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Ivorian ex-leader urges release of 'prisoners of conscience'

By AFP
Africa Gbagbo, left, with Ouattara last week. 'He will do all he can to free them as soon as possible,' Gbagbo said Monday.  By Issouf SANOGO AFPFile
AUG 2, 2021 LISTEN
Gbagbo, left, with Ouattara last week. 'He will do all he can to free them as soon as possible,' Gbagbo said Monday. By Issouf SANOGO (AFP/File)

Former Ivory Coast president Laurent Gbagbo on Monday called for 110 detainees to be released, describing them as political prisoners.

"We are fighting to get them out of there," he told around 100 wives of the prisoners whom he met in the economic capital Abidjan.

"The current goal of my programme is to fight for the release of all prisoners of conscience," he said.

Gbagbo raised the issue during a meeting last week with current President Alasanne Ouattara, the first between the two men since post-election violence in 2010-11 left 3,000 people dead.

"He didn't say no but he didn't say yes. He will do all he can to free them as soon as possible," Gbagbo said Monday.

The crisis was sparked after Gbagbo refused to concede defeat to Ouattara in the 2010 presidential election.

The ensuing conflict was brutal, with both sides accused of atrocities. After Gbagbo was ousted, he was flown to The Hague to face charges of crimes against humanity, of which he was eventually acquitted.

He returned to the former French colony, the world's top cocoa producer, in June with Ouattara's blessing.

Among Gbagbo's list of 110 prisoners are some arrested in the 2010-11 crisis and others picked up during the last presidential campaign last year.

Some of the named prisoners were detained for actions linked to Gbagbo's return to the country in June.

While Gbagbo calls them political prisoners, some on the list were convicted of violent crimes.

General Brunot Dogbot Ble, former head of the republican guard, was jailed for 18 years for the murder of four people, including two French nationals, in April 2021.

"True reconciliation must include the release of these prisoners," said Simone Datte, president of the collective of women and parents of those detained in 2010-11, who took the stage with Gbagbo on Monday.

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