Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

Skip to comments.

Ivory Coast Rebels Threaten France with Attack
Reuters | Mon December 23, 2002 10:38 AM ET

Posted on 12/23/2002 9:26:06 AM PST by Sparta

ABIDJAN (Reuters) - Ivory Coast's three rebel factions threw down the gauntlet to France on Monday saying if there were any attacks by troops from the former colonial ruler on rebel positions they would launch an all-out offensive. The rebel groups met in Bouake, the stronghold of the main faction Patriotic Movement of Ivory Coast (MPCI), on Monday to discuss forming an alliance two days after French troops blasted three rebel pickup trucks attacking a town in the west.

In a joint statement, the MPCI, the Ivorian Popular Movement of the Far West (MPIGO) and the Movement for Peace and Justice (MJP) reiterated their desire for President Laurent Gbagbo to quit and for transparent elections with international monitors.

"The MPIGO, the MPCI and the MJP declare that from today any French military attack on one of their positions will be considered a 'declaration of war'," the groups said. "The MPCI, the MPIGO and the MJP will then launch a joint attack on all fronts."

France said on Sunday its soldiers would stay in Ivory Coast as long as was necessary to negotiate a peaceful end to the crisis, which has torn apart the region's economic hub and a cornerstone of French influence in Africa.


TOPICS: Breaking News; Foreign Affairs; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS:
Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first previous 1-2021-4041-58 last
To: Chad Fairbanks
LOL

A dare I won't take. I posted before I read the legionaires were involved.

Short story . . . a hundred years ago when I was going through basic training, a Legionaire gave us a short class on Survival Training. That guy was the meanest, toughest hombre ever to walk the face of the earth. I think about him often when I watch Rambo. He looked like that, though not so muscle-bound. He had scars on scars and no one questioned his pedigree while taking his class.

41 posted on 12/23/2002 10:55:50 AM PST by geedee
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 36 | View Replies]

To: csvset
=)
42 posted on 12/23/2002 10:56:30 AM PST by PokeyJoe
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 37 | View Replies]

To: geedee
LOL.... he couldn't have looked any meaner if he had one eye... LOL
43 posted on 12/23/2002 10:57:24 AM PST by Chad Fairbanks
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 41 | View Replies]

To: philosofy123
The Ivory Coast trouble is instigated by guess whom? The religion of peace (Islamists)! Our media failed to mention that Qaddafi’s money, and Iranian Moslem infiltrators are behind the violence. It is almost a guarantee; every time there is trouble around the world, you can be damn sure the Moslems are causing it! The question here is: Why the media failed to tell us that Moslems are behind the hostilities?

This just needed a two-fer post.

44 posted on 12/23/2002 11:03:57 AM PST by Digger
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 29 | View Replies]

To: csvset
The FFL is a force worthy of respect. And in all fairness, there were admirable French resistance fighters in WWII, notwithstanding the accomodationalist mindset of may Frenchmen.
45 posted on 12/23/2002 11:57:32 AM PST by Larry Lucido
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 37 | View Replies]

To: Carry_Okie
They may be fascists in fact, but their ideology smacks of Marxism

Ideology is the key term here. Islam's origins are ideological and it continues to be so.

46 posted on 12/23/2002 12:03:28 PM PST by eleni121
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 9 | View Replies]

To: philosofy123
Do you have more information regarding foreign support for the Ivory Coast rebels? Countries, kinds of arms, advisers, "volunteers", etc?
47 posted on 12/23/2002 12:49:14 PM PST by Jacob Kell
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 29 | View Replies]

To: VOA
I wonder how the media manages to keep it somewhat a secret that the religion of peace is involved.
48 posted on 12/23/2002 1:08:23 PM PST by knighthawk
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 32 | View Replies]

To: Prodigal Son
What the Foreign Legion thinks of the French Regular Army:
"When, a French Soldier goes into hospital, it is to have himself sent home. With an African Tilailleur, it is to be healed. With a Legionnaire, it is to die".
(John Robert Young)
One of the Legion's big holidays is Camerone Day
49 posted on 12/23/2002 3:04:20 PM PST by SauronOfMordor
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 11 | View Replies]

To: knighthawk
You asked this question: I wonder how the media manages to keep it somewhat a secret that the religion of peace is involved.

