Côte d’Ivoire: Is Foreign Intervention Legal? (VIDEO)

Posted on | april 6, 2011 | No Comments

The struggle for power in Côte d’Ivoire may soon reach its conclusion in Abidjan, where The Republican Forces (FRCI) loyal to Alassane Ouattara have started an offensive against the positions controlled by forces of Laurent Gbagbo on Monday April 4. Both men claim rights to the presidency, after a disputed election in November 2010, but Ouattara is internationally recognized to have won.

As the assault began to force the ouster of Gbagbo, the involvement of foreign forces, officially as a measure of protection for civilians, was brought up and debated at length on the web.

Screenshot from video showing bombardment in Abidjan Screenshot from citizen video (below) showing bombardment in Abidjan from a distance (April 4, 2011)

Earlier in the afternoon, Choi Young-jin, special representative of the UN Secretary General in Ivory Coast, told the BBC that United Nations Operation in Cote d’Ivoire (UNOCI) would intervene in Abidjan. He said:

We are planning action, we can no longer condone their [Mr Gbagbo's forces] reckless and mindless attack on civilians and the United Nations blue helmets with heavy artillery.

The Twitter account of the French Presidential Office confirmed:

@Elysée: Conformément à son mandat, l’#ONUCI vient d’engager des actions visant à neutraliser les armes lourdes contre les populations civiles.

(In accordance with its mandate, the UNOCI has just taken actions to neutralise heavy artillery against civilians.)

@Elysée: Le Secrétaire général des Nations Unies a demandé le soutien des forces françaises à ces opérations.

(The UN Secretary General has asked for the support of French forces to these operations.)

@Elysée: Le Président #Sarkozy a répondu positivement à la demande & autorisé les forces françaises à participer aux opérations conduites par l’ONUCI.

(President Sarkozy answered affirmatively to this request and authorised French forces to take part in operations led by the UNOCI.)

Witnessing the intervention

According to @Lord225 on Twitter, the operation began at 5.22 pm GMT:

@Lord225: L’assaut est effectif, 17h22 bombardement de plusieurs positions du camp gbagbo, épaisse fumée dans l’air #civ2010

(The assault is effective, 5.22 pm bombing of several strategic positions of the Gbagbo camp, thick smoke in the air)

Soon after the announcement of the beginning of the operation, Ivorian netizens said they sighted military equipment of the type used by French Special Forces. Israël Yoroba, an Ivorian journalist, currently a correspondent for TV5 Monde in Abidjan, posted on his Twitter account:

Je confirme que les camps d’Akouédo sont en train d’être pillonés par deux hélico. 1 Puma et 1 Mi 24. Faites le savoir au monde entier

(I confirm that Akouédo camps are currently being bombarded by two helicopters, a Puma and a MI 24. Let the whole world know about it)

A puma is one of the standard assault helicopters used by French Special Forces, as this video posted on Dailymotion shows.

Yoroba invited inhabitants of Abidjan to leave their testimonies on his Facebook Page on the current situation:

Pendant que que la force française bombarde à Abidjan, des populations racontent en direct comment elles vivent ces tirs http://lnp.sn/Zwj

(While the French Forces are bombing Abidjan, the population is telling us directly how they are coping with the shootings)

Here are some reactions:

Sedrick Ngotta who is in Abidjan says:

Je confirme c est pas les rebel mais les blancs qui nous pillone oh mon dieu!

(I confirm, it’s not the rebels bombarding us, it’s the white men. Oh My God!)

Peter Zéphirin Wahi in Abidjan confirms:

Bombardements des helicos des forces licornes du camp d’akouédo, et l’onuci vient de tirer sur la residence du Chef de l’Etat à cocody et la Présidence au plateau à partir d’helico.

(Bombings by French forces helicopters on Akouédo camp, and UNOCI has just shot on the Presidential Residence in Cocody, and the Presidential palace in Plateau from an helicopter.)

On YouTube AfricaWeWish posted a video showing what they describe as “the bombardment of the Akouédo camp by UNOCI and French forces”:

MLDoss1 also shared a video shot near the Akouédo camp:

Reactions to foreign involvement

From all over Africa, netizens commented on this international intervention :

On the Facebook Page of “La majorité Présidentielle” (Gbagbo’s political party), which is “liked” by 7,231 individuals, people describe how ready they are to fight for their country.

Vakaba Diaby:

j’ai pu me rendre près d’un camp et j’ai suivi et subi les bombardements, mais ma foi en la victoire de la Côte d’Ivoire ne fait que grandir

(I’ve been able to get very close to the camp, I followed and was subjected to bombardments, but my faith in the victory of Côte d’Ivoire keeps on growing)

Anicet Bidza who lives in France adds:

Nous devons nous mobiliser ici en France pour interpeller l’opinion publique Française!!! Ce qui se passe est extrêmement grave et le silence assourdissant des autres pays Africains est un crime contre la cote d’ivoire!!!

(We must mobilize here in France in order to call the attention of French public opinion!!! What is going on is extremely grave and the deafening silence of the other African countries is a crime against Côte d’Ivoire!!!)<

On the Twitter hashtag #civ2010, dedicated to news on Côte d’Ivoire, some share their doubts on the benefit of this international involvement:

Kaya-Mangan Cissé says:

@freerci: Je suis pour le depart de Gbagbo mais contre l’intervention de la france et de l’ONU.

(I am in favor of the departure of Gbagbo, but I am against intervention of France and UNOCI.)

Is it legal?

Bruno Ben Moubamba, a Gabonese politician, former candidate to the 2009 presidential election in Gabon, wrote on his blog [fr] on April 4, 2011 that Nicolas Sarkozy was committing an act of war in violation of international law. French Armed Forces have been stationed in Côte d’Ivoire as part of a peacekeeping operation called, Operation Unicorn (Opération Licorne) since the beginning of the Ivorian Civil War from 2002-2007. Moubamba writes that two United Nations resolutions recalled the use of heavy artillery on the civilian population by these forces, specifically United Nations Resolution 1726 of November 1, 2006 and Resolution 1975 (PDF) of March 30, 2011.

He concludes that the French government exceeded the mandate of Operation Unicorn by intervening with bombardments in Abidjan:

Il s’agit ni plus, ni moins, de la part de la Présidence de Nicolas Sarkozy, d’UN ACTE GRAVE d’Agression. Cet acte engage à son insu le peuple français

(It is no more no less than a SERIOUS ACT OF AGGRESSION by the administration of Nicolas Sarkozy. This act also commits unwittingly the French citizens.)

AUTHOR: Julie Owono
URL: http://bantupolitics.blogspot.com/
E-MAIL: julieowono33 [at] gmail.com

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