Wednesday, July 29, 2015

Ivory Coast (Côte d'Ivoire ):-----The World Worst Living Dictator

The modern day messiah as he was cherished by Sarkozy of France and his "Stooges" of the International community, Alassane Ouattara is enslaving the very people he was bound to "save". He wields his sweeping powers like a tyrant. He ruled with his authoritarian fist that lets him essentially push any policies he deems necessary. He's fulfilling his long time dream of "rattrapage" ( adjustment policy )  which is a form of discrimination that allows only Ouattara's relatives and tribesmen to be appointed to administration positions. Ouattara, the most brutal dictator of the West African powerhouse, is  ruling Ivory Coast with impunity. Ouattara, also konwn as the " Butcher of Ivory Coast " planned to commit genocide against several ethnic groups such as the Wè and the Guéré. Ouattara will always be remembered for the March 2011 killing of 800 unarmed civilians in the town of Duékoué and the attack in July 2012 by his militias and tribal forces on the Nahibly camp for internally displaced people that left at least  211 people dead and thousands seriously injured. The camp was housing 5,000 people, mainly ethnic Guéré. He is regarded as one of the worst dictators of Africa of the 21st century. Ouattara is committing a significant amount of human rights violations such as jailing opposition activists and journalists. An abysmal record of 11 dissidents including influential Ivorian Popular Front ( FPI ) youth and senior militants were jailed this year by the brutal and fascist regime of Ouattara.
Michel Gbagbo, the son of the former President and Head of his FPI party's prisoner affairs committee, once said: " Since 2011, Ivory Coast (Côte d'Ivoire) is added to the dark list of countries in which the crime of opinion is subject to imprisonment. Ouattara is forcibly confining anyone who criticizes his brutal and autocratic regime."
Ouattara is a fascist insect that preys on the lives of the dissidents.


Four years after Ivory Coast President Alassane Ouattara's government said it would stop security forces from demanding money at roadblocks from travelers, including merchants transporting goods and immigrants, it is still costing the economy $340 million CFA ($567 million), Human Rights Watch said in a new report citing World Bank figures.
" President Ouattara's government hasn't done enough to end checkpoint extortion," said Jim Wormington, West Africa researcher at Human Rights Watch. "Security forces continue to enrich themselves at the expense of ordinary Ivorians, many of whom are already struggling to earn enough to make ends meet."
The practice seems well-organized, HRW said, as officials truck drivers' registration numbers. If they refuse to pay, they can be detained.
"If you don't pay, it's a fight. If you don't give him his share, it's a fight," a taxi driver told the rights group. For immigrants, it's more difficult. They hand over their papers and must pay to get them back, or "validated" the group said.

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