ABIDJAN, Ivory Coast - Forces loyal to Ivory Coast leader Laurent Gbagbo have encircled the scene of clashes between them and supporters of his rival in Abidjan and blocked entry to UN peacekeepers, they said on Thursday.
Six policemen were killed in the Abidjan suburb of Abobo on Wednesday in a second day of fighting between security forces loyal to Gbagbo and supporters of rival presidential claimant Alassane Ouattara that claimed at least five lives on Tuesday.
In another incident, pro-Gbagbo forces seized food trucks going to the hotel in which Ouattara is being besieged by them, and let their supporters loot the trucks on Wednesday, the UN mission said.
Source: ioL News
Six policemen were killed in the Abidjan suburb of Abobo on Wednesday in a second day of fighting between security forces loyal to Gbagbo and supporters of rival presidential claimant Alassane Ouattara that claimed at least five lives on Tuesday.
- Ouattara's parallel government, operating out of a hotel under guard of UN peacekeepers, said Gbagbo's forces killed at least seven civilians in Wednesday's clashes.
- The West African nation has been in crisis since a November 28 presidential election that both Ouattara and Gbagbo claim to have won. Ouattara was proclaimed winner by the country's electoral commission and is widely regarded by foreign governments as having legitimately won the UN-certified poll.
- But Gbagbo has refused to step down, with backing from the top court, and he still controls the security forces. His army chief of staff Philippe Mangou said UN peacekeepers had been sent away from Abobo after midnight.
- “According to our last report from the field, the head of the (UN) operation was turned around and went back,” Mangou told journalists after meeting Gbagbo at his residence.
- “It was provocative and shameful on their part, because they are supposed to be an impartial force ... to bring us peace but they have become something else,” he said.
- The UN mission spokesman was not available for comment.
- Relations between the United Nations mission and Gbagbo have rapidly deteriorated since Choi recognised Ouattara as winner of the elections and persuaded world leaders almost unanimously to do the same, isolating him diplomatically.
- Gbagbo has ordered the roughly 10 000 UN soldiers and police to leave the country, but the mission has refused, with the Security Council approving an increase in numbers by 2 000.
In another incident, pro-Gbagbo forces seized food trucks going to the hotel in which Ouattara is being besieged by them, and let their supporters loot the trucks on Wednesday, the UN mission said.
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