Posted By Elizabeth Dickinson Share

It's been over two months now that the Ivory Coast has had two presidents -- one elected, according to internationally certified results, and one who just refuses to step down. In that time, neither shuttle diplomacy, nor international scorn, nor an amped up U.N. presence, nor sanctions, nor anything else has worked to dislodge the incumbent Laurent Gbagbo. And so this perilous ritual has becoming a game: Who can outlast the other. Will the world lose resolve first, or will Gbagbo's sanctioned administration run out of money?

For the moment, the latter hope -- that Gbagbo's coffers will run dry -- is about as good as it gets in terms of a solution to the problem. Now sanctioned by the European Union, the United States, the African Union, and the regional West-African economic group ECOWAS, Gbagbo is running out of options. The West African Central Bank, which was leaking him money, was purged of the the Gbagbo supporters. Alassane Ouattara, the election winner,thas pushed for an export ban on cocoa, the country's largest agricultural product. Instead of leaving through the ports of Abidjan, the product gets exported through Ghana, avoiding a tariff that would have gone to Gbagbo. Two private banks pulled out of the country this week, and it's now unclear if Gbagbo will have the money to pay his army and civil servants. Until now, the government bureacracy has been supportive of his staying in power -- in part at least because those checks were still coming. If he does go bankrupt, public opinion could shift and his supporters could dump him. 

But there's a lot of perils to waiting this one out. For one, it just might not work: Gbagbo is finding ways around the cocoa export trade, for example. His supporters are seeking buyers in China and Russia who might not be as inclined to comply with the export ban. 

More worrying is that, with every day that passes, the international political support  for booting out Gbagbo grows weaker and weaker. Signs of splits within the African Union are most notable; reports indicate that a high-level panel of experts doesn't agree on what to do next in Cote D'Ivoire. (And the emissaries the AU has sent aren't exactly all democrats: Most recently, long-time aruling Equitorial Guinean President Teodoro Obiang visited.)

Here's the worst part, however: Political violence is on the uptick. An AP report today reports that death squads, allegedly targetting Ouattara's political opponent, are exacting an incredible toll: 

Nearly every day since Laurent Gbagbo was declared the loser of the Nov. 28 election, the bodies of people who voted for his opponent have been showing up on the sides of highways. Their distraught families have gone from police station to police station looking for them, but the bodies are hidden in plain sight in morgues turned into mass graves.

Maybe the world can afford to wait Gbagbo out. But maybe the Ivory Coast can't. 

SIA KAMBOU/AFP/Getty Images

 

JOHN360

2:10 AM ET

February 17, 2011

Surely, the people from Ivory

Surely, the people from Ivory Coast can't wait to see Gbagbo go because of their daily sufferings: the economy is collapsing, banks closing, Gbagbo's Liberian and Angolan mercenaries and foolhardy military are torturing, raping and terrorizing Ivorian citizens without impunity. Like Zimbabwe, South Africa once again is aiming at maintaining another brutal dictator who lost the election, against the will of its people and the international community. The issue here is that Gbagbo lost the election according to credible and independent observers and has to go. The African Union (AU) said that their mission was to install Ouattara peacefully. Why is it now that the so-called panel of "experts" cannot agree on what to do next? Has this so-called panel fall into Gbagbo's demagoguery of "neo-coloniaslism" and BS about fighting neo- imperialism or for Christianity? Anything short of asking Gbagbo to cede power immediately will be a betray by the AU and a direct contradiction to its initial stand that Ouattara is the president. Is the panel telling us that the UN (which was called in 2003 by Gbagbo and the new force to monitor, supervise and certify the election ) is not an honest broker? South Africa through its leaders M'beki and Zuma is permitting the spread of this cancer in Africa which is that defeated presidents use brutal force to steal elections and get away. In 1994, the ANC (Zuma and M'Beki's party) was not asked to share power with the F.W. Deklerk's apartheid regime nor was there a talk of splitting South Africa in two to accomodate the losers or repeat election. South Africa' s undemocratic ways called "African solutions to African problems" only encourage dictators not to budge under pressure and is appaling and disgusting. South Africa is undermining ECOWAS, the international community for its own self interest not that of the Ivorian people. With South Africans in the panel it will be impossible for them to call for Gbagbo's departure. Instead Zuma and cronies will manovoeur for an already rejected proposition of vote recounts, another election or worse split Ivory Coast so that Gbagbo can remain president for life like it is presidents in southern African countries like Zimbabwe, Angola, Ouganda...With the events in Egypt and Tunisia, one will think that South Africa's Zuma and M'beki will side once for the respect of the will of the people not for the tyrants who subvert democracy.

 

GABREIL

7:18 PM ET

February 24, 2011

If Mr Quattara won the

If Mr Quattara won the election as all of you want us to beleive, can somebody explain to me why he does not want the results to be re-counted? What is wrong with recounting disputed electoral results? I see nothing wrong there unless you have something to hide.

 

POSTBILL

9:56 PM ET

March 1, 2011

the truth about Ivory Coast

UN kills ivorian civilians everyday

Choi The representative of the UN in Cote d Ivoire tells UN soldiers to fire at Ivorian civilians.DALOA, the Nation third biggest town will be the first field of execution: A police officer, son of Martin GROGUHET former PDCI Deputy Mayor of DALOA, was shot to death with a bullet in the back while he was leaving UNOCI head Quarter in this town after freeing 3 Patriots taken hostage by those soldiers following a peaceful negotiation. This vicious crime took place right there in front of the TWN reporter who still has difficulty to explain this barbarism. For news about Ivory Coast, go to the websites: cotedivoiretruthDOTcom or thefrontiertelegraphDOTcom

 

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