[Congressional Record (Bound Edition), Volume 157 (2011), Part 4]
[Senate]
[Pages 5132-5133]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]




                             COTE D'IVOIRE

  Mr. INHOFE. Madam President, we hear a lot about the disaster and 
things that are taking place and the loss of lives in Libya as well as 
many other places, particularly in the last few months. But going 
seemingly unnoticed is probably just as great a disaster that is 
happening in Cote D'Ivoire right now as we speak.
  I came to the floor yesterday, and I talked about the fact that 
elections took place in Cote D'Ivoire last November. The President, the 
incumbent President, Laurent Gbagbo, was challenged by Alassane 
Ouattara. They claim Ouattara won the election. Ouattara comes from the 
north, the Muslim area up there.
  We found so much voter fraud that we identified, and we specifically 
talked about on the Senate floor, that I have asked Secretary Clinton, 
by letter twice, to intervene and demand a new election.
  When I say ``voter fraud,'' I entered this in the Record yesterday, 
so I will not do it again today. But this shows how they miscalculated 
all those votes in the north. In just one precinct, 100,000 votes--
well, actually 94,873. Obviously, if we have 100,000 or so votes in 
that one precinct, it can happen that way.
  But use logic. If all else fails, stop and think about this. How 
could it be possible that in the northern part of Cote D'Ivoire, when 
they had the election, what we would call the primary election, 
President Gbagbo got thousands, thousands of votes in each one of the 
precincts. Yet when the runoff came, he got zero. That is a statistical 
impossibility. I think for those of us--certainly, the United States 
thought the U.N. and perhaps France was accurate in their initial 
response to this thing that we were going to have to get something 
done.
  Let me go ahead and finish what happened. I mentioned yesterday in 
the town of Duekoue, Ouattara's forces, along with the French, went in 
there, murdered about--we think something over 1,000 people. We get the 
reports from the Red Cross and from other sources.
  But Ouattara has tried to deny his involvement in this slaughter. His 
forces took the town earlier, and this was the week after the Gbagbo 
forces had gone. I think we can just look at Guillaume Ngefa, who is 
the deputy head of the U.N. mission in Cote D'Ivoire.
  He said Ouattara's forces had carried out the killings in Duekoue. 
``We have evidence. We have pictures. This was retaliation.''
  So we have all this evidence I mentioned yesterday which was part of 
it. I read yesterday from the Guardian, the British Guardian. The U.N. 
mission said traditional hunters, known as Dozos, fought alongside 
Ouattara's forces and took part in killing 330 people in the western 
town of Duekoue, which we now know is over 1,000 people. The 
International Committee of the Red Cross said at least 800 people. It 
goes on and on, which I made a part of the Record yesterday.
  In addition to that, we have a statement that was made on the BBC 
yesterday. Keep in mind, they have, in Duekoue--they murdered all those 
people. They have mass graves. People are charred and burned. I am 
going to quote right now, so hold your stomach.

       I spot four pigs eating something dark in a charred 
     courtyard. Standing by a newly dug mass grave, a U.N. soldier 
     from Morocco is choking with rage and grief. I ask him if the 
     dead are children. He nods and begins to sob quietly into his 
     face mask.

  So we know of this disaster that has taken place there, and we do 
nothing. We know about it. I just will say: America, wake up. The 
massacre could have been avoided if Ouattara had accepted the mediation 
effort from the African Union. President Gbagbo did accept, Ouattara 
did not. He rejected it, and I think we know why he rejected it--
because he wants that power. He wants that job.
  Anyway, where we are now--and I am going to try to get this all in--
the

[[Page 5133]]

