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IVORY COAST

IVORY COAST: Press release of the Council of Ministers of Wednesday 29 July 2020

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On Wednesday, July 29, 2020, a Council of Ministers was held from 10:00 to 12:45, at the Palace of the Presidency of the Republic in Abidjan, under the chairmanship of His Excellency Alassane OUATTARA, President of the Republic, Head of State.

The agenda for this meeting included the following items:

A/-General Measures

– Bills and Orders
– Draft decrees

B/-Individual Measures

C/-Communication

A/– GENERAL MEASURES

BILLS AND ORDERS

Under the Ministry of Justice and Human Rights;
The Council adopted an order extending the mandate of members of the High Authority for Good Governance (HABG) other than the President, as well as its ratification bill.

Pending the appointment of their alternates, this order extends, until 31 December 2020, the mandate of the members of the High Authority for Good Governance, appointed by decree no. 2014-216 of 16 April 2014.
DRAFT DECRETS

1- Under the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, in liaison with the Ministry of Planning and Development, the Ministry of Economy and Finance, the Ministry of Health and Public Hygiene and the Ministry to the Prime Minister, responsible for the State Budget and Portfolio;
The Council adopted a decree ratifying the Loan Agreement No. 2000200004699, totalling EUR 75,000,000, or EUR 49,196,775,000, or EUR 99,000,000,000,000,000,000, CFA francs, concluded on 03 July 2020 between the African Development Bank (AfDB) and the Republic of Côte d’Ivoire, for the financing of the COVID-19 response support programme.
This funding is a budget support operation in response to the COVID-19 pandemic and its consequences. It will strengthen the conditions for responding to the health crisis and strengthen economic and social resilience.

2- Under the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, in liaison with the Ministry of Transport;
The Council adopted a decree ratifying the Agreement between the Government of the Republic of Côte d’Ivoire and the Government of the State of Qatar on Maritime Transport, signed on 17 September 2018, in Doha, Qatar.
This agreement aims to strengthen cooperation in the field of maritime transport, with a view to facilitating economic and commercial relations between the two (02) States. It provides, inter alia, for the mutual recognition of documents of ships and identity documents of seafarers duly issued by the competent authorities of both (02) and the pooling of resources in the fight against maritime pollution by ships.

The ratification of this agreement will open to Côte d’Ivoire the right to carry out maritime transport on the international commercial ports of the State of Qatar open to navigation and to protect the national marine environment as well as possible.

3- Under the Ministry of Mines and Geology, in liaison with the Ministry of Economy and Finance, the Ministry of Environment and Sustainable Development and the Ministry to the Prime Minister, in charge of the Budget and the State Portfolio;
The Council adopted an order awarding a mining permit, valid for gold, to the company «MAKO COTE D’IVOIRE SARLU, abbreviated MAKO CI SARLU», in the department of Korhogo.

This permit is issued for a period of four (04) years.
B/– INDIVIDUAL MEASUREMENTS

1-Under the Ministry of Justice and Human Rights;
Following the renewal, by decree no. 2020-572 of 20 July 2020, of the mandate of the President of the High Authority for Good Governance, Mr N’Golo Fatogoma COULIBALY, the Council adopted two (02) decrees:

The first decree renews, for a period of three (03) years, the mandate of the members of the High Authority for Good Governance as follows:
– Mr Moussa KONE, Magistrate Outside the Hierarchy;
– Mr Boniface Obou OURAGA, University Professor.
The second decree appoints the following persons as members of the High Authority for Good Governance, for a term of three (03) years, from 1 September 2020:
– Mr ASSI Emmanuel;
– Mr Louis-André DACOURY-TABLEY.

2-Under the Ministry of Foreign Affairs;
The Council agreed to the appointment of Mrs Catherine Grâce BROOKER as Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland to the Republic of Côte d’Ivoire, with residence in Abidjan.

