which he said, provided a guide for the international community.
 
Choi said this on Monday in Abidjan while addressing reporters.
 
The international community was torn between Alassane Ouattara and former President Laurent Gbagbo after the Ivorian electoral commission announced the results of the elections in favour of Ouattara, which Gbagbo rejected.
 
Choi, who also heads the UN mission, said Jonathan acted promptly in December, 2010, by standing by the results of the elections.
 
He said Jonathan, as the Chairman of ECOWAS during the crisis, saved the day for Cote d’Ivoire by telling the truth.
 
“By guiding the ECOWAS with a clear vision and decisive action, so, I think Ivorian people and the international community, even, are very thankful for what he did,” he said.
 
Post-election crises  
 
Choi said the international community rallied round ECOWAS after the sub-regional institution endorsed the winner of the elections and declared a direction for the country.
 
The envoy supervised the Ivorian presidential election held in November 2010 and also endorsed the results that declared Alassane Ouattara, an opposition leader, the winner.
 
He said the five months political crisis left more than 3,000 people dead and brought the economy to a virtual standstill for the period with an overwhelming number of displaced people.
 
“During the 10 years of Ivorian crisis, you have around 5,000 deaths. Again, it is unacceptable and it should not happen again,’’ he added. 
 
Choi said the UN would assist the country in security, sensitisation of the public on reconciliation and in restoring confidence in the economy.
  
Nigeria’s intervention
   
Jonathan, chairing the ECOWAS meeting of heads of states, was the first leader to insist that the former Ivorian president should hand over peacefully or risk the use of what he described as “legitimate force”.
  
ECOWAS sent in three heads of states to negotiate with Gbagbo on handing over while AU leaders kept a constant train of delegates to the embattled former Ivorian leader for four months.
 
In February, President Jonathan sent an envoy, former President Olusegun Obasanjo, to negotiate with Gbagbo to leave power and take an offer of relocating to another country.
 
Gbagbo turned down the offer and preferred a unity government in which Ouattara would serve as the vice-president.
 
Obasanjo returned to Nigeria disappointed after two days of negotiation and barely two months later, Gbagbo was forcefully ousted on April 11, 2011.

Awaiting possible trial
 
The former Ivorian president has been under house arrest in the northern part of the country in Korhogo after he was removed by soldiers loyal to Ouattara, UN military peace keepers and a special French force, Licorne.
 
The new government has also accused the former leader for human rights abuses.
 

 


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