Serious Commotion as Angry Soldiers Burn Military Base
Irate soldiers have left many people shocked after they burnt down a military base overnight.
Côte d’Ivoire soldier on the move
Soldiers in Côte d’Ivoire’s second largest city looted weapons from the base of an elite military unit overnight before setting it on fire, leaders of the faction said on Wednesday.
The soldiers, who were involved in a series of mutinies last year that tarnished the image of Côte d’Ivoire, one of Africa’s fastest growing economies, accuse the elite unit, known as the CCDO, of spying on them.
Residents of Bouake reported late on Tuesday hearing gunshots and heavy weapons fire between the rival factions, though they said the situation was calm after some early sporadic gunfire and businesses were operating normally.
“We entered the CCDO camp around midnight and took all of their arms and ammunitions,” one of the faction’s leaders, who asked not to be named, told Reuters.
“Their troops fled the camp but we are looking for them.”
A second leader of the former mutineers confirmed they had looted weapons stockpiles.
“We burned the CCDO camp and destroyed everything inside. Even their service vehicles were burned,” the second faction leader said.
There were no immediate reports of any casualties.
The CCDO is composed of soldiers, paramilitary gendarmes and police.
Côte d’Ivoire’s Defence Minister Hamed Bakayoko was not immediately available to comment on the clashes.
Army officials reached by Reuters declined to comment.
Bouake, located in the central region of the west African nation, was the epicenter of several months of army mutinies in 2017 that spread across the nation, forcing the government to yield to demands for bonuses and promotions.
Côte d’Ivoire, the world’s top cocoa grower, emerged from a decade-long political crisis as one of Africa’s fastest growing economies and a darling of international investors.
The 2017’s instability laid bare the dangerous divisions that still persist within an army cobbled together from rival rebel and loyalist factions at the end of a 2011 civil war.
-Reuters
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