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African politics Cote d'Ivoire Highlights Politics Soumanou Salifou September 18, 2020 (Comments off) (451)

HOW WILL A CONTROVERSIAL THIRD TERM SHAPE OUATTARA’S LEGACY—IF HE WINS

Cote d’Ivoire’s president Alassane Ouattara minutes after his inauguration in April 2011

BY PETER SESAY AND LOU SIFA

Côte d’Ivoire, the world leading producer of cocoa and the economic engine of the 8-nation West African Economic and Monetary Union, has for decades been the shining star in West Africa’s generally-cloudy economic sky, a magnet that has attracted citizens of almost all other African nations in search of a green pasture, as well as western investors. But this important nation of twenty-six million people has also been shaken to its roots by multiple outbreaks of violence since the demise of its founding father, Félix Houphouët-Boigny, in 1994: the bogus, bloody election of Laurent Gbagbo in 2000 that sent hundreds of citizens to their death; the 2002 bloody rebellion which failed to overthrow Gbagbo but claimed hundreds of lives; and the post-election civil war of 2011 that resulted in the loss of 3,000 lives. So, when President Ouattara recently decided to run for a third term, many in this heavily-divided nation that is still hurting from the all-too-fresh wounds fear the return of the old demons—as do foreign observers.

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