Photo: Olivier Monnier/IRIN. Riders on the streets of Côte d'Ivoire’s central city of Bouaké. Government is making a come-back in the northern region
Source: IRIN
KORHOGO/BOUAKE, 30 November 2012 (IRIN) - After almost a decade of rebel
rule, northern Côte d'Ivoire is coming to terms with a new authority as
the government of President Alassane Ouattara, who assumed power some
18 months ago, establishes its presence in a region which effectively
split from the rest of the country.
A 2002 armed insurrection partitioned Côte d'Ivoire into two, with the
north under insurgent occupation and the south ruled by Laurent Gbagbo,
who was ousted as president in April 2011 after a bloody poll dispute
with Ouattara. A 2007 deal between the rebels and Gbagbo provided for
the eventual unification of the country.
The return of the government to the Central-North-West (CNO) region that
makes up 60 percent of Côte d'Ivoire’s territory is slowly reviving the
education and health sectors, but residents complain of rising
commodity and rent prices due to government levies, and say insecurity
remains high, especially in the central city of Bouaké, the former rebel
stronghold where some ex-fighters are still armed and are accused of
committing crimes.
“There’s now an effective return to normalcy,” said Daouda Ouattara,
administrator of the northern Korhogo District, noting that around 1,000
government workers are back on duty in the various district offices in
Korhogo, home to some one million people.
In Bouaké, Côte d'Ivoire’s second largest city, most government offices
have reopened. Lassina Diomandé, the local member of parliament, told
IRIN that there was a 95 percent government presence in the city.
However, armed forces are still occupying a building meant to house the
social security offices.
Private firms are also re-establishing in the north. Major local banks
have reopened alongside smaller branches of international banks. Foreign
oil companies are also making a come-back to set up filling stations in
Bouaké and Korhogo, where many fuel sellers still operate small
roadside stations.
Government and tax
For many residents of the north, the return of government is mainly
associated with taxation. Under rebel rule, tax collection was rather
random. Commodities were smuggled in from neighbouring Burkina Faso and
Mali and residents therefore paid no customs levies.
“We are setting up a public sensitization campaign. For almost 10 years
people were used to living free from paying taxes,” said Ouattara,
adding that a customs office is now operational.
Out of an 800-million CFA (US$1.6-million) tax revenue target for
Korhogo District, the authorities have so far collected more than two
billion francs ($4 million). “There’s good progress. We are able to
work. Our aim now is to have people pay the taxes they were never used
to paying,” a customs officer appointed to the region five months ago
told IRIN.
On the streets of Korhogo and Bouaké, many motorbikes do not have
registration plates. The authorities there have set low registration
fees (compared to the rates in the commercial capital Abidjan), and an
end of December 2012 vehicle registration deadline.
“Some people have kept their motorbikes at home because they don’t have
the money to pay the duty,” said Korhogo resident Yaya Soro. “We are all
trying to adapt to the new order, but it’s difficult to resume a trend
we lost 10 years ago.”
Bouaké legislator Diomandé argued that the government’s presence was
beneficial to the people. “People used to pay little, but for low
quality products, especially sugar, cooking oil and fuel.”
House rents are reported to have tripled as those who fled the area to
Abidjan return, and demand has also pushed up by the return of
government workers.
Health and education improving
Some 476 volunteer teachers who took over after government teachers fled
from the north during the conflict have been trained and absorbed by
the Education Ministry, said Louis Vigneault-Dubois, a communications
officer with the UN Children’s Fund (UNICEF).
In Korhogo, 300 primary and secondary school teachers have been
employed, including volunteer teachers to fill a shortage, and a
university is also to be built in the region, said Ouattara, the local
administrator. The university in Bouaké has been renovated to
accommodate 21,000 students who resumed studies in November.
However, in some northern Côte d'Ivoire areas, school attendance is
around 40 percent and the region has registered some of the poorest
examination results in the past two years, according to officials.
Korhogo region has had one paediatrician, one cardiologist and one
gynaecologist for years, said Ouattara. But since the government’s
return, doctors have been employed and the University of Korhogo is to
have a training hospital.
With the return of the administration's regional offices, “people no
longer have to make long trips to Yamoussoukro or Abidjan for official
documents such as birth certificates,” said Diomandé. “It’s comforting.”
Nonetheless, many still decry the underdevelopment in the northern
region compared to Abidjan where infrastructural development is
advancing. A few roads have been renovated in Korhogo, according to
residents.
A Bouaké resident who spoke to IRIN on condition of anonymity described
the return of government as a “semblance of administration.”
“The judiciary is not functional yet. If I have problem and I want to lodge a complaint, there is no one to help me.”
“I don’t object to paying more taxes to the government, but I would like
to see the outcome in infrastructure development. Here, nothing has
been done,” said local restaurant owner Albertine Kouassi.