Man held For Fake Coup Plot In Cote d'Ivoire
Man Grabbed For Fake Coup Plot In Cote d'Ivoire
Prosper Tao Tsikata - In the grips of BNIThe Bureau of National
Investigations (BNI) has arrested a man for allegedly orchestrating a
fake coup plot by exiled Ivorians in Ghana.
The man, who
masterminded the so-called coup plot, managed to convince the Ivorian
authorities to arrest those purported to have planned the fake coup
against the Ivorian government.
Prosper Tao Tsikata, 52, who
has gained notoriety in advance fee fraud, popularly called “419”, was
arrested by the BNI on July 13, 2012 pursuant to reports citing him for
his involvement in the plot for his selfish and parochial interest.
Prosper was reported to have identified some Ivorian soldiers in Ghana
and introduced himself to them as a retired commissioned officer of the
Ghana Army who now runs a private security company, apparently
impersonating Capt. Kojo Tsikata (retd), a former security boss in
Ghana.
According to Notre Voie, an Ivorian newspaper, an
anonymous French intelligence undercover agent was sent to Ghana to
closely monitor the activities and movements of Ivorian soldiers in
Ghana with the view to exposing possible acts of subversion directed at
the Alhassane Ouattara government.
The newspaper in its issue
dated June 25, 2012 published the story of the unnamed French agent
which revealed that Proper Tsikata was the mastermind of the alleged
coup plot against the Ouattara government which led to the arrest of Col
Kate Gnatoa and Lida Kouassi, both loyalists of the erstwhile Gbagbo
regime, who until then, were in exile in Togo.
Lida Kouassi has been identified as a minister in the former government.
Briefing the Daily Graphic Monday, a Deputy Minister of Information, Mr
Samuel Okudzeto Ablakwa, said Tsikata managed to convince some of the
soldiers that he was a sympathiser of former President Laurent Gbagbo
and that not only was he capable, but interested in helping to topple
the Ouattara government by way of pre-financing its overthrow with the
requisite cash, arms, vehicles and other logistics.
He said while majority of the soldiers contacted were suspicious of the move, others decided to play ball.
Tsikata, according to Mr Ablakwa, proposed the idea of preparing a video recording to serve as a coup introductory declaration.
He said in the video recording, Col. Gnatoa, who read the coup message,
was flanked by six other exiled Ivorian soldiers, all in military
uniform and boots provided by Tsikata.
Mr Ablakwa said
investigations later established that the video recording was done in
Tsikata’s private office near Top Herbal at Haatso in Accra.
According to him, one of the exiled soldiers, identified only as Stone,
took custody of the video clip after an initial disagreement with
Tsikata.
He said Tsikata then travelled to Abidjan and
contacted the Ivorian government, particularly Hamed Bakayoko, the
Ivorian Minister of the Interior, and informed him that some Ivorians
resident in Ghana were preparing to overthrow the Ouattara government.
To carry out his plan of duping the Ivorian government, he said Tsikata
returned to Ghana to inform Gnatoa and his group that he (Tsikata) had
deployed several armed troops in Abidjan for the take-over and also made
arrangement for the video clip to be played on national television in
Abidjan, with the view to causing confusion and chaos to facilitate the
take-over by the Gbagbo loyalists.
Mr Ablakwa said Tsikata also
informed Gnatoa that he (Gnatoa) was to become the next Head of State
if the coup succeeded and advised Gnatoa to release the video clip to
him (Tsikata).
He said Gnatoa subsequently asked Stone to
release the clip to Tsikata while they got ready to travel to Abidjan to
execute the coup plot.
He said after taking possession of the
clip, Tsikata took it to Bakayoko to convince him and the group that his
information about the coup plot was real.
Mr Ablakwa said
Tsikata was then paid $200,000 of the $12 million he demanded from the
Ivorian government for helping it to quell the coup.
According
to him, Tsikata then returned to Ghana to lure Gnatoa to a hideout in
Abidjan where he (Tsikata) later led armed men for Gnatoa’s arrest.
Tsikata is believed to be of Nigerian origin, but has assumed Ghanaian status and operates his 419 business as a Ghanaian.
He is known to be a fraudster who hides behind the alias of Tsikata, a
brand name in Ghana known within political circles to hoodwink
unsuspecting persons, particularly prospective gold buyers, on his way
to fleecing them of large sums of money.
The police in November
2007, arrested Tsikata for allegedly posing as a fake lawyer to defraud
a South African of thousands of dollars.
The Daily Graphic,
which carried the report of his arrest, in its September 27, 2007
edition, indicated that Tsikata posed as Mr Wallace Bruce-Cathline of
Minka-Premo and Co and allegedly defrauded the South African of $4,000,
while his accomplice, identified as Asaagaf Mohammed, collected 25,000
Euros from the victim on the pretext of facilitating the purchase and
processing of gold on his behalf.
And yet we still have the UN, HRW and some medias standing on this fake coup plot to accuse Gbogbo's supporters.
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