France's Iraq?
Ivory Coast Loyalists Confront French
World - AP Africa
By PARFAIT KOUASSI, Associated Press Writer
ABIDJAN, Ivory Coast - French armored vehicles took up positions near the home of Ivory Coast's president Monday, and thousands of his supporters marched on the site, fearing an attempt to oust him as France clamped down on violence in its former West African colony.
Fifty armored vehicles moved in around the home of President Laurent Gbagbo in Ivory Coast's commercial capital, Abidjan, presidential spokesman Desire Tagro said.
The French denied surrounding the house or intending to oust Gbagbo, saying the forces were only securing a temporary base at a hotel a couple hundred yards away for foreign evacuations.
Protesters chanted against the French, yelling, "The whites don't like the blacks, but we don't care!" Some signs declares, "Ivory Coast is a sovereign state."
French forces have moved to take control of Abidjan after chaos erupted in this west African nation on Saturday. Ivorian warplanes launched a surprise airstrike that killed nine French peacekeepers and an American civilian aid worker in the north, held by rebels since a 2002 civil war divided the country. The government later called the bombing a mistake.
France hit back within hours, wiping out Ivory Coast's newly built-up air force — two Russian-made Sukhoi jet fighters and at least three helicopter gunships — on the ground.
With armored vehicles and helicopter gunships deployed, France used tear gas and concussion grenades to quell the mobs.
France said it was not intervening to destabilize the country or take sides in the country's civil war, while Gbagbo appealed for calm.
Over the weekend, hard-liners called for loyalists to form a "human shield" around Gbagbo's home, and on Monday state media called on young and old to take to the streets nearby and at the broadcast headquarters.
Six men, faces painted black, forced an AP reporter from his taxi at gunpoint and commandeered the vehicle.
French Embassy spokesman Francois Guenon denied the French troops were targeting Gbagbo, saying, "It is not a question of ousting him, that is very clear."
French armored vehicles rolled through the city after taking control of the international airport and strategic points, including bridges, over the weekend.
After angry government loyalists looted and burned businesses and roamed house-to-house in search of French citizens, residents on Monday assessed the damage to a skyscraper-lined city that once was West Africa's most prosperous — thanks to Ivory Coast's position as the world's top cocoa producer.
"Everything is burned," said one woman, a teacher at a French school that was looted and torched in the anti-French riots. "They have stolen everything they could."
"They even tore out the toilet seat," she said, speaking on condition her name not be used. "The only thing I'm waiting for is for the airport to open, so I can get out of here."
France has about 4,000 peacekeepers in Ivory Coast. The United Nations has about 6,000, manning a buffer zone between rebel north and government south.
On Monday, French military planes returned home the bodies of the nine French forces killed in the bombing, along with 34 wounded soldiers.
In Paris, French Defense Minister Michele Alliot-Marie rejected accounts by some Ivory Coast officials that the bombing was a mistake and urged the reopening of peace talks.
African Union leaders called an emergency session for late Monday on Ivory Coast, the pride of France's former colonial empire.
In South Africa, President Thabo Mbeki was consulting with west African leaders ahead of an emergency trip to Ivory Coast, a foreign affairs spokesman said Monday.
The African Union said Sunday it would send Mbeki to press Ivory Coast to find a political solution.