UNITED24 - Make a charitable donation in support of Ukraine!

Military

VOICE OF AMERICA
SLUG: 2-326142 Ivory Coast Violence (L-O)
DATE:
NOTE NUMBER:

DATE=7/24/05

TYPE=CORRESPONDENT REPORT

TITLE=IVORY COAST/VIOLENCE (L-O)

NUMBER=2-326142

BYLINE=JOE BAVIER

DATELINE=ABIDJAN

CONTENT=

HEADLINE: Unidentified Assailants Attack Ivory Coast Police Stations

INTRO: Overnight attacks on police stations have left at least five dead in Ivory Coast. The military in the country's government-controlled south has been placed on high alert, amid fears violence could escalate. Joe Bavier visited the scenes of the attacks near Abidjan, and has this report for VOA.

TEXT: /// INSERT NAT SOUND OF HYSTERICAL WOMAN EST. AND FADED UNDER ///

A young woman wails outside the local headquarters of the gendarmes in Anyama, a suburb of Ivory Coast's commercial capital, Abidjan.

/// BRING ACT UP, FADE UNDER ///

She says her father was among five officers killed in the attacks late Saturday. Inside, the steps leading into the station are covered in blood. Police say the officers' throats were cut.

About a kilometer away, another attack forced five police officers to flee. One of the officers on duty explains.

//// POLICEMAN IN FRENCH EST. AND FADED UNDER ///

They (the attackers) arrived in two small buses and a taxi, and stopped in front of the station, he says. They all jumped out, he says, and there was one at the entrance with a Kalashinikov rifle.

The attackers, who have yet to be identified, sacked the offices and carried away arms and ammunition.

In what many see as a related attack, gunmen stormed another police station in the city of Agboville, about 70-kilometers north of Abidjan.

As many as two-thousand prisoners reportedly escaped from the prison there during the fighting. An Ivorian army spokesman said, by early afternoon, parts of the city were still being attacked.

/// INSERT NAT SOUND OF CONVOY ///

Armored vehicles patrolled the streets of Abidjan early Sunday, and army officials said a deployment of security forces had been dispatched to secure Agboville.

/// INSERT NAT SOUND OF ANGRY SOLDIERS EST. AND FADED UNDER ///

A group of angry soldiers, stationed outside the police station in Anyama, say they blame the rebels, known as the New Forces, who have controlled the northern half of Ivory Coast since a civil war broke out nearly three-years ago.

New Forces representatives have denied involvement in the attacks.

The incident puts in serious danger a tenuous peace process mediated by South Africa, and intended to clear the way for presidential elections in October.

In a statement read on government television, a spokesman of army chief of staff Brigadier General Phillippe Mangou said the military had informed the U.N. peacekeeping mission in Ivory Coast of, what he called, a violation of the peace accord. (SIGNED)

NEB/JB/MEM/RAE/TW



NEWSLETTER
Join the GlobalSecurity.org mailing list