UN Fears Attacks from Liberia on Ivory Coast

{{Gbagbo refused to acknowledge defeat in an election and UN and French forces helped oust him.

Gbagbo is now before the International Criminal Court in The Hague facing crimes against humanity charges.}}

“Networks affiliated to the former regime aiming to destabilize the government”, “mercenaries” and armed elements on the border were among threats to the Ouattara government listed by the UN.

It also highlighted the “uncontrolled circulation of weapons”, organized crime and tensions between communities.

Gbagbo’s Ivorian Popular Front (FPI) boycotted regional and municipal elections held in March and its contacts with the government are deadlocked.

The Gbagbo party has demanded a general amnesty be declared, including for its detained leader.

Ban called on the government and former ruling party to resume discussions “to pave the way for political reconciliation.”

He also said electoral reforms were needed to make sure elections in 2015 are “fair, inclusive and transparent.”

Ivory Coast is awash with arms left over from a decade of turmoil up to 2011. Tens of thousands of former fighters in rival militias are also a problem for the authorities.

The UN report said that by June about 6,000 former combatants had been disarmed and that the government aimed to demobilize 65,000 in two years.

Ban said improved security and high economic growth had fuelled “optimism that the current path will lead the country to regain its place as an anchor of stability and prosperity” in West Africa.

“Remarkable progress” has been made, but the UN leader cautioned that “more needs to be done to ensure that the period of crises has been left behind.”

Ban recommended that the UN mission of 10,400 troops and police be renewed but said two battalions of peacekeepers could be removed by 2015.

{agencies}

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