President Alassane Ouattara of Côte d'Ivoire
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Côte d'Ivoire President
Alassane Ouattara said on Monday he would push for constitutional reform if he
wins re-election this week to scrap a nationality clause that helped drag his
West African nation into a decade-long crisis. Côte d'Ivoire, the
world's largest cocoa producer, has long been a magnet for immigrants from
neighbouring countries. Ivorian nationality became a burning political issue at
the heart of a 2002-2003 civil war that divided the country in two for eight
years.
Ouattara
himself was barred from seeking the presidency over what opponents said were
his foreign origins before finally winning election in 2010, though his victory
sparked a second brief civil conflict that killed more than 3,000 people.
Reuters report continues:
Heavily
favoured to win a second term in a presidential election on Sunday thanks to a
thriving economy, Ouattara told Reuters he was determined to remove the
nationalist bias from the constitution.
The
current document, ratified in 2000 in the wake of a military coup, says
presidential candidates must prove both their parents are Ivorians who were
born on Ivorian soil. They must also have never claimed the citizenship of
another country.
It
became a symbol for exclusion for northerners, whose family ties often cross
into Burkina Faso and Mali.
"We
will have a new constitution because I think the current constitution is
outdated. It was written during the crisis of 2000. It has too many things
which are complicated," Ouattara said in an interview in the commercial
capital Abidjan.
While
leaders of several African nations have pushed to alter their constitutions to
extend their rule in recent years, Ouattara vowed to respect Côte d'Ivoire's
two-term limit and step down in 2020 if re-elected.
"By
the end of my second term I'll be 78, so there's no real reason for me to try
to continue. I've worked long enough," he said. Dressed in a dark business
suit, he was speaking in the well-appointed office from which he has managed
his campaign.
While
Ouattara has long maintained he qualified to run under the existing
constitution, the constitutional court blocked his candidacy for a 2000 poll
won by ex-president Laurent Gbagbo.
Two
years later, soldiers who said they were fighting discrimination against
northerners staged a failed coup against Gbagbo that split the country into a
rebel north and government controlled south.
Any
reform of the constitution would require backing from parliament, dominated by
the president's allies, and then need to be submitted to a referendum.
Ouattara,
campaigned for the presidency in 2010 saying the constitution needed to be
changed. However, he spent his first term focused on reviving the economy after
Gbagbo's refusal to recognize his victory plunged the country into turmoil.
"We
need to revisit the question of nationality ... We'll also have to see what are
the roles of the Supreme Court and if we should have an electoral
commission," Ouattara said.
BOOM TIMES
Having
implemented a policy of heavy investment in infrastructure during his first
term, Ouattara, a former senior International Monetary Fund official, has been
largely credited for Ivory Coast's rapid post-war economic revival.
Economic
growth has averaged around 9 percent over the past three years, according to
government figures. The president said that an influx of new investment would
push that figure into double digits from next year. The IMF has issued a more
conservative average forecast of 8.4 percent for 2015 and 2016.
After
issuing a dollar-denominated bond in each of the past two years to pay for
infrastructure upgrades, Ouattara said the government was in a position to curb
its Eurobond issuances.
"I
think the private sector will take over. If I go to a Eurobond market now it
will be to shave the debt profile," Ouattara said, pledging to keep the
government debt to GDP ratio below 50 percent.
Ouattara's
election opponents have accused him of seeking to use Ivory Coast's impressive
growth figures to paper over what they say are failures in the realms of
post-war reconciliation and justice.
His
main challenger is likely to be Pascal Affi N'Guessan, the head of Gbagbo's
Ivorian Popular Front, who was jailed by Ouattara's government in the wake of
the 2011 conflict. Gbagbo himself is awaiting trial before the International
Criminal Court accused of crimes against humanity.
N'Guessan
and other opposition candidates say little of the wealth created by the
country's current economic boom has trickled down to the most vulnerable.
"Obviously
there are a lot of people who are not profiting from the high rate of growth on
a personal basis," Ouattara responded.
"But when you have
better roads, when you have better schools, when you have better health
centres, all this improves the lot of the people."
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