Polls open in Cote d’Ivoire

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Many Ivorians hope presidential election will usher in new era of peace and prosperity, but fear of violence also brews.
 
President Laurent Gbagbo, who is running for re-election, has been in office since 2000 [Reuters]

Residents of Cote d’Ivoire have begun voting in the country’s first presidential election in 10 years, just one month after a contentious 5.7-million-person voter list was approved by the government.
President Laurent Gbagbo, who was elected to a five-year term in 2000 after a coup unseated his predecessor, is facing 13 challengers.
Gbagbo’s opponents personify some of the most sensitive issues facing the country: One of them, Henri Konan Bedie, is the man who lost his job in the 1999 coup that set off fighting and was only resolved in 2007; another, Alassane Ouattara, was excluded from elections in 1995 and 2000 because of allegations that he was not actually an Ivorian citizen – a hugely controversial issue in the country.
‘New era’

As political campaigns wrapped up ahead of the poll, supporters held massive rallies for candidates in the main city of Abidjan as people celebrated the vote that has been postponed six times in the last five years.
Many Ivorians hope the election will help usher in a new era that will ensure peace and bring prosperity to a country that has seen years of civil war, numerous political coups and extreme poverty.
Gbagbo, a member of the Ivorian Popular Front party, dissolved the government and election commission in February amid allegations that hundreds of thousands of foreigners had been included on the voter lists. The issue of who among Cote d’Ivoire’s 20 million residents is a true citizen has been a source of conflict since the 1960s, when the newly independent and relatively stable cocoa-producing nation began attracting masses of foreign workers.
Bedie, president from 1993 until his ouster, has been a strong proponent of the concept of Ivorian-ness and was the one who banned Ouattara in 1995. Ouattara has been accused of having one parent from Burkina Faso, but newly amended Ivorian laws allow residents with only one Ivorian parent to claim citizenship.
Young-jin Choi, the UN mission chief in Cote d’Ivoire, told journalists that the country “is at a historic turning point in the peace process”.
“It shows the will of the Ivorian people and their leaders to find a definitive solution to this crisis,” he said.
Fears of violence

Many residents worry that tensions heightened by what is expected to be a close presidential race will erupt into serious violence between the political factions or their supporters. During the last presidential election, gangs of machete-wielding youth roamed the streets to enforce order.
Al Jazeera’s Yvonne Ndege, reporting from Abidjan, said residents are keen to see the results but concerned that there could be violence if Gbagbo loses.
Gbagbo said he is less concerned about winning than with how people will react to the election results.
“I was never worried for the electoral campaign. I am not worried for the vote, but as to how the party and the supporters will react to the results announcement. That’s what’s worrying me,” Gbagbo said.
Markets in Abidjan were crammed in the run-up to the poll as many people stockpiled food out of fear that unrest could come soon.
“The market is crammed since Friday. Everyone is terrified, people are coming to buy up everything to stock it in their homes,” Fanny Konate, a local resident, said.
The United Nations has sent an extra 500 peacekeepers to Cote d’Ivoire to beef up security before the election, bringing the number of UN troops in the country to 8,000.
Yet many are hopeful that the poll is also the country’s best chance for peace.
“If things heat up we’ll drink water. But I know that it won’t heat up because we are waiting for this peace for a long time and today the peace is in front of us and we are close to [having] peace here,” Cecile Moboi, a local resident, said.


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