New Era

I.Coast ‘street general’ Ble Goude returns after acquittal

- - Nampa/AFP

ABIDJAN - Charles Ble Goude, a key figure in post-electoral violence in Ivory Coast 11 years ago, returned to the country Saturday for the first time in more than eight years, hinting that his political ambitions remained undimmed.

The former right-hand man to ex-president Laurent Gbagbo, dubbed the “street general” for his ability to organise a crowd, was acquitted along with Gbagbo of crimes against humanity charges by the Internatio­nal Criminal Court last year.

Wearing a suit and tie, the 50-year-old landed at the airport in the economic hub of Abidjan after flying in on a commercial flight from neighbouri­ng Ghana, according to an AFP reporter on the scene.

Later addressing thousands of his supporters in Abidjan, Ble Goude thanked the Ivorian authoritie­s for facilitati­ng his return, and said his “duty” was to “support the peace process”.

“I am not passing through, I have come here for good. Your leader has arrived. You are no longer orphans,” he added in a speech regularly marked by rapturous ovations from the crowd.

Ble Goude hailed his supporters in heavy rain from the retractabl­e roof of his car as it travelled through the streets, where people welcomed him with banners and cheers.

The office of Ivorian President Alassane Ouattara, who earlier this year pardoned his predecesso­r Gbagbo in the name of national reconcilia­tion, has approved the return.

Around a dozen people, including Simone Gbagbo wife of the expresiden­t -- had gathered to welcome the controvers­ial figure at the airport.

“We are very happy, we waited for so long. We have a nation to build... with your energy, I am sure you are going to play your part with us,” she said at the event in Abidjan.

The West African state remains deeply scarred by the 2010-11 conflict, which erupted after Gbagbo refused to concede electoral defeat to Ouattara.

Some 3,000 people were killed, with Gbagbo arrested in April 2011. Ble Goude was detained in Ghana in 2013 and transferre­d to The Hague the following year before his acquittal in March 2021.

Ble Goude is the last major pro-Gbagbo figure from the postelecto­ral crisis to return to Ivory Coast.

Security was tight around the airport on Saturday. A few hours before Ble Goude’s arrival, police shooed away most journalist­s, and a planned press statement was cancelled.

In 2015, he launched his own political party, the Pan-African Congress for the Justice and Equality of Peoples. Like Simone Gbagbo, he has not joined Laurent Gbagbo’s African Peoples’ Party Ivory Coast.

Ibrahim Sorie Yillah, vice president of the ICC’s victims’ fund, said Ble Goude’s return was a significan­t moment, but did not draw a line under the post-electoral violence.

“A large number of victims of crimes committed during that period continue to wait for reparation­s for the harm they suffered,” he said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Namibia