Fan Forum
Remember Me?
Register

  New Forum Poll (Vote Here)   |     Summer TV Shows Poll (Vote Here)   |     Request a Forum   |     View New Forums

Reply   Post New Thread
 
Thread Tools
Old 11-06-2004, 11:07 PM
  #1
Extreme Fan
 
Joined: Feb 2001
Posts: 2,010
Ivory Coast raid kills 9 French troops, American

From MSNBC.com

Quote:
ABIDJAN, Ivory Coast - French troops clashed with soldiers and angry mobs Saturday after Ivory Coast warplanes killed at least nine French peacekeepers and an American civilian in an airstrike — mayhem that threatened to draw foreign troops deeper into the West African country’s escalating civil war.

Mob violence broke out in Ivory Coast’s largest city after France retaliated for the airstrike by destroying two government warplanes at an airport outside the capital.

Thousands of pro-government youths, some armed with machetes, axes or chunks of wood, took to the streets of the country’s commercial capital, Abidjan. Crowds went door to door looking for French citizens and set fire to two French schools, sending a pall of smoke over the city.

“Everybody get your Frenchman!” young men in the mob shouted to each others. About 14,000 French nationals live in Ivory Coast — some 8,000 of whom have dual citizenship.

Later, massive explosions and heavy gunfire rocked the nation’s capital, Yamoussoukro. It was not immediately known what caused the apparent fighting in the city, where both Ivorian and French forces are based.

More troops deployed
The U.N. Security Council demanded an immediate halt to all military action in the Ivory Coast and confirmed Saturday that U.N. peacekeepers and French forces were authorized to use “all necessary means” to carry out their mandate.

France quickly sent three Mirage fighter jets to West Africa and ordered more troops to Ivory Coast in response to the violence.

French Foreign Minister Michel Barnier demanded action from Ivory Coast President Laurent Gbagbo, saying he must “clearly assume his responsibilities and the role that is his to return the country to calm — especially in Abidjan.

“We must immediately return to the path of peace,” Barnier said.

French Defense Minister Michele Alliot-Marie said Gbagbo would be “held personally responsible by the international community for (maintaining) the public order in Abidjan.”

She said French President Jacques Chirac phoned Gbagbo earlier this week to warn him against heightening the conflict.

“Visibly, he (Gbagbo) didn’t take that into account,” she said.

A French defense ministry spokesman said on condition of anonymity that the United States had shown “great understanding about France’s concerns in Ivory Coast.” But he did not know whether U.S. military assistance had been sought.

The U.N. force includes thousands of West African troops, with the rest coming from an array of contributing nations, none American.

End of tenuous truce
Hard-liners in Ivory Coast’s military broke a more than year-old cease-fire, launching surprise airstrikes Thursday against rebel positions and vowing to retake the northern part of the country held by rebels since the civil war began in 2002.

Government officials said Saturday’s airstrike that hit a French peacekeeper position was an accident — but the violence highlighted the nationalist fervor in the pro-government south.

Many in the south resent the French troops, suspecting them of siding with rebels, even though the peacekeepers have protected government troops in the past. France has about 4,000 troops in Ivory Coast, and a separate U.N. peacekeeping force numbers around 6,000.

Saturday’s violence began when government warplanes struck French positions at Brobo, near the northern rebel-held town of Bouake, in the afternoon, U.N. military spokesman Philippe Moreux said.

Eight French soldiers were killed and 23 others wounded, French Defense Ministry spokesman Jean-Francois Bureau said in Paris. An American citizen also was killed in the raid, the French presidency said without elaborating.

A ninth French soldier died of his wounds, France’s U.N. Ambassador Jean-Marc de La Sabliere said before the emergency Security Council meeting. Council diplomats said the American who was killed was believed to have worked for a non-governmental organization and to have been at the French base.

Missionary possibly killed
U.S. Embassy spokeswoman Ergibe Boyd in Abidjan said diplomats have not confirmed the death. She said the American likely was a missionary since there is no U.S. military or diplomatic presence in the area.

In response to the strike, French infantry destroyed Russian-made Sukhoi fighter jets on the ground at an airport in Yamoussoukro, 75 miles to the south, French military spokesman Col. Henry Aussavy said. The jets were believed to be the ones that carried out the strike.

