Ivory Coast ex-president rejected from electoral roll

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Former Ivory Coast President Laurent Gbagbo gestures as he enters the courtroom of the International Criminal Court in The Hague on January 15, 2019, where judges were expected to issue rulings on requests by Gbagbo and ex-government minister Charles Ble Goude to have their prosecutions thrown out for lack of evidence. – The International Criminal Court on January 15 acquitted former Ivory Coast president Laurent Gbagbo over post-electoral violence in the West African nation in a stunning blow to the war crimes tribunal in The Hague. Judges ordered the immediate release of the 73-year-old deposed strongman, the first head of state to stand trial at the troubled ICC, and his right-hand man Charles Ble Goude. (Photo by Peter Dejong / ANP / AFP) / Netherlands OUT

An appeal by Ivory Coast’s former president Laurent Gbagbo to be reinstated on the election roll has been rejected by the country’s electoral commission, his party said Friday.

Gbagbo filed his appeal on June 8 after being struck from the roll, his African People’s Party – Ivory Coast (PPA-CI) party, a left-wing pan-African group, said in a statement.

He returned to Ivory Coast in June 2021 after being acquitted by the International Criminal Court on human rights charges linked to post-electoral violence in 2011.

But he still faces a 20-year prison sentence in Ivory Coast for an alleged “robbery” of the Central Bank of West African States (BCEAO) in 2011.

This conviction handed down in 2018, while he was imprisoned in The Hague, resulted in the loss of his civic and political rights and therefore his removal from the electoral roll.

The former president considers the removal “a political manoeuvre” aimed at eliminating him from political life and diminishing his party and its supporters from local elections in September, the statement said.

Gbagbo “vigorously refutes” the accusation about stealing funds from the BCEAO, and “intends to fight” the electoral commission’s decision, the statement added.

He claims he was never summoned to trial and was never notified of the judgment that was handed down in his absence.

The political climate has become tense in the country in recent weeks.

Some eight million voters are due to head to the polls on September 2 to elect new municipal and regional leaders ahead of the 2025 presidential election.

AFP

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