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COTE D' IVOIRE: LIBERIAN WOMAN
COMMANDS MERCENARIES IN KORHOGO
January 2, 2004 (IRIN) Awa Michel, a short
dark robust woman in her mid 30's, busies herself cooking rice and
fish soup over two coal pots outside her house in Cote d'Ivoire's
northern city of Korhogo.
She is sitting on a rough wooden bench wearing a simple cloth wrapped
over her breasts, not a military uniform, and her AK-47 assault
rifle is nowhere in sight.
But Michel is a seasoned Liberian bush fighter who is second in
command of the 42-strong mercenary bodyguard of Adama Coulibaly,
the Ivorian rebel warlord who controls Korhogo. He is known locally
as "Adams."
Michel is loud-mouthed and aggressive in the way she talks and is
contemptuous of most men she knows. You can hear her voice a block
away.
Michel says she has killed men in combat and was nearly killed herself
in early 2003 while fighting alongside Ivorian rebel forces.
Now she guards her boss, smokes marijuana and sells beer and soft
drinks from a big fridge inside her air conditioned bedroom of the
spacious villa which she shares with several Liberian comrades near
the police headquarters in Korhogo.
Like the other Liberian mercenaries in Adams' bodyguard, Michel
is given food, but is rarely paid. She would dearly love to go and
see her mother who lives in a refugee camp in Guinea. But she doesn't
have the money to get there.
This is her story, told to an IRIN correspondent visiting Korhogo
as she cooked dinner.
Michel belongs to the Mandingo tribe of northern Liberia. During
the early 1990's she and her older brother joined ULIMO-K, a faction
in the civil war that was backed by Guinea. It drew most of its
support inside Liberia from Mandingos and Muslims.
ULIMO-K eventually allied itself with Charles Taylor's National
Patriotic Front of Liberia (NPFL). Following Taylor's victory in
the 1997 presidential election, Michel gained entry into Taylor's
elite fighting force, the Anti-Terrorist Unit (ATU).
Her brother, "Jungle Jabah", had risen to become a senior
commander of ULIMO-K and chose instead to follow the movement's
leader, Alhaji Kromah, to the United States.
But Michel was determined to pursue a military career at home.
Mandingos were regarded as being of suspect loyalty
within the ATU, so she changed her surname from Jabateh to Michel
- the surname of her foster mother - in order to hide her ethnic
origins and gain promotion within the force.
She spent 21 months undergoing special forces training with the
ATU.
Towards the end of 2002, Michel and a group of her ATU colleagues
were called to the Executive Mansion in Monrovia where Taylor and
his military commander, Benjamin Yeaten, told them they were to
be sent on a special mission.
They were to go to Butuo on the Cote d'Ivoire border and cross over
to attack Ivorian government forces. Michel said she was surprised
but did not dare to question orders. She and her group were told
that members of Liberia's Krahn tribe were being attacked in Cote
d'Ivoire by government forces so they had to go and help out.
Michel and more than 200 other ATU soldiers traveled overland to
the Ivorian border where Sam Bockarie, the former military commander
of Sierra Leone's Revolutionary United Front (RUF) rebel movement,
was waiting for them.
Under his orders, they crossed the border to attack the nearby Ivorian
town of Bin-Houye and advanced rapidly from there to Zouan-Hounien,
and then Danane, a large town near the Liberian border.
Michel said she saw helicopter gunships piloted
by white men dropping bombs on towns in the area.
The Bockarie-led ATU force then headed east to help the Ivorian
rebels recapture Man, a large city which changed hands several times
during the fighting before ending up under rebel control.
The Liberian intervention force fought alongside
two small Ivorian rebel movements based in the west of the country;
the Ivorian Movement for Justice and Peace (MJP) and the Ivorian
Popular Movement of the Great West (MPIGO). Man fell to them after
several days of fighting.
Without resting, the Liberians then headed south with the aim of
capturing San Pedro, the second largest port in Cote d'Ivoire, from
which much of the country's exports of cocoa and timber are shipped.
However, they were soon halted by government forces and a heavy
battle for the town of Bangolo, 50 km south of Man, nearly proved
fatal for the Liberian female fighter.
A bullet struck her in the back and came out through her left breast.
She was seriously wounded, but not quite out of action.
"I killed the white man who shot me," she gloated. "I
didn't let him escape. Imagine shooting me and then going Scot free.
No way, I deal with that man, I finish him off".
Bockarie entrusted her to the care of an Ivorian warlord called
Adams, who took her to hospital in Man. Michel has been with him
ever since.
When Adams was forced by a more powerful faction of the rebels to
move out of Man at the end of April, she and her Liberian comrades
in arms followed
him north to Korhogo.