Reuter's major owner is an Opecker Prince. He will allow Reuter's to use the word terrorist or terrorists in any story dealing with Islamokazi terrorism.

The rest of the lelf wing/maggot infested media is in bed with the Opecker Princes and the Murdering Islamofascists in charge of Iraq, Iran, Syria and Lybia. These Mediots have been doing this since Jimmy Carter was president.

50 posted on 12/23/2002 3:16:48 PM PST by Grampa Dave
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 48 | View Replies]

To: knighthawk
I wonder how the media manages to keep it somewhat a secret that the religion of peace is involved.

There are some in this forum who contend that it is out of ignorance that this sort
of omission occurs.

While I used to be willing to consider that possibility...I can't do it anymore.
This goes along the lines of "fool me once, shame on you...fool me twice, shame on me".
And I'm now convinced that the mainstream media in the USA (and some in Western Europe+U.K.)
either by training and/or sentiment...just...can't...bring themselves to use the words "Muslim" or "Islamic" until
an incident is so reported on the Internet or an outlet like FOX News...that they must
report it in order to not be obviously shills for radical Islam.


The Ivory Coast case really got me on this topic.
FOR WEEKS...I read reports in The Los Angeles Times and listened to evening news reports
on ABC, CBS, NBC, etc...and the report is always that "rebels from the North are on the attack".

Eventually, slowly, I came to my senses. The media ALWAYS attaches some sort of adjective
to rebel forces...they are either "Marxist", "Maoist", "Socialist", "Shining Path", etc.
Reports usually tell you at least a BIT about their political orientation,
in addition to the fact that they are "rebels".

Well, finally, I read a buried report of about three paragaphs in the Los Angeles Times that
let it slip...the rebels in the north of The Ivory Coast are Muslims.


So, I now have the general policy when some group of "rebels" or "insurgents"
or "freedom fighters" are mentioned in the mainstream media...but their political philosophy
doesn't get even a one line mention...
...it's a cinch that we're talking about those proponents of The Religion Of Peace...
Muslims/Islamicists.

(...and I say that with apologies in advance to the sane Muslims in islands like Turkey
who are also under attack...)
51 posted on 12/23/2002 4:34:25 PM PST by VOA
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 48 | View Replies]

To: Grampa Dave
These Mediots have been doing this since Jimmy Carter was president.

Mediots...I like that...and will use it freely in the future!!!

My moment of awakening was the Randy Weaver case.
As much as I am repelled by Mr. Weaver's philosophy on race...I was STUNNED when
some of the truth of the Ruby Ridge situation slowly emerged.

The beginning was hearing reports in the media about the Weavers' "bunker" in the
remote area of Idaho....
when I saw the "bunker" on NBC DateLine, I laughed out loud (before I started getting angry).
It was a shack that I would be loath to use as shelter during an average
winter in Oklahoma.

But I guess I'm a slow learner.
It took me a few weeks to really sniff out the Muslim angle in The Ivory Coast.

As the old German said:
"Too soon vee get old, too late vee get smart"
52 posted on 12/23/2002 4:41:45 PM PST by VOA
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 50 | View Replies]

To: VOA
Don't bang yourself too hard!

I woke up with the NY Slimes, Times and Newsweak during Ronald Reagan's terms and their attempts to slander him and label him as dumb (sound familiar).

Then. during the 1992 elections I gave up on ABCNNBCBS when they refused to address the real problems with the Clintons and lied about how bad our economy was.

The oldest trick the maggot infested mediots have is to spike the real good news for our side and bad news for their side. The next is their big lie pushes like Reagan was dumb, GW is dumb or conservatives are racists.

This brings us back to Reuters and our left wing mediots lying and spiking the reality of the evil side of the Islamofascists and their Islamokazis since the days of Jimmy Carter.

We all learn when we visit Free Republic. We see the real news and then get to read other Freepers input on the history of the news. Then the light goes on over our heads, and we say Wow! I was not aware of that for years.

Happy Holidays!
53 posted on 12/23/2002 5:01:59 PM PST by Grampa Dave
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 52 | View Replies]

To: Sparta
These so-called "rebels" are Islamofascist trash

Anyone trying to kill French people can't be all bad.

