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Ex-Ivorian Prez Gbagbo launches new political party in Abidjan

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Former President of Ivory Coast Laurent Gbagbo, with a decade-long stay in exile, this weekend shocked the world when it emerged that he (Gbagbo) is lacing his boots to make a comeback to the Ivorian presidency after he launched a new political party to usher in his return to politics in Francophone West African country.

“This is the amazing return of Laurent Gbagbo to the political scene,” his representative Justin Kone Katinan told AFP in front of the dispatch.

Gbagbo will preside the new party’s congress on Saturday and Sunday as he tries to “rejoin the left” and utilize the event as a springboard to the 2025 official political race.

The 76-year-old, whose 2000-2011 principle was set apart by disturbance and division on the planet’s greatest cocoa maker, has been entirely noticeable since getting back to his country on June 17.

He was booted out of office in April 2011 after a short conflict that killed 3,000 lives, started by his refusal to acknowledge defeat in an election won by current President Alassane Ouattara.

Gbagbo was then travelled to the International Criminal Court in The Hague to deal with indictments of wrongdoings against mankind coming about because of the contention yet ultimately cleared.

He has involved himself by visiting the previous president and furthermore rival Henri Konan Bedie, held “compromise” chats with Ouattara yet has dropped out for great with his previous executive Pascal Affi N’Guessan, who heads a group of his previous Ivorian Popular Front (FPI).

Abandoning the FPI, Gbagbo currently expects around 1,600 agents will show support at the congress facilitated at Abidjan’s esteemed Hotel Ivoire where his new “African People’s Party – Cote d’Ivoire” (PPA-CI) will hope to draw up a statement.

The mooted party logo involves two interweaved hands catching a guide of Africa with the emphasise on a Pan-African measurement.

For sure one of the significant congress subjects will be African sway even with the withstanding impact of Western forces.

The new party desires to reshape homegrown discussion in a nation where the resistance has become progressively dug out over the previous decade.

“We need to comprise an ordinary resistance which brings a scrutiny” to the table to empower “discussion to abandon savagery and become basically political,” says Kone Katinan.

“We are standing by to check whether this will be a genuine resistance or a party looking for power. We will perceive how they go with regards to things, what will be their elective program,” notes political expert Sylvain N’Guessan.

Pleating Gbagbo’s aspirations could be a bill intended to restrict the period of official contender to 75. He will turn 80 out of 2025.

Gbagbo’s successor Allassane Quattara amended the Ivorian Constitution in a bid to continue to stay in office hitherto was limited.

Source: africaneditors.com

editor
Abel Mavura is a journalist, editor, and writer whose work explores the intersections of cities, migration, and social justice. He tells stories about how people move, survive, and remake urban life under conditions of precarity, drawing on close field engagement and lived experience. Trained as a journalist at the Christian College of Southern Africa, Abel’s early work was rooted in media practice and community storytelling. Over time, his focus expanded into research and critical inquiry, allowing his writing to move fluidly between reportage, analysis, and long-form reflection. He is a graduate of Sciences Po Paris and is currently pursuing research at the University of Cambridge, where his work builds on earlier research into migration and informal housing. Abel is the author of three books, and his writing has appeared across platforms ranging from grassroots and community radio to international and policy-facing spaces. His work is grounded in clarity, ethical storytelling, and a commitment to centring voices often left out of mainstream narratives.

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