United States should call for a ceasefire and for a new election. I 
have also been told, within the last day, that the U.N. helicopters, 
U.S. peacekeeping helicopters are firing upon Gbagbo's military camp.
  Lastly, I have sent a letter to the Foreign Relations Committee 
Chairman John Kerry. Let me applaud John Kerry. He has agreed to hold a 
hearing to look at this. I cannot tell you how much I appreciate it 
because it takes courage to stand up against the United Nations and 
France and our State Department and admit that we have to look into 
this. So that is exactly what we are going to do.
  But that was yesterday on the floor. What has happened? What happened 
last night? Last night, the job was finished. They went in, and they 
massacred I do not know how many people.
  President Gbagbo had young children who were surrounding his palace 
and his residence. They are willing to sacrifice their lives to save 
their country from the French influence they are getting with Ouattara.
  They were armed with baseball bats and 2 by 4s. I do not know, there 
are hundreds of them out there. Last night, Sarkozy had gone to 
Secretary General Moon and said: Use my forces to end this, and they 
did. We know what happened last night.
  Maybe you do not know what happened last night. They went in with 
helicopters and with rockets, and they destroyed most of a major city, 
Abidjan, the capital of Cote D'Ivoire. We have evidence. I hope people 
will take advantage of this, particularly those people--I know there 
are a lot of people out there who are opposed to any intervention we 
have. They do not truly care about Sub-Saharan Africa. No one cares 
about Sub-Saharan Africa.
  I have stood on this floor time and time again, back when we were 
sending troops into Bosnia, and the excuse was ethnic cleansing. I 
said: For every 1 day in any town in any country in Sub-Saharan Africa, 
there are more people ethnically cleansed than in any day in Bosnia.
  But nobody seemed to care. So we have hundreds of kids around there, 
and last night they were mowed down. If anyone questions this, you can 
access on my Internet, inhofe.senate.gov, and get the YouTube that 
shows graphically what they are doing. I do not know how many hundreds, 
how many thousands of people were brutally murdered last night by the 
French, supporting Ouattara. It is something we need to get involved 
in.
  When I look at President Obiang, who is from Equatorial Guinea, he is 
the chairman of the African Union. He says he condemned the foreign 
intervention in the Ivory Coast. We stand by idly, and we don't do 
anything about it.
  I renew my request to Secretary Clinton and to the State Department 
and to others who care about the loss of innocent life in sub-Saharan 
Africa, specifically in Abidjan and Cote d'Ivoire, to come forward and 
help us find justice. I hope President Gbabgo and his wife Simone are 
not dead today. They might be dying as we speak. They are raiding their 
residence, raiding the palace. It is a brutal mess. I don't think I 
have ever seen in the years I have been here, particularly coming from 
France, supported by Sarkozy, the raid on innocent lives in sub-Saharan 
Africa.
  If no one else comes in, I will talk longer. I ask unanimous consent 
to speak until someone comes in to speak.
  The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. Without objection, it is so 
ordered.
  Mr. INHOFE. Madam President, I guess you might wonder why I am 
concerned. I have had an interest in sub-Saharan Africa for quite some 
time. After 9/11, finally the United States decided they would do 
something of concern in sub-Saharan Africa. So what we have had since 
that time is an interest in helping them to build African brigades, as 
the terrorists come down through the Horn of Africa and Djibouti and 
into the continent. We need to help the Africans build brigades so they 
can resist, not doing it for them, not doing it in place of the 
Africans, but to help them so they can defend themselves. That is 
exactly what we have been doing.
  I have been honored to be the point man on the Armed Services 
Committee to go over and work with these guys. These countries in 
Africa are our friends. They participate in programs such as the IMET 
program that allows us to train their officers in the United States, 
such as the Train and Equip Program that allows us to work with them 
and train these individuals. When we see an atrocity such as this take 
place, when we visualize the young kids out there being brutally 
murdered, we should do something about it.
  I praise someone who philosophically I have not agreed with most of 
the time, Senator John Kerry, Chairman of the Foreign Relations 
Committee. I am on his committee as well as Armed Services. He is 
sympathetic to what is going on and has agreed to having a hearing. 
There is a man named Meltheodore. He was the mayor, when I first met 
him, mayor of Abidjan in Cote d'Ivoire. He is currently a member of 
Parliament in Cote d'Ivoire. He is the head of an opposing political 
party to President Gbagbo. He was a candidate against President Gbagbo 
when he ran successfully for President. Here is a guy who would have 
every reason to be opposed to President Gbagbo. Yet he is willing to 
testify before Senator Kerry's committee that not only did they rig the 
election, but he showed the documentation on rigging the election, and 
we should be in a position where we could strongly recommend another 
election.
  I have nothing against Alassane Ouattara except I do know that he has 
been an enemy of the Gbagbos since long before 2002, when he was 
opposed to him. This is, I guess, the final kill. But at what expense 
is this coming? It is coming at a high expense in terms of a number we 
can't quantify today. If colleagues don't believe it, look it up. They 
can get the YouTube site. They can watch what happened last night. They 
can get that off of my Web site, inhofe.senate.gov.
  I see my friend Senator Manchin from West Virginia. Before yielding 
the floor, I wish to applaud him for his being courageous and standing 
up for doing something about the EPA taking over the regulation of 
greenhouse gases that would put coal and oil and gas out of our reach. 
I applaud Senator Manchin.
  I yield the floor.
  The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. The Senator from West Virginia.
  Mr. MANCHIN. I thank my good friend for his hard work. We are working 
in a bipartisan manner.

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