Jump to navigation

Côte d'Ivoire

The elephants talk reconciliation

Historic foes – President Ouattara and ex-President Gbagbo – claim they want to put the past behind them

The first meeting in over a decade between President Alassane Ouattara and his predecessor Laurent Gbagbo next Tuesday (27 July) is billed as symbolising long-delayed national reconciliation. The two will meet in the presidential palace – a logical if unsubtle way for Ouattara to underscore who is in power. Presidential spokesman Amadou Coulibaly also told reporters that the pair had spoken over the phone in early July.

After the country was engulfed by violence after the disputed presidential election in 2010, French troops arrested Gbagbo in April 2011 and he was indicted by the International Criminal Court for crimes against humanity.

Gbagbo returned home triumphantly in June after his final acquittal by the ICC but his future plans are unclear. He retains strong grassroots support from his Front Populaire Ivoirien (AC Vol 62 No 13, Old foes re-enter the ring). Equally unclear is whether the incumbent President will try to thwart his political foe's attempts to contest future elections. Time might help the decision-making: Gbagbo will be 80 when the next elections are due.

Having faced much criticism for his political shortcomings, Ouattara is trying to position himself as the man to heal the country's wounds, having pardoned hundreds of opposition supporters, including Simone Gbagbo (the estranged first wife of Laurent Gbagbo).

The country's three political 'elephants' – Outtara, Gbagbo and Henri Konan Bédié – think they can boost their standing by talking up the imperative of reconciliation. Earlier this month, Gbagbo and Konan-Bédié, former rivals, said they were committed to forging 'final and sustainable peace'. Many younger Ivorians think the best service this cohort of septuagenarian and octogenarian political chiefs can render would be to exit the political stage.



Related Articles

Old foes re-enter the ring

Defeated on the battlefield and at the ballot box 10 years ago, Ouattara's old adversary returns and will posing problems

President Alassane Ouattara faces the most delicate of strategic choices following the triumphal return home last week of his career-long political foe Laurent Gbagbo after his fin...


Skimming a bad system

Côte d'Ivoire's Public Prosecutor, Raymond Tchimou, is leading a crackdown on corruption in the cocoa industry, which accounts for 40% of world supply. On 13 June, Tchimou an...


ADO looks ahead

Reconciling the nation, purging the army and restoring a stable political culture are the President's big challenges in his second term

President Alassane Dramane Ouattara's second term in office will be about bestowing a legacy of lasting political stability and economic reconstruction when he leaves office in 202...


Soro clouds economic revival

Ouattara’s new cabinet of bankers and economists underlines his determination to raise living standards but what about human rights?

President Alassane Dramane Ouattara’s cabinet reshuffle on 22 November emphasised old loyalties and economic competence, firmly pushing neo-liberal economic buttons. Out from the p...


Accident-prone

P>Almost everything that could go wrong for President Laurent Gbagbo's national reconciliation conference in Abidjan is doing so (AC Vol 42 No 18). None of the three main oppositio...