Saturday 24 March 2012

The UN. lies, killings and mafia activities

UN says Ivory Coast forces accused of killings, are acting alone, not under government orders...Yet these forces are the official army of the international recognized " president's government... do you smell something fishy ?  Well the mafia has always been using fish to cover up her criminal activities in the past...So the only reason the UN would declare such a stupid lie is that she's the Ivory Coast government or real Army... Why ? Well we remember the previous declaration of the UN "

UN blames spate of killings on Ouattara forces

UN blames spate of killings on Ouattara forces

The UN on Thursday released a report documenting 26 extrajudicial killings in the Ivory Coast in the past four weeks. The report blamed most of the killings on members of the republican armed forces loyal to President Alassane Ouattara.

By News Wires (text)
AFP - There were 26 extrajudicial killings in the Ivory Coast in the past four weeks, mostly blamed on fighters who helped President Alassane Ouattara take power, the UN mission reported Thursday.
The killings were reported between July 11 and August 10, the rights representative for the UN's Ivory Coast mission, Guillaume Ngefa, said at a press conference.
There were "26 cases of extrajudicial execution, summary or arbitrary" and "85 cases of arbitrary arrest and illegal detention," he said.
Most often implicated in the "numerous violations of human rights" being recorded were men whom locals and victims identified as belonging to the Republican Forces of Ivory Coast (FRCI), he said.

And we have a;; this as proof that these forces are under  the so called  international recognized president Ouattara
  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Military_of_C%C3%B4te_d%27Ivoire

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/picturegalleries/worldnews/8432639/Ivory-Coast-pro-Ouattara-soldiers-prepare-for-final-assault-on-Gbagbo-bunker.html

 http://english.souslemanguier.com/nouvelles/news.asp?id=10&sourceid=4&pays=152&idnews=31071
In March of this year, prior to Mr Gbagbo's arrest, Mr Ouattara merged the military forces that supported him into a new army under his command, the Republican Forces of Ivory Coast (FRCI).
The leader of many of the men who joined the FRCI was Mr Ouattara's Prime Minister, Guillaume Soro.
So from the moment the formation of the FRCI was announced in a speech by Mr Ouattara on 8 March, there was a direct line of command - or, at least, a direct line of responsibility - from Mr Ouattara, through Mr Soro, to the armed forces that overthrew Mr Gbagbo.
 By Mark Doyle
BBC International Development Correspondent
 25 May 2011 11 00:44

Ouattara signs decree to unify Cote d'Ivoire's security forces


Alassane Ouattara, declared as the winner of last year's presidential election and recognized as Cote d'Ivoire's legitimate president by the international community, on Thursday signed a decree to unify "the national armed forces and the New Forces (ex-rebels) under the name 'Cote d'Ivoire's Republican Forces (FRCI)'."







 So then reading the recent declaration on the UN tt seems like we are getting in the depth of the birth of the first Illuminati government in Africa.

As the same UN says the Republican Forces of Ivory Coast (FRCI), which has her blessings as the recognized official army of Ivory Coast and currently receiving the  French government support and training  is not acting under the government order.


UN says Ivory Coast forces accused of killings, are acting alone, not under government orders



ABIDJAN, Ivory Coast — Ivory Coast security forces accused of killings, arbitrary arrests and other human rights violations are acting alone and not under government orders, a United Nations official said Wednesday, as the West African nation struggles to impose order after months of violence and chaos.
Doudou Diene, the U.N.’s independent expert on human rights in Ivory Coast, said in Wednesday’s report that most of the violations in the country result “less from the state’s complicity than from its failure to prevent them, because of the difficulty of reforming the security sector.”



Officials in Ivory Coast did not respond to requests for comment Wednesday. An Ivorian official said earlier this month that the government was aware of lawlessness in the country and was attempting to curb it, but that it was “difficult” because of the amount of illegal weapons in circulation.
Diene implicated government forces in 27 cases of torture and inhuman and degrading treatment, 22 cases of arbitrary arrest and 9 killings during the last months of 2011. His report was based on two visits to Ivory Coast in November and December. U.N. spokesman Martin Seutcheu in Geneva said Diene presented the report to the Human Rights Council in Geneva Wednesday morning.
Ivory Coast was plunged into chaos after former strongman Laurent Gbagbo refused to step down after losing a 2010 election to elected President Alassane Ouattara. The U.N. says at least 3,000 people were killed in the ensuing violence. Gbagbo was sent to the International Criminal Court last year to face charges of murder, rape and other crimes allegedly committed by his supporters.
Ivory Coast’s new military, the Republican Forces of Ivory Coast, is composed mostly of rebel soldiers who helped bring Ouattara to power last spring.
The government has attempted to merge the former rebels, who hail from the predominantly Muslim north, with members of former military. Those two armed groups fought each other during the 2011 violence, and have a long history of political and ethnic division.
Diene cited the government’s difficulties in merging the forces.
“The promised creation of a national army reflecting the country’s ethnic, religious and cultural diversity has been delayed because those who participated in the rebellion have differing backgrounds and have not all received standard military training,” he reported.
Human rights groups questioned some aspects of the U.N. report.
A researcher at Human Rights Watch said the report “shies away” from criticism.
“As he continues his vital work after a decade of grave human rights abuses, the Independent Expert should look more deeply at the role of the Republican Forces in ongoing abuses and at the one-sided justice that threatens to further political-ethnic tensions,” Matt Wells said.
The International Crisis Group also said that the violations are still the government’s responsibility.
“I share the view that most violations ... are linked to the lack of progress in initial steps of security sector reform,” said Gilles Yabi, West Africa Project Director of the International Crisis Group. The violations, he said, “have to do with the indiscipline of (the Republican Forces), lack of clear chain of command and control, and a strong sense of impunity.”
But, he added: “Saying that does not mean that the state does not have a responsibility ... A better control of the (Republican Forces) and strong and visible sanctions of the perpetrators is of course government’s responsibility.”
Diene also said he was “troubled” by reports of attacks against religious buildings and leaders in late 2011.
He reported “some 40 attacks” by members of government forces and unidentified armed men.
“Priests and laypeople were manhandled, humiliated and stripped naked in the attacks, and a number of ceremonial objects and items belonging to the clergy were removed,” he reported. “The recurrence and scale of the attacks, the victims and targets chosen and the modus operandi of these armed men suggest that the acts were carefully planned and orchestrated.”
Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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