54 posted on 12/23/2002 5:12:26 PM PST by xm177e2
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Sparta
Sorry for the long post, and hang in there for the last sentence, where our "Friends" at Islam for Today have the following to say:

Muslims excluded from power in Ivory Coast

Muslims constitute 60% pf the population of this West African state, but lack political clout, reports Omer Bin Abdullah

December 6, 2000

This past November 22nd was a milestone day in Ivory Coast, or Cote d'Ivoire as this Francophonic country is officially called, as major opposition leader Alhassane Dramane Ouattara was cleared to contest the December 10th Parliamentary elections, after having been barred from running for president, in a vote to restore civilian rule.

Ouattara was one of 999 candidates approved by the National Electoral Commission, which evaluated 1,008 applications for the 225 Parliamentary seats.

Ouattara, a Muslim, was barred from running for president in October by the Supreme Court, which said there were questions over whether both his parents were of Ivorian origin as required by a constitution approved by the ousted military junta. Ouattara's Rally of the Republicans welcomed the electoral commission's ruling, lauding its independence.

Ivory Coast, once seen as an island of ‘stability’ within Africa, is now in turmoil as Muslim blood is flowing. In October, groups of Ouattara’s supporters were rounded up, beaten at police stations, and executed. In one such incident, the bodies of at least 50 young men were found in a nature reserve in Abidjan, presumably shot by security forces.

The country, slightly larger than New Mexico, has a 60% Muslim population; however, power has rotated among the Christian Baoule people of central and eastern Ivory Coast, who account for about 22% of the 16 million citizens, since France relinquished its control of the country in August 1960. The religious and ethnic nature of the latest violence exposes an old fault-line, in most West African states, between a mainly Christian coast and a hinterland dominated by Muslims.

Ivory Coast's founding father, President Felix Houphouet-Boigny, ruled with an iron fist from 1960 until his death in 1993. In 1990, he allowed the first multiparty elections in which he was reelected. His handpicked successor, Henri Konan Bedie, another Baoule but far less adept than Houphouet-Boigny, became president in the October 1995 elections after receiving 95.25% of the votes – an election that the opposition, including then soft-spoken Prime Minister Ouattara, boycotted.

Ouattara resigned as prime minister, becoming deputy-managing director of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) in Washington, D.C. However, he said he would return to Ivory Coast and run for the presidency. He left the IMF in early 2000 to stand as a presidential candidate.

Bedie’s government, invoking the idea of “Ivorités” and Ivorianness, argued that his foreign parentage prevented Ouattara from being a suitable candidate for the presidency. Ouattara was then barred by a Supreme Court ruling from running for the presidency on the grounds that he is a foreigner, an assertion that he denies.

“Ado,” as he is affectionately called, is an economist and has spent much of his career at the IMF and the West African Central Bank, with a brief tenure as prime minister between 1990 and 1993 under Houphouet-Boigny.

However, as a northerner Ouattara has been an outsider from the mainstream of Ivorian politics and the target of extraordinary attempts concentrated on his nationality and the origin of his parents to exclude him from power. Ironically, his citizenship saga stems from his former boss, Houphouet-Boigny, who had encouraged large numbers of immigrants from neighboring countries – often of the same ethnic groups found inside Ivory Coast – to come and work on the extensive cocoa and coffee plantations to which the country owed its early economic prosperity.

Houphouet-Boigny advocated a very broad concept of dual nationality that allowed foreign residents the right to vote. He was also a consummate politician, managing to keep ethnic tensions to a minimum while ensuring the concentration of political and economic power within his own ethnic Baoule, mainly Christian, group.

Today, some 40% of Ivory Coast's 16 million inhabitants – the immigrants and their descendants – fall into this category of “circumstantial Ivorians” differentiated from “pure Ivorians,” the so-called original natives.

Bedie’s much-hated policy of “Ivorités” had the effect of marginalizing an estimated 60% of the population, mainly Muslims from the north, who were considered a threat to his bid to be returned to power. It also disqualified Ouattara, his main political rival from running for the presidency, on the grounds of his nationality.

