Côte d’Ivoire: UN Forces Put On Alert Following Attack On Police Post
New York, Jul 25 2005 10:00AM
With elections in Côte d’Ivoire barely three months away, the United Nations 6,500-strong force has been put on alert
and is sending military units to help restore calm after an attack by unidentified assailants on a Gendarme brigade and
police station in Anyama, north of Abidjan, the strife-torn West African country’s major city.
The UN Operation in Côte d’Ivoire (UNOCI) was set up last year to prevent hostile actions from undermining a ceasefire
between the National Armed Forces of Côte d'Ivoire (FANCI) and the Forces nouvelles, who have split the world’s largest
cocoa producer into a government-controlled south and rebel-controlled north.
“UNOCI calls on all parties to refrain from any action that could further contribute to the deterioration of an already
worrying situation,” the mission said in a statement yesterday, adding that according to information from the Ivorian
Security and Defence Forces (FDS), Saturday’s attackers have moved to Agboville, 70 kilometres north of Abidjan. “UNOCI
strongly condemns this attack, which could jeopardize the important progress made in the peace process, particularly
after the second Pretoria meeting of 28 and 29 June 2005,” it added, referring to an agreement mediated by South African
President Thabo Mbeki establishing a new timeline for disarmament and elections.
Earlier this month the UN Security Council demanded that all Ivorian parties and signatories “scrupulously comply” with
all aspects of the new deal, the latest effort to revive a peace process deadlocked since April when talks faltered over
the timetable. The elections, now scheduled for October, are meant to formally end the conflict that exploded when
rebels tried to oust President Laurent Gbagbo in 2002, seizing the north.
Just 10 days ago Secretary-General General Kofi announced the appointment of former Portuguese Foreign Minister António
Monteiro as autonomous High Representative for the elections.
ENDS