leader Laurent Gbagbo, France said yesterday, after a week of heavy fighting to unseat him.
Forces loyal to rival presidential claimant Alassane Ouattara have been waging an offensive in Abidjan to topple Gbagbo, who has refused to cede power after losing last November’s election to Ouattara, according to results certified by the United Nations.
A United Nations spokesman in Abidjan told Reuters that the United Nations had sent forces into the Cocody neighbourhood, where Gbagbo is believed to be holed up in his heavily defended compound, but did not plan to intervene.
“We have sent a patrol to Cocody and the surrounding area, but it is not to intervene,” UN spokesman Hamadoun Toure told Reuters. “I am not aware that Ouattara has requested our intervention at this stage.”
Earlier, French forces hit military vehicles belonging to troops loyal to Gbagbo during a helicopter-borne mission that rescued Japan’s ambassador to the West African country.
The French went in overnight after Gbagbo soldiers broke into the Japanese residence.
French forces, who have already joined helicopter raids to destroy Gbagbo’s heavy weapons, also struck two pick-up trucks belonging to armed assailants who tried to break into the French ambassador’s residence in the former colony.
The strikes came as Ouattara laid siege to Gbagbo’s own residence after an attempt to extract him from his bunker on Wednesday met with fierce resistance.
A week after Ouattara’s soldiers arrived in the city, bursts of gunfire could be heard coming from Gbagbo’s presidential palace in the Plateau district and also in the upscale Cocody neighbourhood where his residence.
“Right now there is shooting every 30 minutes,” a Cocody resident who only gave his name as Jean-Claude said by phone.
But there was no sign of a major assault by Ouattara’s forces, whose attack on Gbagbo’s personal residence was repelled on Wednesday. Gbagbo is thought to be holed up in the residence, which lies at the heart of the Cocody embassy district.
French Defence Minister Gerard Longuet told the French Senate Gbagbo had around 1 ,000 men, 200 of whom are in his residence.
They include his Republican Guard and youth militias armed with heavy weapons, who pushed back an assault by Ouattara’s men on Wednesday after talks led by the United Nations and France to secure Gbagbo’s departure failed.
A week of fighting for control of the city has left terrified residents scrambling to find food and water, with frequent power cuts and hospitals overwhelmed with wounded.
“Every morning people have to take jerry cans to walk around the neighbourhood and search for water,” Jean-Claude, a resident, said.
“As for food, there is nothing left. People have to queue up in long lines to buy even a single baguette,” he said.
France has taken a leading role in talks to persuade Gbagbo to hand over to Ouattara and end the standoff over the contested election in November. – Reuters

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