Cote d’Ivoire’s Climate of Fear


http://www.africandictator.org/?p=3469

Cote d’Ivoire’s Climate of Fear
July 28, 2011 | Filed under: Cote d’ Ivoire | Posted by: Eric
Gaëtan Mootoo from Amnesty International
Not enough is being done in terms of reconciliation and security in post-conflict Cote d’Ivoire, various human rights groups are saying.

Militias are preventing the reintegration of Internally Displaced People and refugees, especially those deemed to be young and fit enough to be seen as potentially former deposed dictator Laurent Gbagbo supporters.

Despite President Alassane Ouattara’s attempts at restoring peace and promising justice, even to the extent of encouraging investigations into the actions of forces loyal to him during the period of civil strife in early 2011, Cote d’Ivoire is failing to offer a safe haven to civilians.

Journalists face life imprisonment

Reporters Without Borders is alarmed by the arrests and intimidation of journalists, some of who face life imprisonment. The formerly pro-Gbagbo media houses have had to move their offices repeatedly. Their journalists, RWB is saying, should be tried under media laws rather than those which infringe on their human rights, even if they are guilty of publishing propaganda.

Journalist Hermann Aboa was charged on 21 July with threatening the nation’s defences, attacking and conspiring against state authorities, undermining national territorial integrity, participating in an armed band, participating in an insurrectional movement and attacking public order. He faces life imprisonment if convicted.

Five other journalists or former journalists allied with old regime are currently detained or under house arrest. They are Franck Anderson Kouassi, head of the former National Council for Broadcasting Communication (CNCA), Gnahoua Zibrabi, former publisher of L’Oeil du Peuple and onetime Gbagbo adviser, Armand Bohui Komé, former member of the National Press Council (CNP) and press officer to the First Lady, and RTI journalists Serge Boguhé and Germain Guezé.

More than three months have passed since the post-election crisis ended with Alassane Ouattara’s installation as president but journalists are still frightened about working for opposition or independent media. Some have simply given up their jobs and are in hiding.

The fate of independent and state media echoes that of certain ethnic groups, whom Amnesty International say face retribution.

•Refugee Retribution
Amnesty International is concerned by the “security role” given to the Dozo militias by the official FRCI forces. Armed Dozos are manning checkpoints on major roads in west Côte d’Ivoire which is deterring displaced people from returning home.

“The freedom with which the Dozos now operate indicates that their actions are tolerated or even instigated at the request of the FCRI,” said AI’s Gaëtan Mootoo.

“President Ouattara and Prime Minister Guillaume Soro must work hard to create a security force that is impartial and who can protect all Ivorian citizens regardless of their ethnic group,” said Mootoo.

President Ouattara has struggled with implementing reconciliatory measures, and is in the difficult position of undoing the effects of a dictatorship.

The UN has extended its security mandate in the country for another year.

•Indicators: As a dictatorship ends, it’s possible that the new leader may be forced to replicate autocratic measures in order to restore peace. However,
• press freedom and
•political representivity should not be hampered. Gbagbo’s former regime has left Cote d’Ivoire struggling to deal with the
•issue of succession, always the mark of a former dictatorship.

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