Ouattara supporters seize Yamoussoukro

Fighters loyal to presidential claimant Alassane Ouattara (above) have seized control of Ivory Coast's capital city.

Fighters loyal to presidential claimant Alassane Ouattara (above) have seized control of Ivory Coast's capital city.

Published Mar 31, 2011

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Abidjan - Forces loyal to Alassane Ouattara seized the capital of Ivory Coast and advanced toward the coastal cities of Abidjan and San Pedro on Wednesday, in a dramatic push aimed at toppling incumbent leader Laurent Gbagbo.

The head of presidential claimant Ouattara's rival government said Gbagbo had just “hours” to leave power peacefully, after months of negotiations aimed at dislodging him in the aftermath of an election late last year failed.

“The time for dialogue and ceasefires is over... (Gbagbo) has a few hours to leave power peacefully,” Guillaume Soro, Ouattara's premier, told French radio RFI.

Resisting pressure from the African Union and the West, Gbagbo has refused to step down since the poll last November, which UN-certified results showed he lost to Ouattara by an eight-point margin.

At least 472 people have been killed since the standoff began, according to the United Nations, and a humanitarian crisis is worsening, with a million people displaced from the commercial capital Abidjan alone.

Ivory Coast is the world's largest grower of cocoa, and curbs imposed since the conflict began have paralysed exports, sending futures prices to 30-year highs.

Cocoa futures hit their lowest point in more than two months on Wednesday as advances by Ouattara's troops raised hopes exports could soon resume.

Pro-Ouattara forces now control areas growing about 600 000 tons of cocoa a year, half of national output.

Residents and military sources in Yamoussoukro, which is officially the nation's capital but functions as little more than a presidential retreat, said pro-Ouattara forces had taken control by the end of the afternoon.

“It is the (pro-Ouattara) Republican Forces that control Yamoussoukro,” a military source in Gbagbo's camp said. “(Ouattara's forces) are walking through the city.”

Several residents confirmed the information and a pro-Gbagbo military source said they had been given the order to pull back towards Abidjan, 215km to the southeast.

Clashes were reported in the town but it was not clear what had happened to the Republican Guard, a pro-Gbagbo unit that was expected to put up resistance to any Ouattara push.

Another group of pro-Ouattara fighters, largely made up of former rebels who have controlled the north since a 2002-3 civil war, took control of Soubre, the last main town on the road to the cocoa port of San Pedro.

In Abidjan, pro-Gbagbo youths killed seven civilians when they opened fire in a pro-Ouattara neighbourhood of Abidjan, witnesses said. Former colonial power France, meanwhile, said pro-Gbagbo forces had fired on the French ambassador's convoy in Abidjan.

As the fighting has intensified, about 30 000 Ivorians and West African migrants have been forced to seek refuge in an overcrowded Catholic mission in the town of Duekoue with little or no access to food, water or health facilities, the International Organisation for Migration (IOM) said.

Thousands more have sought shelter in public buildings and at least 112 000 have crossed into Liberia to the west.

A Reuters reporter on the road east out of Abidjan said hundreds of cars were clogging roads heading out of the city. - Reuters

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