2011年4月15日星期五

Doubt about Gbagbo ally arrest

15 April 2011 last updated at 15: 16 GMT Charles Ble Goude greets the crowd on 5 February 2011 in Abidjan the young patriots leader was under UN sanctions for incitement attacks provided the whereabouts by Charles Blé Goude, an important ally of the deposed Ivory Coast leader Laurent Gbagbo are unclear, after a spokesman drew a declaration he say were arrested.

The BBC's John James says there were many rumors about Mr. Blé Goude.

Mr. Blé Goude, known for his vitriolic talk, thousands of young men mobilized the army to join four-month election in the last days of the dispute.

Many other members of his group of young patriots were given weapons.

Since December, some 1,500 people were killed and forced a million from their homes.

Mr Gbagbo called Mr. Blé Goude his youth Minister after he refused to accept is that he lost November elections and tried, in the Office to remain.

Mr Gbagbo forces was captured on Monday in the presidential residence of President Alassane Ouattara and Mr. Blé Goude was not one taken of which at the same time in custody.

He made attacks against UN personnel in the year 2006 for incitement under UN sanctions.

Pledge allegiance

Mr Ouattara spokesman Patrick Achi had the BBC and French radio said that Mr. Blé Goude was being held in a secure location, without more information.

He later said told AFP: "the first information I was not later confirmed was."

Mr. Blé Goude aide, semi-bi, told the BBC after that, that he did not know of the detention or Mr. Blé Goude was.

The most moderate and undeclared members of the Government of Gbagbo have now pledged loyalty to President Ouattara, says our correspondent in Abidjan.

Others have fled from the country, often to neighbouring Ghana, or diplomatic protection, he says.

Plunge the conflict of the world's largest cocoa producer back into a civil war threatened.

After a deadlock Pro-Ouattara long forces down from swept their northern bases in the main city Abidjan.

Mr Gbagbo put up a final stand in the presidential residence, but additional firepower of UN and French troops the difference made.

Sexual slavery

A new report by the International Rescue Committee aid agency says alarming number of women and girls have been raped, sexually assaulted, beaten and violence, harassed by armed men as they many to neighboring Liberia were fleeing.

The IRC Liz Pender in the Liberian town of Ganta, said that those who report incidents represent a tiny fraction of the victims.

People displaced by fighting in Ivory Coast - 3 April 2011There are concerns about the humanitarian conditions for the thousands of people, who fled

"The types of sexual violence, that we are hearing is devastating," she told Network Africa programme of the BBC.

"It is rape, gang rape, it is, it is sexual slavery - men, which, they keep for a week, exchanged them as 'Women' it with their friends and managing either girls or women to escape or be killed then."

A woman told Ms. Pender as she was forced to watch as several men, her sister took round, which then flogged was raped to death.

Do it say the women she had attacked which side fighters.

This week promised Mr Ouattara, which is recognised by the UN peacekeeping force in the country as the winner of the November survey, a truth and Reconciliation Commission set up.

He said that all parties responsible for atrocities in the conflict Court would be made.

The UN refugee agency says that big reconciliation efforts for those will be needed, in the West of the country fled to return safely home.

It said in a statement that although fighting was ended, ethnic tensions were still high and many people in hiding in the Bush remain.

Some 27,000 people are still reported that in a church in the Western City of Duekoue, where they took protection as Pro-Ouattara on advanced Abidjan forces.


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