All may not be well with Ivory Coast, a country which seemed to be attaining political stability as a report by UN experts has said that warlord military commanders in Ivory Coast are making hundreds of millions of dollars by plundering the country’s exports of cocoa and other resources.
Forces Nouvelles militia leaders who took the side of President Alassane Ouattara in his showdown with Laurent Gbagbo in 2011 are part of a “military-economic network” taking advantage of “rampant” smuggling and parallel tax networks, the report said, adding that the former rebel leaders have been integrated into the national army “without the commanders having abandoned their warlord-style predatory economic activities, which they have now extended to the entire Ivorian territory,” said the report.
Ivory Coast is the world’s leading cocoa producer, but about 153,000 tonnes out of the 1.47 million tonnes produced in the 2011-2012 season valued at about $400 million (about N64bn) was lost to smugglers, according to government figures quoted by the UN sanctions experts, and much of it went through Ghana, the experts said.
The country also ranks as the world’s second biggest producer of cashew nuts. A third of the country’s 450,000 tonnes of cashew nuts, worth about $130 million (N20.6bn), was lost to the smugglers, added the report. Ivory Coast is the world’s second biggest producer of the nuts.
It didn’t end there, the experts said, as they also raised doubts about trade in gold, diamonds, cotton, timber and other resources in the report for the UN Security Council, which renewed the mandate of the experts last week.
The experts submitted that the balance of power after the 2011 crisis and the security situation in the West African nation was “precarious.”
UN and French forces helped dislodge then-president Gbagbo when he refused to relinquish power after a presidential election won by Ouattara. Gbagbo is now at the International Criminal Court in The Hague on charges of crimes against humanity during the unrest.
As the Ivorian economy rapidly rebounded from the crisis in 2012, “the political and economic networks linked to former Forces Nouvelles combatants strengthened, with former zone commanders with a notorious record of violations of international humanitarian law” drafted into the national army.
The report named Martin Kouakou Fofie, who has been on a UN sanctions list since 2006, Ouattara Issiaka, Herve Toure, Kone Zakaria and Cherif Ousmane as all being in “strategic command posts” with significant amounts of weapons.
Ivory Coast is under an international arms embargo, but the report said the experts “cannot exclude the prospect that these commanders remain actively interested in acquiring weapons and related materiel.”
The experts said they had information that weapons had moved from Ivory Coast to neighbouring Mali and Niger.
Their report also said that while Forces Nouvelles dominates the military, Liberian mercenaries and Gbagbo activists in Ghana still “remain a security threat”.
The experts said they were investigating “connections between supporters of the previous regime and the financing of insurgent activity using profits from sales of diamonds and gold.”
They called on the Ivory Coast government to “take all measures necessary to curb the large-scale smuggling of cocoa, cashew nuts, cotton, timber, gold and all commodities illegally exiting or entering the country, in particular across the borders with Ghana.”`