International News

Shots heard from inside military camp in I.Coast’s Abidjan

ABIDJAN, (MILLAT+APP/AFP) – Shooting was heard late Friday from inside
the main military camp in Abidjan, Ivory’s Coast’s economic capital, witnesses said Friday, days after a brief mutiny by the armed forces.
“There were shots, bursts of gunfire coming from the barracks. It
stopped and started again,” Mathilde Kouadio, a teacher living nearby, told AFP.
The gunfire coincided with tense talks in Ivory Coast’s second city
of Bouake between the defence minister and rebellious troops.
The revolt, which lasted two days, saw soldiers seize Bouake, firing
shots in the air and terrifying residents, while demanding bonuses, better pay and houses.
The protests spread to other cities, including Abidjan.
A deal to end the mutiny was struck on Sunday, led on the government
side by Defence Minister Alain-Richard Donwahi, who was briefly held by the
mutineers.
The following day, Ivory Coast’s President Alassane Ouattara ordered
major changes in the top security ranks — the armed forces’ chief of staff, the senior commander of the national gendarmerie and the director-general of the police.
Talks on implementing the agreement began in Bouake on Friday, again
with Donwahi, but tension was high.
Rebel troops took up positions on the roads into the town, and on two
occasions fired into the air to disperse demonstrators who protested against
their behaviour.
Bouake, which is home to 1.5 million people, was the cradle of a
rebellion which erupted in 2002 in a failed attempt to oust then president Laurent Gbagbo.
The revolt sliced the former French colony into the rebel-held north
and the government-controlled south and triggered years of unrest.