Agencies/
Would-be Ivory Coast leader Alassane Ouattara’s choice for prime minister, Guillaume Soro (left), shakes hands with Burkina Faso president Blaise Compaore as Burkinabe Foreign Affairs minister Alain Yoda looks on at the Presidential Palace in Ouagadougou yesterday
West African armies are ready to intervene in the

West African nations have threatened to send in troops to dislodge Gbagbo who has refused to step aside after a November 28 presidential election that the election commission says he lost.
“We are ready on the military level. It is up to heads of state to give us instructions,” General Olusegun Petinrin said after Economic Community of West African States (Ecowas) military chiefs wrapped up talks in
The meeting that opened in the capital
“We are now waiting to hear from the heads of state: if they tell us to go to the
Another officer from
The UN has about 9,500 soldiers in
Meanwhile, Ouattara reiterated yesterday that any economic sanctions directed against
Asked in an interview whether he would back broad trade measures including an embargo on its cocoa exports, Ouattara said: “All the measures we back should target those responsible for the situation: Mr Laurent Gbagbo, his government, his entourage ... But I want to spare the large majority of the population.”
The livelihoods of around 700,000 subsistence farmers rely on cocoa in the West African state, the world’s top grower.
The
Ecowas, which suspended the regional economic powerhouse in early December, has threatened the military option should mediation fail to persuade Gbagbo to leave peacefully.
The latest attempt to mediate an end to the crisis ended in failure this week with Kenyan Prime Minister Raila Odinga, an envoy of the African Union, leaving
Odinga was in
He dismissed comments from Gbagbo’s foreign minister that the Kenyan leader was no longer wanted as mediator in
“He did not go there to negotiate with Gbagbo,” Onyango said. “He is AU envoy and whatever Gbagbo’s people say about his mediation does not matter. His rejection does not matter. He is AU envoy.”
“(Odinga’s) mandate is that the AU has decided that Gbagbo has lost,” Onyango said. “He gave him the message. He rejected it because he did not move from his position. The PM made it very clear if the AU position of peaceful resolution failed, force will be used.”
Odinga travelled to neighbouring
He was due to meet Angolan President Jose Eduardo dos
A report from a meeting of Ecowas military chiefs in December talks of the need for Gbagbo to be removed “from power as soon as possible so the legitimate government can be put in place and start its work”.
It outlines an intervention force headed by
“
“The message, however, is that Gbagbo is an unreasonable operator and we need to keep AU unity and possibly consider sanctions,” the diplomat reiterated.
Ouattara has dispatched several officials he has nominated as members of his administration to
Western nations have imposed travel bans and are trying to stem the flow of funds to Gbagbo through sanctions on ports and some banks but he retains the loyalty of the military and controls much of the cocoa sector and state institutions.