On December 25, 1999, General Robert Guei overthrew Bedie and promised to clean up Ivorian politics. He forgot his pledge and tried to steal the October elections by pursuing the same policy, for the same ends, and targeting the same man – Ouattara. In less than a day, he was forced to flee as thousands of protesters swept onto the streets and placed opposition leader, Laurent Gbagbo, in power.

The change of presidents, however, has not changed the country’s power structure, which continues to exclude Muslims. Gbagbo’s head of the army, General Mathias Doue, is a former member of the Guei junta. Gbagbo's accession triggered a new wave of violence as supporters of Ouattara demanded new elections in which their candidate could stand. The marches turned into ethnic violence and sectarian attacks in which Muslim homes and businesses were targeted.

Gbagbo is an opposition leader of many years' standing. However, in the past year, Alhassane Ouattara has eclipsed him as Ivory Coast's most visible opposition figure. Although nominally a socialist with a background in trade unionism under the government of Houphouet-Boigny, Gbagbo, for years seen as little more than a rabble-rouser off the street, has recently embraced the idea of Ivorité – no less enthusiastically than Bédié and Guei before him. After all, it was the sidelining of Ouattara that enabled Gbagbo to stage a political comeback, and it would not suit him to see Ouattara reestablish himself.

Ouattara insists his ancestry is fully Ivorian, and his lawyers say genetic tests have shown that he is the son of an Ivorian woman – contradicting his opponents who say that Ouattara's mother was from Burkina Faso (formerly Upper Volta). While prime minister, he was an effective economic manager and succeeded in pruning government spending. This earned him praise from international economic bodies but annoyed senior figures in the then ruling party and many civil servants. Some have commented that if competence were the main election issue, Ouattara would romp home.

Political analysts are concerned that after almost 40 years of peace and stability, the former French colony is now in danger of sinking into the religious and ethnic turmoil that has gripped many of its West African neighbors. The country has now had two coups in under a year, and election violence has cost hundreds of lives, mainly that of Muslims.

They point out that Ivory Coast’s GDP per capita was estimated at $1,680 in 1998 along with a healthy 6% growth rate when, by contrast, the corresponding figures for oil-rich Nigeria were only $960 and 1.6%.

This tradition of stability, obtained at the cost of the Muslim majority, caused Ivory Coast to be regarded by Western powers – particularly by France and the United States – as an important regional ally in a notoriously unstable region. Another attraction for the West besides Cote d'Ivoire’s coffee, cocoa beans, and palm oil is its offshore oil and gas discoveries.

The concern for maintaining the status quo among Western powers has been so intense that even France, which had supported Bedie, continued to work with Guei after expressing its disapproval of his violent seizure of power, and there was no sign of a challenge to the general's authority in Washington either.

After the ignominious and hurried departure of General Guei, the ascension of Gbagbo as president of Ivory Coast was trumpeted as a victory for democracy – despite the fact that the October election was not inclusive. And there has been little talk about democracy as the youth who defied bullets to oust Guei now hunt down supporters of Gbagbo's rival, Ouattara.

Regrets being offered by Western observers over Ivory Coast's shattered image as a relatively prosperous and peaceful country do not note that its stability was built on a flawed premise enacted by the country’s former colonial master. The Islam-phobic French empowered the mainly Christian Baoule at the cost of the Muslim majority. Today, the country’s Muslims are determined to reclaim their due.

http://www.islamfortoday.com/ivorycoast.htm

55 posted on 12/23/2002 8:03:26 PM PST by Uncle Miltie
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Brad Cloven
yeah,yeah.

All I see when Muslims take over is hatred for everyone not willing to kowtow to them, beheading of Christians and women, and other brutalities.

Islamaphobia is a survival trait !

56 posted on 12/24/2002 6:05:14 AM PST by hoosierham
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 55 | View Replies]

To: Sparta
Probably should change the title to read "France prepares to surrender to Ivory Coast rebels".
57 posted on 12/24/2002 6:41:00 AM PST by pfflier
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Sparta
Probably should change the title to read "France prepares to surrender to Ivory Coast rebels".
58 posted on 12/24/2002 6:42:01 AM PST by pfflier
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]


Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first previous 1-2021-4041-58 last

Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.

Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

FreeRepublic, LLC, PO BOX 9771, FRESNO, CA 93794
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson