Pascal Affi N’Guessan charged with creating a rival
government after President Alassane Ouattara won third term
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Pascal Affi N’Guessan served as Ivory Coast’s prime minister from 2000 to 2003. Photograph: Issouf Sanogo/AFP/Getty Images |
The Ivorian opposition leader and former prime minister Pascal Affi N’Guessan has been placed under arrest for creating a rival government after President Alassane Ouattara’s election victory, his wife and a spokeswoman have said.
Prosecutors in Ivory Coast are pursuing terrorism charges
against more than a dozen opposition leaders who boycotted the 31 October vote
in which Ouattara won a third
term in office and announced they were creating a transitional
council.
The standoff has raised fears of protracted instability in
the world’s top cocoa producer, whose disputed 2010 presidential election led
to a brief civil war. More than 40 people have died in clashes before and since
the latest vote.
N’Guessan was arrested overnight after the public prosecutor
confirmed on Friday that he was being sought by the police, his wife, Angeline
Kili, told Reuters.
“I confirm that my husband was arrested during the night,
but I don’t know where he is right now,” she said.
Geneviève Goëtzinger, a spokeswoman for N’Guessan, said on
Twitter he was arrested in the south-eastern town of Akoupé while en route to
his home town, Bongouanou.
The police were not immediately available for comment.
N’Guessan served as prime minister from 2000-2003 under
President Laurent Gbagbo, whose refusal to concede defeat to Ouattara after the
2010 election led to a civil war that
killed an estimated 3,000 people.
The opposition claims Ouattara has violated the constitution
by seeking a third term. Ouattara says approval of a new constitution in 2016
restarted his mandate and allowed him to run again.
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