Ivory Coast detains senior opposition official

Ivory Coast detains senior opposition official
The October 25 election in Ivory Coast was largely peaceful but did see some violence, in a country where presidential elections are often synonymous with political tensions. (AFP)
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Ivory Coast detains senior opposition official

Ivory Coast detains senior opposition official
  • Damana Pickass is the chief coordinator of the Common Front
  • The October 25 election was largely peaceful but did see some violence

ABIDJAN: Ivory Coast authorities have detained a senior aide to opposition leader Laurent Gbagbo, accusing him of having called for an uprising ahead of last month’s presidential polls, the prosecutor said on Wednesday.
Damana Pickass was detained near Abidjan on Tuesday, prosecutor Oumar Braman Kone said in a statement.
Pickass is the chief coordinator of the Common Front, which groups the two main opposition parties headed by Gbagbo and former Credit Suisse CEO Tidjane Thiam.
Both Gbagbo and Thiam were barred from standing in October 25 presidential polls that saw 83-year-old President Alassane Outtara secure a fourth term in the world’s top cocoa producer.
The Front had called for demonstrations in the run-up to the election to denounce the exclusion of its candidates, despite the government banning rallies by parties not taking part in the vote.
Another protest is planned for Saturday.
Kone said that political figures including Pickass had “called for a popular uprising and the overthrow of the Republic’s institutions.”
Those calls “resulted in acts of violence that threatened national security,” he added.
Gbagbo’s party denounced the arrest as the “ongoing persecution of the opposition.”
Pickass was “being hunted down,” Sebastien Dano Djedje, executive president of the African People’s Party – Ivory Coast (PPA-CI), one of the two parties making up the Common Front, said on Wednesday.
The October 25 election was largely peaceful but did see some violence, in a country where presidential elections are often synonymous with political tensions.
At least 11 people died in demonstrations before the vote or in clashes on election day. The opposition claims a death toll of 27.
More than 100 people have been sentenced to three years in prison for participating in the demonstrations, according to their lawyers.


Nepal registers 125 parties for post-uprising polls

Updated 2 sec ago

Nepal registers 125 parties for post-uprising polls

Nepal registers 125 parties for post-uprising polls
Katmandu: Nepal’s Election Commission said on Wednesday that 125 political parties had registered to contest the first parliamentary polls since a mass uprising in September ousted the government.
Many are established parties, but some of the movements vying for seats in the March 2026 vote were formed by youth activists who helped launch the anti-corruption protests that shook the country earlier this year.
“We are working with a belief that all political parties and citizens are eager to bring a new leadership to the country through the election,” commission spokesman Narayan Prasad Bhattarai told AFP.
Registration remains open for another two weeks.
The final list, including the exact number of new parties and those associated with youth groups, will be released after the November 18 deadline.
The September protests, triggered by a brief ban on social media, quickly morphed into a nationwide movement against economic hardship and government corruption.
Two days of violent unrest killed at least 73 people, and saw parliament, courts and government buildings set ablaze.
In the aftermath, former chief justice Sushila Karki, 73, was appointed interim prime minister to guide the Himalayan nation until elections.
Nepal’s political future remains uncertain, with deep public distrust of established parties posing a major challenge to holding credible elections.
But Bhattarai insisted the commission was determined to “conduct the election in a peaceful, impartial, and fear-free environment.”
Karki on October 29 held the first talks between political parties and youth representatives since the protests, attended by all major political parties including that of ousted premier KP Sharma Oli.
The unrest further weakened Nepal’s already fragile economy, with the World Bank warning in October that “heightened political and economic uncertainty are expected to cause growth to decline” to 2.1 percent.
The bank estimates a “staggering” 82 percent of Nepal’s workforce is in informal employment, with GDP per capita at $1,447 in 2024.