By Clea Broadhurst
At least one person has
been killed in the first major outbreak of opposition-led violence
which erupted in several towns, after the Constitutional Council
released the official list of the 10 contenders running in the upcoming
presidential elections.
The opposition has called for demonstrations against current
President Alassane Ouattara to address several issues. Some of his
opponents claim he did not meet all of the criteria to run again, such
as the fact that both of his parents were not Ivorian.
However the Constitutional Council president, Mamadou Kone, concluded that he was eligible to run again.
Some have accepted this but point out other issues.
"I can't stand around without doing anything, especially when our
oppostition party is not represented within the electoral commission,"
Monique Gbekia, spokesperson for the organisation LIDER (Democracy and
Liberty for the Republic), told RFI in a phone interview. "The electoral
commission is only made of activists from Ouattara's party. It's
unacceptable; it's unfair.
"The whole eletoral process is stitched up," she added. "We cannot go
to the polls in these conditions. He shouldn't be acting as a president
when he is a candidate, just like us. And candidates can sit down and
find solutions so that the elections can take place in peace ... because
if he enters the race under the current situation, that will exclude
people."
Some 300,000 new people will vote, bringing the total number to just
over 6 million. But Gbekia says that more than 3 million people have
been excluded from voting because when it was time to register, they
were simply unable to do so.
A surge of violence during election times in Cote d'Ivoire often
happens. The country is very politically divided, and conflict has been
ongoing for several decades now. People are still trying to get over the
violence that erupted in 2011.
"A lot of people vote because of their tribal convictions rather than
political ones. That's just how it happens in Africa, and it's a
shame," Herve Gouamene, a lawyer specialised in human rights who has
represented former president Laurent Gbagbo, told RFI.
"Unfortunately, most of the time, elections in Africa are marred by
violence, and most of the time it's because no one trusts anyone.
"There is no trust in the winner of the elections, but nor in those
who are supposed to ensure safety and security, and that's really too
bad. In Cote d'Ivoire, we've had very bad elections with a lot of
violence, and we could've solved the main problems. We should have,
before going to the polls again. It wasn't done and now, we fear even
more dreadful incidents in the future."
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