“Our forces responded in a situation of legitimate defense,” Bureau said. “Now the priority is the immediate end of combat.”

France sent three Mirage fighter jets to nearby Gabon, and Chirac said he ordered the deployment of two more military companies to Ivory Coast.

The Security Council authorized U.N. and French troops patrolling a zone dividing the rebel-held north from the government-controlled south “to prevent any hostile action” and condemned any attempt to send forces through the zone.

The council said it “intends to examine rapidly further actions, including individual measures, to be taken.”

U.S. Ambassador John Danforth, the current council president, said France will draft a resolution following up on the statement.

Angry mobs
In Abidjan, French troops fired in the air and shot tear gas to hold back massive mobs trying to overrun a French military base. French and Ivory Coast troops traded gunfire on the tarmac of the international airport, as Ivory Coast troops tried to destroy French aircraft there in retaliation.

A French soldier was slightly injured and an airplane was lightly damaged before the fighting ended, French spokesman Jacques Combarieu said.

“French go home!” loyalist mobs screamed. Thousands went house to house seeking out French civilians, Aussavy said.

At least three French families called French authorities to say loyalist militias had stormed their homes, a Western diplomat said on condition of anonymity. There was no immediate word on any civilian casualties.

After nightfall, state TV ran a nonstop crawl across screens, asking for restraint: “We are asking all patriots and Ivorians to not attack, and to not attack the property, of French people or the international community.”

Presidential spokesman Desire Tagro said on state TV: “The president asks all Ivorians to remain calm ... French and foreigners settled in Ivory Coast are not responsible for the Ivorian crisis. We mustn’t bring the war here.”

A senior member of Ivory Coast’s government — Sebastien Dano Djeje, Cabinet member for National Reconciliation — said the bombing of the French position in the north “was a mistake. We didn’t aim to hit them.”

But then he questioned whether the government air force was really behind the strike.

“But what proves it was Ivorian planes? We have to do an investigation,” he told The Associated Press.

Ivory Coast, the world’s top cocoa producer, was the pride of France’s former colonial empire for prosperous decades after independence in 1960. A downturn in commodities prices and political change in the 1990s encouraged instability, and the country suffered its first-ever military coup in 1999.

Turmoil and regional, ethnic and political hatreds have reigned since. Civil war erupted in September 2002. A power-sharing deal brokered by the French ended major fighting in 2003, but otherwise failed to take hold.
__________________
quaeque ipse miserrima vidi et quorum pars magna fui (All these terrible things I saw, a great part of which I was) - Virgil, The Aeneid
JW77 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 11-07-2004, 11:28 PM
  #2
Extreme Fan
 
Joined: Feb 2001
Posts: 2,010
An update, from MSNBC.com

Quote:
Mobs attack French targets in Ivory Coast
Government openly criticizes France after clashes

ABIDJAN, Ivory Coast - Machete-waving mobs looted and burned in Ivory Coast’s largest cities Sunday, laying siege to a French military base and searching house to house for French families after a day of sudden clashes between forces of France and its former colony.

France’s military sent helicopters to pluck trapped expatriates from buildings as other helicopters and armored vehicles moved out to confront the mobs, lobbing volleys of tear gas and percussion grenades that sent rioters fleeing.

French gunships took up positions at bridges in skyscraper-lined Abidjan on Sunday, a day after seizing control of the country’s two airports and flying in 600 reinforcements.

Defiant tone
Faced with the confrontation with France, the Ivory Coast government reluctantly moved to call off its offensive against rebels who control the northern part of the country. The government broke a more than year-old cease-fire last week by launching airstrikes against the rebels.

The government said Sunday it was willing to cease fire and that it would pull back its troops. French retaliation on Saturday for a surprise bombing of French peacekeepers destroyed Ivory Coast’s tiny air force and left its airports under French control.

The government took a defiant tone toward France. Ivory Coast will ask the U.N. Security Council for action against France, presidential spokesman Desire Tagro told The Associated Press. “We are faced with aggression by one country against another country. We are going to inform the entire world ... that France has come to attack us.”

