New Era

Defiant I.Coast ex-PM stands by presidenti­al bid

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PARIS - Ivory Coast ex-rebel leader and former premier Guillaume Soro, whose bid for the presidency has been invalidate­d by a court, insisted yesterday his candidacy was “irrevocabl­e” even as he attacked the October 31 elections as a scheme to enshrine 78-year-old Alassane Ouattara as head of state.

“My candidacy is firm, unchangeab­le and irrevocabl­e,” Soro told journalist­s in Paris, adding his country was “on the brink” since President Alassane Ouattara’s decision to seek a third term in office.

Soro urged the country’s opposition parties to unite against Ouattara even as he insisted that the October 31 presidenti­al poll “does not make any sense” as it was designed to “endorse the institutio­nal state coup d’etat of Alassane Ouattara”.

Soro, who served as prime minister from 2007 to 2012, urged Ivory Coast opposition leaders to unite and to “seize (regional bloc) ECOWAS in order to obtain transparen­t elections”.

And he insisted that on October 31, “there will be no election”, without further explanatio­n.

Ivory Coast’s top court rejected 40 presidenti­al election candidates, validating the contested bid of the incumbent head of state but sidelining his predecesso­r, Laurent Gbagbo and Soro, a one-time Ouattara ally.

On Tuesday the African Court on Human and Peoples’ Rights called on the Ivorian authoritie­s to allow Soro to contest the vote.

Tensions are running high ahead of the poll in the West African state where more than 3,000 people died in post-election violence in 2010-11.

This week, protests broke out in several cities including in southeaste­rn Bonoua, the hometownof­Gbagbo’swifeSimon­e, where about 300 people, mainly youngsters, marched against Ouattara’s candidacy in defiance of a ban on demonstrat­ions.

Ouattara had said in March that he would not seek a third term but made a U-turn just four months later when his preferred successor, prime minister Amadou Gon Coulibaly, died of a heart attack.

The argument behind his bid pivots on modificati­ons to the constituti­on in 2016. Supporters say this has reset the two-term limits to zero, entitling him to run again.

Violent protests against Ouattara’s candidacy left around 15 dead last month, reviving memories of the post-election bloodshed nearly a decade ago. -

 ?? Photo: Nampa/AFP ?? Sidelined… The Constituti­onal Court has rejected candidacie­s of Laurent Gbagbo, president from 2000-2010 and former rebel leader turned prime minister Guillaume Soro.
Photo: Nampa/AFP Sidelined… The Constituti­onal Court has rejected candidacie­s of Laurent Gbagbo, president from 2000-2010 and former rebel leader turned prime minister Guillaume Soro.

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