Côte
d'Ivoire newspapers in Abidjan run headline news on the arrest warrant issued
by a French judge against parliamentary speaker, Guillaume Soro on December 8,
2015 ©Sia-Kambou (AFP)
|
Côte d'Ivoire's
parliamentary speaker, who is at the centre of a diplomatic dispute between his
country and France over a court investigation, left Paris for Abidjan on
Wednesday evening, a spokesman said.
Guillaume
Soro, who is also a former rebel chief, had been summoned by a Paris judge in
connection with a complaint filed by Michel Gbagbo, son of former Côte d'Ivoire
president Laurent Gbagbo, who was ousted in 2011 and is currently awaiting
trial in The Hague.
AFP report continues:
"Mr.
Soro's plane departed... for Abidjan" on Wednesday evening, an Ivorian
presidency spokesman told AFP.
Côte
d'Ivoire on Tuesday summoned the French ambassador over the row, with Foreign
Minister Charles Koffi Diby telling AFP he was voicing "a strong
protest" against the moves to question Soro.
Soro
had travelled to Paris to attend the COP21 UN climate conference.
Several
hours later, Soro's lawyers issued a statement saying the summons was not
applicable because of his diplomatic immunity.
"Documents
proving the official nature of his presence in France for COP21" were
shown to the investigating magistrate who had issued the summons on Monday,
Soro's legal team said.
They
said the investigating magistrate had acknowledged that Soro "holds
diplomatic status, and the immunity" that goes with that, indicating that
the summons was not applicable.
The
magistrate had sought to question Soro in connection with a complaint linked to
"kidnapping, isolation and inhuman treatment" in 2012, when Soro was
prime minister, several sources said.
"The
problem is not one of opposing a court decision, but of ensuring that
everything respects international law," said Ivorian government spokesman
Bruno Kone.
Soro
headed rebels fighting Gbagbo, who was ousted after refusing to concede defeat
to his arch-rival Alassane Ouattara in 2010 presidential elections.
After weeks of violence,
Gbagbo was arrested in April 2011 when Ouattara's forces, backed by the United
Nations and France, overran his compound in Abidjan.
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