E/CN.4/2005/18/Add.3
page 6
military dimension of the situation, the Special Rapporteur was pleased to be able to meet
Brigadier General Abdoul Hafiz, of MINUCI, General Doué Mathias, Chief of Staff of the
Ivorian Armed Forces (FANCI), and his staff, and the commanding officer of the French forces
of Licorne, General Juana.
4.
A preliminary note on the Special Rapporteur’s visit (E/CN.4/2004/18/Add.4) was
submitted to the Commission on Human Rights at its sixtieth session, pending finalization of this
report.
I. GENERAL OVERVIEW
A. Ethno-demographic data
5.
Côte d’Ivoire covers an area of 322,462 square kilometres and has an estimated
population of 15.9 million. This is a State with a highly diverse population,
comprising 66 ethnic groups, which can be classified into 4 major groups: the Akan
(42.1 per cent), the Mande (26.5 per cent), the Gur (17.6 per cent) and the Krou (11 per cent).
There is also a high level of immigration, with government estimates putting the foreign
population - originating chiefly in the neighbouring countries of Burkina Faso, Mali, Guinea,
Ghana and Liberia - at more than 3 million in 1988, or nearly 26 per cent of the total population.1
Côte d’Ivoire is West Africa’s leading country for immigration and its pivotal economic
position, its ethnic and cultural diversity and its tradition of immigration make it a veritable
microcosm of the region. This key factor cannot be overlooked either in the assessment of the
ethnic dimension of the crisis, or in the search for a lasting solution.
B. Historical and political background
6.
From 1960, when it gained independence, until 1990, Côte d’Ivoire had a one-party
presidential system. As President of the National Assembly, Henri Konan Bédié succeeded the
country’s first President, Félix Houphouët-Boigny, upon the latter’s death in 1993, in accordance
with the Constitution but in a political context marked by a power struggle that pitted him
against Prime Minister Alassane Dramane Ouattara. President Bédié won the 1995 presidential
elections, which were boycotted by some of the opposition parties, but was subsequently ousted
in 1999 by a military coup that brought General Robert Guéï to power. In October 2000,
Laurent Gbagbo assumed the Presidency following elections in which two of the biggest parties
did not take part, and in a climate of extreme violence. In October 2001, the President organized
a forum for national reconciliation to address the issues that had polarized the Ivorian people,
including the questions of nationality and land ownership.
7.
The current crisis erupted on 19 September 2002, with simultaneous attacks on military
installations in Abidjan, Bouaké and Korhogo, a military operation that was viewed as an
attempted coup d’état supported by foreign elements and countries and which led to widespread
harassment and xenophobic violence against people considered to be “foreigners”. According to
reports, some 20,000 people were made homeless in Abidjan following the destruction of
dwellings, settlements and shanty towns housing many immigrant workers from neighbouring
countries.