HTTP://WWW.STOPNATO.ORG.UK ---------------------------[It appears that French troops are intervening in some capacity in the Ivory Coast. From the BBC report, it is possible that the French are intervening to prop-up the rebellion against Gbago's elected government who has fostered relations with Charles Taylor's Liberia. I'm not an expert on Ivorian politics, so I could be wrong, but we should perhaps look into the causes of this intervention? Btw, you will note that the French - in classical colonial style - are intervening also to "save" missionaries!!!]
Monday, 23 September, 2002, 08:42 GMT 09:42 UK
French troops in Ivorian capital
Many residents' houses have been destroyed
French troops have reached the Ivory Coast's capital, Yamoussoukro, as they seek to protect French and other foreign nationals caught up in a coup attempt which began on Thursday.
The convoy of dozens of vehicles left the main Ivorian city of Abidjan late on Sunday, hours after France had flown up to 200 reinforcements, drawn from its other bases in West Africa. France describes the move as a "precautionary measure", and it is thought the troops will set up a forward base to be able to stage evacuations, if necessary, from nearby Bouake, Ivory Coast's second city, which on Monday morning still remained in rebel hands. There are growing concerns for about 200 children - about 150 of whom are sons and daughters of US Baptist missionaries - trapped in the basement of a boarding school in Bouake - a city of some 500,000 people. The national football teams of Senegal, Sierra Leone and Gambia are also trapped in Bouake. The hotel they are holed up in has no water supplies and there is little food left. Ivorian officials say 270 people have been killed and 300 wounded in insurgency so far. The rebels in Bouake and in the northern city of Korhogo appear to have ignored government demands for them to surrender in return for an offer of talks. Abidjan is now quiet, but in Bouake rebel soldiers said on Sunday that they had beaten off a heavy attack by loyalist troops. If you are in the Ivory Coast, click here to e-mail us your experience
No intervention
Some 20,000 French nationals are thought to live in the former French colony.
Ups and downs
Before 1999 - Relative calm and stability
1999 - Coup; General Guei takes power
2000 - Guei flees after rigging elections;
Gbagbo wins controversial elections
2001 - coup attempt fails
2002 Troops mutiny, Guei killed
France has agreements with the Ivory Coast to help restore order if necessary. But the BBC's West Africa correspondent, Paul Welsh, says for now it seems unlikely that they will become directly involved. In Abidjan, a spokesman for the main opposition leader, Alassane Ouattara, said Mr Ouattara's house had been destroyed by government soldiers, but that Mr Ouattara was safe inside the French embassy. French army spokesman Christian Baptiste said: "This violent crisis is an internal affair, and the concern of our political authorities is that our citizens as well as those of the international community don't pay the price." But our correspondent says the reinforcement of the French garrison is also designed to send a message to the rebels that it is time to negotiate.
Olive branch
Following a national address by President Laurent Gbagbo which hinted that the rebels had been aided by a foreign power, hundreds of foreigners' homes in the Abidjan were burned down and thousands of people packed up and took to the road in search of safety. Defence Minister Moise Lida Kouassi told the BBC that the army's only aim was to regain control of territory from rebels. Prime Minister Pascal Affi Nguessan offered an olive branch to rebels in a televised address on Saturday evening.
President Gbagbo accused foreign nations of helping the rebels
Despite earlier threats of "no negotiations" from the president, Mr Nguessan said the government was prepared to examine the grievances of the rebels if they laid down their arms and surrendered the areas they held. Thursday's uprising began with co-ordinated attacks on military installations, government sites, and cabinet ministers' houses in Abidjan and other cities and towns. The man the government has blamed for the uprising - General Robert Guei - who seized power in a 1999 coup - was killed. Foreign news stations, including the BBC, have been taken off the air in Ivory Coast.
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