She said Bockarie told Adams "Look after my wife and treat
her well. If she dies, you die".
A few weeks later, Bockarie, who was nicknamed Mosquito, because
of his ability to strike suddenly and then melt away into the bush,
met his own end.
Taylor said Bockarie was killed by Liberian government forces while
trying to move back across the border from Cote d'Ivoire with a
band of Sierra Leonean mercenaries. But diplomats in Monrovia said
he was shot secretly in Monrovia on Taylor's orders after an argument
with his boss at the Executive Mansion.
Michel simply says that Bockarie was killed because he ran wild
and failed in his mission, which was to put a stop to the killing
of Liberians in Cote d'Ivoire.
"Mosquito started killing Liberian people, he was killing them
for no reason. He betrayed my people and he paid for his betrayal,"
she said.
Although Bockarie, a notorious womaniser, refered to Michel as his
"wife" when commending her to the care of Adams, Michel
said she never had an intimate relationship with the Sierra Leonean
mercenary. She is not sentimental about him.
Michel said Bockarie and Felix Doh, the leader of MPIGO who he worked
with closely, had both betrayed Taylor. As far as she was concerned
that was why they were gunned down in unexplained circumstances
within a few days of each other.
"The price of betrayal is death," she
said grimly as she stirred her cooking pots.
Master sergent Ousmane Cherif, who is now the military commander
of the rebel capital Bouake, was sent to Man in early May 2003 to
restore order.
But Adams saw the writing on the wall and fled to Korhogo with his
Liberian escorts before Cherif arrived at the head of a large force
of troops from the largest rebel movement, the Patriotic Movement
of Cote d'Ivoire (MPCI).
Their task was to control the volatile situation in Man and Danane
and the rest of the "Wild West" of Cote d'Ivoire and deal
with the Liberian and Sierra Leonean mercenaries there who were
making trouble there.
Before Cherif's arrival and for many weeks afterwards rival rebel
factions fought gun battles with each other every night in the streets
of the Man and Danane.
But Cherif dealt swiftly with the Liberian and Sierra Leonean mercenaries,
who had been accused of committing widespread atrocities against
civilians.
Michel said bitterly that Cherif killed many of her Liberian comrades.
She has sworn to take revenge against him. "He has to die too,
you can't just kill Liberians like that" she said.
After arriving in Korhogo, Adams talked his way into being given
command of the armoured batallion that is based there. Michel and
41 other Liberians stuck alongside him.
Now, sitting by her cooking pots while an Ivorian boy pounds onions,
tomatoes and peppers into a hot sauce for her fish, Michel talks
nostalgically about her mother whom she has not seen for several
years.
She lives in a Liberian refugee camp near the town of N'zerekore
in Southeastern Guinea. Michel would love to go and visit her, but
she cannot as she has no money. None of the Liberians in Korhogo
are on a payroll, she said.
They are fed, clothed and housed, and are given just enough pocket
money to buy drinks at least once a week in the local bars.
Just before Christmas, 20 of the Liberians were sent to patrol the
northern border with Burkina Faso and Mali following a clash between
rival rebel factions in the Ivorian border town of Pogo, which left
several people dead.
But usually all the mercenaries do is hang around the grounds of
Adams' residence, acting as his personal security guards.
Adams basks in the reputation of being the warlord who captured
Man. But he refuses to publicly acknowledge the existence of his
Liberian mercenaries, who are led by a man nicknamed "Ellis."
Their presence, however, is an open secret in the town.
Under the terms of an agreement on 4 July 2003, formally ending
a state of war in Cote d'Ivoire, the government and rebels both
committed themselves
to getting rid of any mercenaries remaining in their ranks.
But two senior rebel commanders openly admitted on Friday that Adams
was quietly ignoring this requirement.
Fofana Idrissa, the head of rebel security in northern Cote d'Ivoire,
known as "Fofie, told IRIN by telephone from Korhogo on Friday:
"After the mopping up operations in the West which were aimed
at removing all Liberians from our ranks, Adama Coulibaly left Man
about four or five months ago with some Liberians who serve as his
personal bodyguard."
"Only he knows why he is still surrounded by Liberians because
the international community has banned all foreign soldiers from
Ivorian soil." he added.
Losseny Fofana, the rebel commander of the western region in Man,
also confirmed to IRIN by telephone that Adams was continuing to
employ Liberian gunmen. He noted that this was in contravention
of orders.
Meanwhile, Michel stirs her pots. She won't have any of her young
boy helpers do the cooking for her. "No-one can do it the way
I want, no-one is as clean as I am, and the cooking has to be done
in a certain way in order to taste right," she said.
From: http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=38698&SelectRegion=West_Africa&SelectCountry=COTE_D_IVOIRE
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