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Military

SLUG: 2-306091 Ivory Coast Diarra (L-O)
DATE:
NOTE NUMBER:

DATE=08/01/03

TYPE=CORRESPONDENT REPORT

TITLE=IVORY COAST / DIARRA

NUMBER=2-306091

BYLINE=LISA BRYANT

DATELINE=PARIS

CONTENT:

VOICED AT:

INTRO: Ivorian Prime Minister Seydou Diarra has called for international support to help end the fighting in Liberia, but said that the crisis in Monrovia must be resolved on a regional level. Mr. Diarra spoke to reporters in the French capital at the end of a trip to the United States and Europe to drum up support for his own, conflict-torn country. Lisa Bryant reports from Paris.

TEXT: Prime Minister Diarra said the fighting in Liberia was a west African problem, which should be resolved by west Africans. He expressed optimism that regional peacekeepers, who are expected to begin arriving to Monrovia on Monday, will help end the fighting.

///DIARRA ACT IN FRENCH; EST AND FADE///

Mr. Diarra warns that instability is spreading in west Africa. It had already hit Sierra Leone, Ivory Coast and Liberia, he says, and may eventually touch southern Senegal as well. He claims roving gangs of armed young

fighters are responsible for the unrest. He says local governments, helped by the international community, must put a stop to it.

Mr. Diarra spoke at the end of a three-day visit to Paris where he talked to French President Jacques Chirac. He said his trip to New York, Brussels and Paris was partially aimed at shoring up political and economic support for the Ivorian peace process

He expressed optimism that the French business community would return to the Ivory Coast, after fleeing the West African country during the recent unrest.

//DIARRA AC IN FRENCH; EST AND FADE//

Mr. Diarra says he is optimistic about his own country's future. Not only had government troops and rebels signed a peace agreement last month, ending Ivory Coast's 10-month civil war, but Mr. Diarra said the country's politicians were slowly becoming committed to peace and reconciliation.

Still, he said French and African peacekeeping forces should remain in the country, to shore up public confidence and help rebuild the country's army. (SIGNED)

NEB/LB/MAR/FC



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