Skip to main content
Amnesty International UK
Log in

Ivory Coast: Hundreds tortured and illegally detained

Amnesty International returned from a month-long mission to Ivory Coast with reports of torture, sexual abuse, state-sponsored militia attacks and death in custody from a country still reeling from last year’s presidential power struggle.

More than 200 people to have faced illegal detention and torture include members of former President Laurent Gbagbo’s Front Populaire Ivoirien (Ivorian Popular Front, FPI).

Amnesty International West Africa researcher Gaëtan Mootoo said:

“We met dozens of detainees who told us how they have been tortured by electricity or had molten plastic poured on their bodies, two of them have been sexually abused. Some have been held for many months denied contact with their families and access to lawyers.

“While acknowledging that the Ivoirian government is facing a wave of attacks, we are very worried that the current arrests and repression stem from a willingness of reprisals and revenge.

“More than 18 months after the arrest of Laurent Gbagbo, it’s high time for President Alassane Dramane Ouattara to go beyond promises and put the respect of human rights at the top of his government’s agenda.”

The Amnesty delegation met four detainees at an unrecognised place of detention, the Génie militaire, a military barracks in Abidjan. They had been held incommunicado for more than a month.

Despite tireless requests and efforts to trace relatives in different places of detention, many families have been left with no information and only learnt of their relatives’ whereabouts through Amnesty International.

Among those held in illegal places of detention in Abidjan, some have been charged with endangering the security of the State, others were released without charge or trial. In some cases release followed ransoms being paid to military officers.

One member of Gbagbo’s FPI was arrested in Abidjan on 27 August 2012 after being accused of being a militiaman. He was released two days later after a ransom was provided. He told Amnesty:

“My parents first paid 50 000 CFA (around £60) and then after my release, my jailers went at my house and demanded a higher sum. I told them that I couldn’t pay such an amount and they agreed to receive 20 000 CFA more (approximately £25).”

In another case, a police officer died as a result of torture.

Serge Hervé Kribié was arrested in San Pedro on 21 August 2012 by the Forces Républicaines de Côte d'Ivoire (Republican Forces of Côte d’Ivoire, FRCI, the national army) and interrogated about recent attacks. He was stripped naked, tied to a pole, had water poured on his body and then was subjected to electric shocks. He died a few hours later.

During the mission Amnesty met high ranking officials close to Gbagbo detained in four towns in the centre and the north of the country including his wife Simone who is held in the town of Odienné, his son Michel, held in Bouna plus key figures from the former administration held in Boundiali and Korhogo.

All are facing a number of charges including crimes against State security and murder.  

Gaëtan Mootoo added:

“Some of them told us that despite the fact that they have been held since April 2011, they only saw an investigating judge twice for less than a few hours.”

One of the judges involved in these cases told Amnesty said that due to the confidentiality of investigations he couldn’t give any information on the files but that he would end his enquiry before the end of the year.

The Amnesty delegation also went to Duekoué and the neighbouring villages in the west of the country where mass graves were recently discovered. They spoke with a number of displaced people who lived in a camp in Nahibly who been attacked by Dozos (traditional hunters who are a state-sponsored militia) and FRCI members in July 2012 as a reprisal for the death of four people.

The delegation collected credible accounts of numerous people being arbitrarily detained, “disappeared” and extrajudicially executed in the aftermath of the attack. The attack and violations occurred despite the fact that peacekeeping soldiers of the United Nations Operation in Ivory Coast (UNOCI) were stationed outside the camp and UN police were posted inside the camp.

Notes to the Editor

Laurent Gbagbo was president of Ivory Coast from 2000 to 2010 when he was forced from power after a disputed election escalated into a violent standoff.  After a four-month battle that resulted in more than 3,000 deaths, Gbagbo was arrested in April 2011 and was subsequently turned over to the International Criminal Court in The Hague on charges relating to post-election violence.

ENDS
Amnesty International UK media information
Eulette Ewart, 020 7033 1552, eulette.ewart@amnesty.org.uk
Out of hours: 07721 398984, www.amnesty.org.uk
Follow us on Twitter: @Newsfromamnesty
Follow our blog: https://blogs.amnesty.org.uk/pressblog






 

View latest press releases