C/– COMMUNICATION

Under the title of Prime Minister, Head of Government, Minister of Budget and State Portfolio;
The Council adopted a communication on the implementation of the Priority Action Plan (PAP) activities at the end of June 2020.
The first half of the implementation of the 2020 PAP, adopted in January 2020, was marked by the COVID-19 pandemic, which resulted in travel restrictions, population containment, and a slowdown in economic activity.

Thus, the budget deficit, which had been reduced to the Community standard of 3% of Gross Domestic Product (GDP), thanks to rigorous management and strengthened budgetary discipline, should be widened and should go toover 5.1% of GDP as agreed with the International Monetary Fund (IMF) at the beginning of the pandemic.
In spite of this pandemic, the Government has maintained the momentum of economic transformation, by increasing the supply of public services in various areas, including health, education and training, the provision of drinking water, sanitation, electrification and roads.

Government action in the second half of 2020 will be devoted, on the one hand, to the continuation of programmed actions which have been hampered in their implementation due to the health crisis and, On the other hand, the continued implementation of the Government’s Social Program (PSGov), with the bonus of the response to the COVID-19 pandemic.

Also, the Government intends to continue its action with the preparation and organization of presidential elections, the preparation of National Identity Cards (CNI), the acceleration of the realization of major structuring projects, including the Autoroute du Nord at the Yamoussoukro-Tiébissou-Bouaké section, the urban train, the fourth bridge, the Y4 ring road, as well as the sports complexes of the Africa Cup of Nations (CAN) 2023.

Done at Abidjan, 29 July 2020
Sidi Tiémoko TOURE
Minister of Communication and Media,
Spokesperson for the Government
porteparolat@communication.gouv.ci

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IVORY COAST

CÔTE D’IVOIRE – President Alassane Ouattara’s RHDP tidal wave in local elections

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The Rassemblement des houphouëtistes pour la démocratie et la paix (RHDP) won the majority of Ivorian town halls and regional councils, after the double election on Saturday, according to the Independent Electoral Commission which proclaimed the final results on Monday, September 04, 2023.

It is a tidal wave in favor of the Gathering of Houphouëtistes for Democracy and Peace (RHDP), the party of the president of Alassane Ouattara after the municipal and regional elections of September 2, 2023. The party obtained 125 municipalities out of 201 and 25 regions out of 30. We remember the victory of Prime Minister Patrick Achi, in the Mé, that of Mamadou Touré, the Minister of Youth in Haut-Sassandra; the victory of Anne Ouloto, the Minister of Public Service, in the Cavally (west), that of the minister Director of cabinet of the presidency, Fidèle Sarrassoro in the Poro (north).

The two main opposition parties, the African People’s Party-Côte d’Ivoire (PPA-CI) and the Democratic Party of Côte d’Ivoire (PDCI), allies in many localities, are gaining a region, Nawa, and ten communes like Lakota and Bloléquin. Although it has fewer communes compared to the 2018 election, the PDCI of Henri Konan Bédié remains in its fiefs: Yamoussoukro, Daoukro, Toumodi, the Iffou region or in Aries. Outside the alliance, Laurent Gbagbo’s PPA-CI gained two communes.

“Acceptable” Participation
The Ivorian Popular Front loses Moronou, the stronghold of Pascal Affi N’Guessan and comes out of this double election without any elected representatives.

The turnout remains substantially the same in the 2018 elections: it amounts to 44.61% for the regional election and 36.18% for the municipal elections. A rate that the President of the Independent Electoral Commission (IEC) considers “acceptable”.

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IVORY COAST

IVORY COAST – Laurent GBagbo files an appeal to the electoral commission

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Still removed from the electoral list three months before the local elections, Laurent Gbagbo tabled on Thursday, June 8, 2023 an appeal to the Independent Electoral Commission. Acquitted by the ICC of crimes against humanity committed during the 2010-2011 post-election crisis, he remains under a 20-year prison sentence in Côte d’Ivoire for the “robbery” of the Central Bank of West African States (BCEAO) in 2011. Pardoned by the presidency, but not granted amnesty, he is still deprived of his civil rights.

