Ivory Coast's leader heads ECOWAS

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Ivory Coast’s president was named the new head of West Africa’s regional bloc on Friday at a summit in Abuja, Nigeria’s capital. The summit was dominated by a security crisis in the Sahel that a rights group said could spark chaos in the desert region.

President Alassane Ouattara was “unanimously” chosen to lead the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS), the body’s outgoing chairman, Goodluck Jonathan of Nigeria, said before the close of a two-day meet.

His nomination to head the 15-nation bloc was described as a move aimed at showing support for Ivory Coast, still emerging from a brutal post-election crisis.

“Through this election, you once again show the support … of our organisation to Ivory Coast in its efforts at reconciliation and reconstruction,” said Ouattara, a former International Monetary Fund economist.

One year ago, Ouattara, 70, was largely confined to an Abidjan hotel by his political foe, ex-president Laurent Gbagbo, who had refused to accept defeat after a November 2010 vote.

Gbagbo’s refusal to quit triggered conflict which left around 3,000 people dead before Ouattara took power. Gbagbo is now awaiting trial by the International Criminal Court, accused of crimes against humanity.

After the ECOWAS summit, Ouattara was expected to head to Benin, where African leaders will gather on Saturday for talks on worsening insecurity in the Sahel region that stretches across Africa south of the Sahara.

ECOWAS “strongly condemned” a fresh offensive launched by Tuareg rebels in northern Mali, which the UN refugee agency said has forced more than 44,000 people to flee into neighbouring Burkina Faso, Mauritania and Niger.

At least 60,000 have been displaced within Mali, the International Committee for the Red Cross said Friday.

Global rights watchdog Amnesty International said on Friday the escalating fighting between the Tuareg rebels and the forces of ECOWAS-member Mali could plunge the region “into chaos.”

“This is the worst human rights crisis in northern Mali for 20 years,” said Gaetan Mootoo, Amnesty’s West Africa researcher.

In the summit’s closing statement, ECOWAS called for “an immediate and unconditional cessation of hostilities by the rebels,” and “ordered them to immediately surrender all occupied zones in” Mali.

Tuareg rebels, boosted by the return of those who had been fighting for Moamer Kadhafi in Libya, launched an offensive on January 17 and have attacked several northern towns as they demand autonomy for their nomadic desert tribe.

The summit ordered an urgent meeting of military chiefs from the ECOWAS bloc to review the “emerging security threats” in the Sahel and the Gulf of Guinea, which has been hit by rising piracy.

There has been speculation that some African leaders will also use the weekend meeting in Benin’s economic capital Cotonou to revisit a contested election that saw African Union (AU) commission chief Jean Ping narrowly retain his post.

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At a summit last month, the 54-member AU was deadlocked over ex-South African foreign minister Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma’s bid to claim Ping’s job, a race that exposed divides between geographical regions and French- and English-speaking Africa.

The weekend meeting was called by the AU’s new chairman, Benin’s President Thomas Boni Yayi.

The new ECOWAS chairman,Alassane Dramane Ouattara, known as Ado, was born on January 1, 1942, at Dimbokro in central Ivory Coast but did most of his schooling in Burkina Faso, where he also worked later as an adult, feeding the debate on his identity.

He earned a doctorate in economics in the United States in 1967 and began working the following year for the International Monetary Fund.

In 1983 he was appointed vice governor of the regional Central Bank of West African States (BCEAO).

He was named prime minister in 1990 by the Ivory Coast’s first post-independence president Felix Houphouet-Boigny, a post he kept until Houphouet’s death in 1993.

Considered a candidate for the 1995 presidential race against Henri Konan Bedie, he decided not to take part, judging the process was not transparent.

Fearful Bedie supporters meanwhile developed the nationalist concept of “Ivorian-ness” and tried to prove that Ouattara was of Burkinabe nationality, barring him from standing.

After another stint with the IMF, the well-spoken Ouattara returned to Abidjan in 1999 and was appointed head of the Rally of Republicans, launching himself into the 2000 presidential campaign.

His candidacy was rejected on the grounds of “dubious nationality” and Gbagbo was brought to power.

The next vote, scheduled for 2005, was repeatedly delayed by Gbagbo, partly over issues of nationality. He finally allowed elections in 2010 — only to flatly refuse to accept that he had been beaten by Ouattara.

As some of Gbagbo’s forces deserted him, the now 70-year-old Ouattara — backed as rightful president by the United Nations, United States, European Union and African countries — called on militia and mercenaries in the pay of his rival to join his Republican Forces.

At his inauguration, Ouattara emphasised reconciliation for the strife-hit nation.

Ouattara is married to a Frenchwoman, Dominique Folloroux-Ouattara, and has two children from a first marriage.

.Reported by AFP

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