Additional
Reporting By Ali Al Shab, IOL Ivory Coast Correspondent
LOME,
November 23 (News Agencies) - After weeks of discussions and
negotiations, an agreement was reached in Lome between the Ivory Coast
government and the northern military opposition, the Ivory Coast
Patriotic Movement.
The
discussions were held under the mediation of Togo’s President
Gnassingbe Eyadema. According to the agreement, both sides will respect
a ceasefire and will return to the negotiation table in order to solve
the national problems.
Both
sides have also agreed to cooperate with the African communication
committee in order to end the internal fighting and to establish a unity
on the ground.
The
agreement also agrees to the spread of an African peacekeeping force to
monitor the ceasefire and the implementation of the agreed upon accord.
Meanwhile, the government also pledged to respect freedom of the press
and to provide the media with the facilitations to project the true
picture of what is happening in the country.
According
to Agence France-Presse (AFP), the Ivory Coast rebels have said they
want a "serious" peace accord to end two months of conflict
but accused the government of preparing for new fighting.
"The
most important thing for the Ivory Coast Patriotic Movement is that we
do not end up with a deal that is banal, we want a serious accord that
will be implemented," Guillaume Soro, the secretary-general of the
MPCI, said in Lome on Friday night.
He
was speaking after meeting for several hours with the mediator in the
Ivory Coast crisis, Eyadema, and the secretary general of the African
Union, Amara Essy, AFP reported.
"The
MPCI believes in the talks in Lome and we hope that it will lead to
lasting peace, but each side needs to make sure that out on the ground
they behave in a way that will not jeopardize the talks," he added.
"Since
yesterday our chief of staff has repeatedly told us that the government
was moving troops around, even provoking our men. We will try to keep
faith in these talks, but we are not surprised by what we see out
there," he told journalists.
There
was persistent talk on Friday of renewed fighting between the military
and the rebels, army mutineers who took up arms against President
Laurent Gbagbo on September 19 and now control half the country.
Witnesses
told AFP that they saw men and materiel being moved around near the
frontline towns in Ivory Coast.
The
two sides signed a ceasefire on October 17, which is being monitored by
French troops, and began peace talks in Lome two weeks later.
However,
the negotiations soon deadlocked as the rebels demanded Gbagbo quit and
he insisted they disarm.
Eyadema
met with the rebels and government representatives on Friday night and
warned that "renewed fighting or an attempt to find a military
solution to this crisis will be a catastrophe."
"What
is happening in Ivory Coast today has grave consequences for the rest of
the region. Other countries are suffering as a result of it,"
Eyadema's spokesman said he had told delegates from the two sides and
the secretary general of the African Union at a meeting in Lome.
He
also appealed to the rivals to forgive wrongs on both sides of the
conflict, which began when rebels took up arms against President Laurent
Gbagbo on September 19.
"It
is imperative that you as Ivorians forgive those things you hold against
each other," he said.
Eyadema
spoke as fear mounted on Friday that renewed fighting would break out
between the two sides, who signed a ceasefire on October 17.
The
mediator on Thursday tabled new proposals for a peace accord but sources
close to the talks said the rebels were considering to reject the plan
because it did not satisfy their principal demands.
Meanwhile,
human rights organizations in crisis-torn Ivory Coast said on Saturday
they were concerned about the activities of "death squads" who
have killed several dozen people in the country's economic capital
Abidjan.
The
Ivory Coast government and rebels who control the northern half of the
country signed a truce on October 17, but in spite of this and a
dusk-to-dawn curfew abductions and murders continue in Abidjan.
"The
growing insecurity in Abidjan is due to the death squads, unknown people
who are sowing terror. It is like we are all living under a death
sentence, it is very worrying," Martin Bléou, the president of the
Ivorian League for Human Rights (LIDHO), told AFP.
LIDHO
was trying to gather testimony from as many witnesses as possible
because it believed "there are violations of human rights
everywhere," he added.
The
Ivorian Movement for Human Rights (MIDH) said it, too, believed the
spate of killings was the work of death squads.
"There
are death squads, we are sure of that, and their mission is to kill
people, not to ask questions. They are not controlled by the normal
military hierachy," Ibrahima Doumbia, the vice-president of the
IMHR told AFP.
"We
have counted 50 people who have been shot dead in Abidjan, and those are
only the bodies we have seen. There have been certainly been more but we
only list those cases that we see or where we have direct
witnesses," he said.
The
government has denied responsibility for the killings in Abidjan and
hinted that it would be the work of the rebels who took up arms against
President Laurent Gbagbo on September 19, plunging Ivory Coast into its
worst post-independence crisis.
It
said "people in camouflage fatigues" who have
"infiltrated" the city and other areas that are held by the
Ivorian army, were to blame for the killings.
On
the first day of the uprising Ivory Coast's military leader Robert Guei
was gunned down along with his wife.
In
early November opposition politician Emile Tehe and the brother of one
of the rebel's Benoit Dacoury-Tabley were shot dead, while this week a
prominent businessman was gunned down in Abidjan