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Guillaume Kigbafori Soro (born May 8, 1972 in Ferkessédougou, Côte d'Ivoire) has served as the Prime Minister of Côte d'Ivoire since April 4, 2007. Prior to his service as Prime Minister, Soro led the Patriotic Movement of Côte d'Ivoire and later the New Forces rebel group as its Secretary-General.[1][2]
[edit] Ivorian Civil WarMain article: Ivorian Civil War A Catholic from Diawala in the north of the country, Soro led the rebel Patriotic Movement of Côte d'Ivoire (MPCI) in a September 2002 rebellion against the government of President Laurent Gbagbo that triggered the Ivorian Civil War. In December 2002 Soro's MPCI combined with two other rebel groups - Ivorian Popular Movement of the Great West (MPIGO) and Movement for Justice and Peace (MJP) - to form the les Forces Nouvelles de Côte d'Ivoire (New Forces). He became Secretary-general of the group. [edit] Political careerFollowing a peace agreement in January 2003, Soro joined the government as communications minister in April 2003.[3] The New Forces ministers began a boycott of the government in September 2003 and returned to the government in January 2004.[4] After an opposition demonstration held in Abidjan was violently broken up in March 2004, Soro and other former rebel and opposition ministers began boycotting the government. In turn, Gbagbo dismissed Soro from his position, along with two other ministers, on 19 May 2004. Soro denounced this move, saying that it was effectively a coup by Gbagbo against the peace agreement.[5][6] On 9 August 2004 Soro attended a cabinet meeting and was reinstated in his position.[7] On 28 December 2005, Soro was appointed minister of reconstruction and reintegration in the government of Prime Minister Charles Konan Banny; in this position he became the second ranking member of the government, after the prime minister.[8] He did not, however, attend a cabinet meeting in this capacity until 15 March 2006.[9] [edit] Prime MinisterFollowing a peace deal signed on March 4, 2007, it was considered a possibility that Soro would be named prime minister in a new government, and Gbagbo was said to want Soro as the next prime minister.[10] In an interview published on March 26, Soro said that he would be willing to become prime minister.[11] An agreement was signed on the same day according to which Soro would become prime minister, and Gbagbo was expected to officially appoint him to the position,[12] which he did on 29 March.[13] Soro took office on 4 April,[14] and his government was named on April 7, with 32 ministers (excluding Soro himself); this was slightly fewer than in Banny's government, and Soro's government contained many of the same ministers as its predecessor.[15][16] In a speech broadcast on April 13, Soro apologized "to everybody and on behalf of everybody" for the harm caused by the war.[17] Main article: June 29, 2007 assassination attempt on Guillaume Soro On June 29, 2007 rockets were fired at Soro's plane at the airport in Bouaké, significantly damaging the plane. Soro was unhurt, although four others were said to have been killed and ten were said to have been wounded. Arrests were subsequently reported.[18]
Soro and Gbagbo participated in disarmament ceremony, the "peace flame", on July 30. This ceremony involved burning weapons to symbolize the end of the conflict.[19][20] Soro, as Prime Minister, is barred from standing as a candidate in the planned 2008 presidential election by the peace agreement. Soro said in a March 2008 interview with Jeune Afrique that he would discuss his future political plans following the election. Rumors have suggested that Soro and Gbagbo have secretly agreed on an arrangement whereby Soro would support Gbagbo in the election and, in exchange, Gbagbo would back Soro in the subsequent presidential election; Soro derided these rumors as "gossip". Describing himself as an "arbiter of the electoral process", he said that the New Forces would not back any candidate and its members could vote for whomever they wished.[21] [edit] References
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