The United States on Sunday warned its citizens to avoid traveling to Ivory Coast because of widespread violence.

About 4,000 French and 6,000 U.N. troops are posted in Ivory Coast, manning a buffer zone between the loyalist south and the north, held by rebels since civil war broke out in September 2002 in the world’s top cocoa producer. The foreign presence aims to hold together a country vital to stability of a troubled region.

France’s retaliation — destroying the military’s five helicopter gunships and two Russian-made Sukhoi warplanes — came after the Sukhois bombed a French peacekeeping position in the north, killing nine French peacekeepers and an American consultant working for an aid group.

Mob violence after France’s response claimed more victims. A Red Cross official, Kim Gordon-Bates, said about 150 people had been wounded in Abidjan, most from bullets. The official refused to give any information on deaths.

French reinforcements
State television showed the bodies of what it said were five loyalists killed by French forces.

About 300 French troop reinforcements landed Sunday at Abidjan’s international airport, which was taken by France late Saturday after it destroyed what it said was the entire Ivory Coast air force —

Another 300 reinforcements would be sent from France, the French Defense Ministry said. Three French military planes, including a medical support aircraft, were en route to Ivory Coast, while three French military Mirage fighter jets were on standby in the West African nation of Gabon.

Still more reinforcements headed toward Abidjan on Sunday afternoon from the capital, Yamoussoukro, to confront the mobs.

An Associated Press photographer saw 20 heavy vehicles bearing French troops heading toward Abidjan — a city in flames.

Raging violence
Gunfire rang out in the city and smoke billowed into the air from throngs laying waste to both foreign and locally owned property.

Loyalists set up roadblocks of burning tires. An Associated Press reporter watched as a crowd armed with machetes and iron bars entered a neighborhood near the city’s main French military base, demanding to know if there were any French living in the district.

“It’s better to kill the whites than steal their stuff,” one rioter shouted.

“It’s better to burn them, like in Algeria. They burned the whites — that’s why they’re respected,” another said.

Foreigners cowered.

“We are all terrified, and try to reassure each other,” one French resident said by telephone from his home elsewhere in the city, speaking on condition his name be withheld.

“We have been told by the embassy to stay at home ... It is a difficult situation to live through,” he said.

Also in danger: hundreds of thousands of immigrants from neighboring Muslim countries.

“We’re afraid because who knows, maybe this is civil war,” said one, hiding with 30 other Muslims in a mosque Sunday. He gave only his last name, Ouedraogo.

Mobs reportedly attack French families
A French military helicopter swept in Sunday to rescue trapped civilians, apparently expatriates, from an Abidjan hotel, airlifting about a dozen to safety with their suitcases.

Numerous French families contacted French authorities in Ivory Coast overnight, saying their homes were being attacked and looted, French military spokesman Henry Aussavy said. Electricity and phone lines at the French Embassy were cut, spokesman Francois Guenon said.

Rioting persisted despite demands France and from the U.N. Security Council that President Laurent Gbagbo restore order. France warned of international sanctions.

Ivory Coast leaders sounded alternately conciliatory and challenging.

“Let us cease fire,” National Assembly president Mamadou Koulibaly said on state television, offering to return to a more than year-old calm broken by Ivory Coast’s resumption of attacks on Thursday.

Speaking to French radio Inter, however, Koulibaly accused French President Jacques Chirac of arming Ivory Coast’s rebels and of sabotaging Ivory Coast’s government.

“Ivory Coast has become an overseas territory in Jacques Chirac’s head,” said Koulibaly, Ivory Coast’s second-highest leader.
__________________
quaeque ipse miserrima vidi et quorum pars magna fui (All these terrible things I saw, a great part of which I was) - Virgil, The Aeneid
JW77 is offline   Reply With Quote
Reply   Post New Thread

Bookmarks


Thread Tools



All times are GMT -7. The time now is 05:15 AM.

Fan Forum  |  Contact Us  |  Fan Forum on Twitter  |  Fan Forum on Facebook  |  Archive  |  Top

Powered by vBulletin, Copyright © 2000-2012, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
SEO by vBSEO 3.5.2
Copyright © 1998-2012, Fan Forum.