Laurent Gbagbo visited the office of the Abidjan Independent Electoral Commission in a small committee. The PPA-CI activists had been ordered not to move, and respected it.

The former president personally signed his appeal to the CIS. Before going out to make a statement to the press. He went back on his conviction by the Ivorian courts in the case of the BCEAO’s “robbery” in 2011, an accusation he says he “strongly refutes”.

I don’t know why I was judged. No one summoned me because in order to have a trial, the accused is summoned and given a summons where he resides. Everyone in the world knows where I was living at the time of this trial. I was at the ICC!”

Laurent Gbagbo ended his speech with a call for peace. “The time for the blows is over,” he argued, before urging Henri Konan Bédié and Alassane Ouattara to work together to “leave the younger generations a peaceful Ivory Coast.” But he won’t give up his civil rights, he promised, concluding, “I won’t let my name get dirty without a fight.”

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IVORY COAST

VORY COAST – Local elections: Laurent Gbagbo will not vote

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Former Ivorian President Laurent Gbagbo will not be able to participate in his country’s local elections scheduled for 02 September 2023. And for good reason, He is still removed from the electoral list published Saturday, May 20, 2023, a decision described as “unacceptable provocation” by his party. While Gbagbo was acquitted by international justice of crimes against humanity committed during the bloody post-election crisis of 2010-2011, he remains under a 20-year prison sentence in Côte d’Ivoire for the “robbery” the Central Bank of West African States (BCEAO) in 2011. This conviction, pronounced in 2018 while he was imprisoned in The Hague, had resulted in the loss of his civil and political rights and thus his removal from the electoral lists.

And the pardon granted by President Alassane Ouattara last year in this case does not change this status. On Saturday, during the publication of the electoral list in Abidjan, Sébastien Dano Djédjé, an executive of the African Peoples Party-Côte d’Ivoire (PPA-CI), Gbagbo’s party, denounced an “unjust” decision. This calls into question the credibility of the Independent Electoral Commission (IEC). The electoral process is losing credibility,’ he added, before leaving the ceremony with the party delegation.

“We are not picking on Laurent Gbagbo. There is a court decision that is not the work of the CIS. The CIS is simply carrying out what the law says,’ said Commission President Kuibiert Coulibaly, stating that “11,000 people” have been deprived of their civil and political rights.

On Saturday afternoon, the PPA-CI held a press conference to denounce an “unacceptable provocation”. Such stubbornness on the part of the Ivorian regime poses serious risks to peace and social cohesion,’ said Justin Koné Katinan, spokesman for Mr Gbagbo’s party. This omission from the electoral list “constitutes a casus belli”, he added.

The PPA-CI is based in particular on a decision of the African Court of Human and Peoples’ Rights that ordered in 2020 the reinstatement of the former Ivorian president on the electoral list. The party authorities will meet shortly to consider possible remedies. Complaints can be made to the IEC until 8 June.

After the 2020 presidential election, which saw the re-election of Alassane Ouattara for a controversial third term and where violence had caused 85 deaths and 500 injuries, Côte d’Ivoire experienced a period of calm in the political climate. The 2021 legislative elections were held in calm and former president Laurent Gbagbo was able to return to Côte d’Ivoire in June 2021, after his acquittal by the ICC. On two occasions, he even met with President Ouattara to “describe the political climate” in Côte d’Ivoire.

But the last few weeks have been marked by tensions between the two opposing sides during the post-election crisis of 2010-2011, which caused 3,000 deaths.

In particular, the PPA-CI accused the authorities of “exploiting the justice system” after the arrest in February of 26 of its activists for “disturbing public order” on the sidelines of a demonstration in Abidjan. Sentenced in the first instance to two years in prison, they were given two years of suspended sentence on appeal.

Some eight million voters are called to the polls on September 2 in Côte d’Ivoire to renew municipal and regional councils. The next presidential election is scheduled for 2025.

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