The Angolan vice president, Fernando da Piedade Dias dos Santos, received on Tuesday in audience in Luanda, two emissaries of the candidate to the presidential elections in Cote D’Ivoire, Alassane Ouattara.
The emissaries are Jean Marie Kacou Gervais (head of the mission and Bakayoko Hamed.
The audience was granted in the ambit of the continuation of Angolan efforts, in order to seek for a peaceful and negotiated solution to the post election crisis in Cote d’Ivoire.
On the occasion, the head of the delegation Jean Marie Kacou Gervais recognises the important role played by the Angolan President, José Eduardo dos Santos, seeking for solutions in political crises within Africa.
According to him, his delegation is in Angola in order to learn about the Angolan experience.
The meeting was attended by the Angolan foreign affairs minister, George Rebelo Chicoty.

The so-called electoral crisis in Ivory Coast hardly has any African Press, any African perspective, to present it.
Firstly, how not to develop an African perspective. Much of what Zimbabwe has got on the situation in Ivory Coast has to come from Agence France Press (AFP) and Reuters, reaching us largely through Zimpapers. With what we have gone through from 2000 until 2008 – no less than four Ivory Coast-like electoral situations – I fail to understand why we think media systems of meddlesome ex-colonial powers can give us clean news on situations similar to what the BBC and the entire British media distorted here. Western power is mediated and mediased and western media networks are partners in imperial conquest. They have always been imbedded, always armed with the reflex of an occupying power. We who used to tell the rest of Africa not to be misled by the British and American media surely cannot ourselves rely on French media for reportage on events happening in an ex-French colony that has chosen to free itself?
How does the UN, itself the failed supervisor of the whole process, rise above the same process in judgment? Indeed hurry to favour one result against the other, and do so against its loudly proclaimed failure to demilitarize the North in order to create even conditions for a national poll? Who failed Ivory Coast, Gbagbo, or the UN? Who deserves to leave Ivory Coast, Gbagbo or the effete UN? What deserves to come in, a fair ballot or a full invading battalion. Congo in the early 1960s showed us how the UN can in fact be used to suppress and even assassinate legitimate interests of a people. Congo in Africa’s 1960s showed us how meddlesome colonial powers can piggy-bag their sinister designs on a UN operation. Today, Ivory Coast shows Africa yet again how the UN is no insurance against electoral rigging, indeed against a destabilizing electoral process.















