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After more than 13 years,
the UN officially ends its mission in Côte d'Ivoire today as the country is at
peace.
BBC
Africa Live report continues:
It
witnessed the country’s second civil war in 2010 and at its height it had more
than 12,000 peacekeeping troops, police and UN staff on the ground.
UN
peacekeepers arrived in 2004 when the country was already split in two.
Rebel
forces controlled the north, the government controlled the south.
A
second civil war in 2010 forced more than a million people from their homes and
more than 3,000 were killed.
The
main achievement is that the country is united.
Aïchatou
Mindaoudou is the last Special Representative of the United Nations
Secretary-General in Côte d'Ivoire. He told me that he is leaving the country in
good shape:
“Almost
67,000 ex combatants have been disarmed, demobilized and also reintegrated. For
the first time in October 2015 an election has been organized since the crisis
and it was organized without any incident.”
Côte d'Ivoire may no longer be at war but some fear the country’s still not ready for
the United Nations to leave.
There have been two army
mutinies already this year, bringing the entire country to a halt.
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