A woman cheers during a rally in support for Ivory Coast’s President Alassane Ouattara in Abidjan yesterday.


AFP/Abidjan



The ruling coalition in Ivory Coast yesterday nominated incumbent President Alassane Ouattara for re-election in October’s presidential poll as the country seeks to move on from years of political turmoil.
Ouattara’s official nomination was announced by former Ivorian head of state Henri Konan Bedie, with Gabon’s President Ali Bongo Ondimba also attending a grand ceremony held in the country’s biggest stadium in Abidjan.
The 73-year-old Ouattara, decked out in a white hat and shirt, made a grand entrance into the 35,000-seat stadium riding in a convertible.
He was greeted by the crowd shouting “ADO president!” - a reference to his initials as Alassane Dramane Ouattara.
The Ivorian leader had won the backing of his Rally of Republicans (RDR) party at a congress in March. Its ally the Democratic Party decided not to field its own candidate to help ensure Ouattara’s victory
Faced with a divided opposition, the former vice-president of the International Monetary Fund is the favourite in the presidential race.
Ouattara took office in 2011 after a bloody post-election crisis sparked by former president Laurent Gbagbo’s refusal to hand over power, claiming electoral fraud in the 2010 presidential vote. More than 3,000 people lost their lives in the ensuing unrest.
“I found a country in ruins, which needed to be rebuilt,” Outtara told AFP in a 2013 interview. “I made it clear that I am not sure how to finish this work in the time I have left and I will probably seek a second term.”
Following a decade of political and military crisis, the economy in the west African nation, the world’s largest cocoa producer, expanded by nine% between 2012 and 2014, with strong investment in the public sector.
Ouattara has pledged to maintain similar levels of growth until 2020. But his critics say that the fruits of development have not been well distributed among the population of around 20mn people.
Ouattara also claims credit for restoring calm in the former French colony, although opposition figures and civil society activists argue that despite the creation of a truth and reconciliation committee to help heal the wounds of conflict, the results have not been significant enough.