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President Alasane Ouattara: trouble in military campsPresident Alasane Ouattara: trouble in Abidjan military camp

The mutiny by soldiers in Ivory Coast demanding wage increases and bonuses has spread to Abidjan, the commercial capital..

The shooting started in the second largest city of Boauke and Korhogo this morning,

“Shooting has started in our camp too now,” stated a soldier at the military base in the city, known as “old Akouedo”, which is located in a residential section of the city of nearly 5 million inhabitants.

Heavy gunfire was heard overnight and early on Saturday near military camps in two cities in Ivory Coast, where disgruntled soldiers launched revolts a day earlier over salaries and bonuses, residents and a soldier stated.

Shooting began at around 6 a.m. (0600 GMT) in Bouake. Residents also reported hearing shooting throughout the night at an army base in the northern city of Korhogo.

“The shooting is very heavy right now at the 3rd Battalion. I’m nearby and I hear it like it was right next to us,” Bouake resident Ko Benoit told Reuters by telephone as gunfire could be heard on the line.

Zie Silue, who lives in Korhogo, stated the gunfire there had stopped by the early morning.

“It’s calm now, but residents are being careful. There’s practically no traffic. Shops are closed,” he stated.

Ivory Coast – French-speaking West Africa’s largest economy – emerged from a 2002-11 political crisis, to become one of Africa’s rising economic stars.

However, the years of conflict and a failure to reform its army, thrown together from a mixture of former rebel fighters and government soldiers, have left it with an unruly force hobbled by internal divisions.

Trouble started on Friday when renegade soldiers seized Bouake after taking up positions at key entry points, beginning a standoff with troop reinforcements sent there after word of the revolt reached the army headquarters in the commercial capital Abidjan.

On Saturday, it was not immediately clear what provoked the gunfire in Bouake and Korhogo, but a member of the uprising stated soldiers in Bouake had seen what they considered suspicious movements outside the camp.

“This is gunfire (by the renegades) to discourage them,” he stated.

While the shooting later died down, intermittent bursts of gunfire continued.

A Reuters reporter, who entered Bouake late on Friday and met some of the mutineers, stated they were composed of low-ranking soldiers but also included some demobilised combatants.

Nearly all appeared to be former members of the New Forces rebellion, which had used Bouake as its de facto capital and controlled the northern half of Ivory Coast from 2002 until the country was reunited following a 2011 civil war.

Defence Minister Alain-Richard Donwahi in a statement late on Friday called for calm and stated the government was prepared to listen to the soldiers’ grievances after the uprising spread to other cities including Daloa, Daoukro and Odienne.

Calling the revolt “understandable but deplorable for the image of the country”, he stated he would travel to Bouake on Saturday to speak directly with the mutineers.

By Admin

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