这篇雅思阅读材料主要讲述了在非洲的象牙海岸总统宣布解散政府后,各个国际组织都表示希望他迅速离境,西非的国家甚至表示如果他拒绝的话,就要承担军事上的后果。这是怎么回事呢?
In the month since Mr. Gbagbo lost a long-delayed presidential election, the United Nations, the European Union, the United States, the African Union and the West African regional grouping known as Ecowas in a rare example of African and international solidarity have all declared that he must step down, slapping a near daily array of sanctions on his government until he does so. West African nations have even threatened to use military force to oust him if he refuses to leave.
But Mr. Gbagbo has been adamant, rebuffing a delegation of African leaders who urged him to give up power this week. That resistance has quickly turned Ivory Coast into a global test case of how and maybe whether the international community can impose its will on leaders who maintain solid support within their own militaries and refuse to recognize the elections they lose.
Given how many authoritarian leaders have been tolerated in Africa and elsewhere, the first hurdle in that test achieving a broad international consensus has been handily cleared. But Mr. Gbagbos persistent refusal to budge has effectively thrown the onus back on the foreign powers once again, forcing the issue of how far they will go to remove him.
The question now is what will happen next? said Elkanah Odembo, Kenyas ambassador to the United States. What will we do next? Whatever the strategy, he added, it needs to happen fast before more lives are lost.
On Wednesday, as the leaders of Ecowas, or the Economic Community of West African States, agreed to further negotiations with Mr. Gbagbo, their defense chiefs were meeting in Nigeria to discuss possible troop deployments, according to a Western diplomat there. Analysts argue that the groups military capacities are limited and hampered by, among other things, the Gbagbo governments veiled threats to retaliate against citizens of countries that intervene against Ivory Coast, where there is a large immigrant population.
To back down now would entail a significant loss of credibility for the international institutions and governments pressing Mr. Gbagbo, analysts contend. But the possibility of force has seemed equally unappealing to some African diplomats, particularly because Ivory Coast has already endured a civil war and there is little appetite for fueling another one.
When disputed elections spilled into violence in Kenya and Zimbabwe in recent years, many nations embraced political compromises that joined rivals into tense and sometimes unwieldy power-sharing agreements.
In this case, many African leaders themselves have said power sharing is off the table, rejecting the notion that Mr. Gbagbo should have a significant role in the government. At least five more elections are in the offing in the coming year in West Africa alone, and few want to enshrine a solution that allows recalcitrant leaders to hold onto power beyond their legitimate terms.
Theres a strong sense here that if they let another wishy-washy power-sharing arrangement emerge in C te dIvoire, it will create a very bad precedent, said the Western diplomat in Abuja, Nigeria, where Ecowas is based, who was not authorized to discuss the matter. The stakes here are unusually high. Either Gbagbo loses everything, or it will be a tremendous loss of face for Ecowas.
It is unclear whether Mr. Gbagbo can play for time through negotiations and somehow split the coalition of nations urging him to leave, or whether the weight of sanctions and threat of military force will compel him to surrender.
So far, there is no sign of the latter. Just the opposite, Mr. Gbagbo has deployed his security forces in opposition neighborhoods, beating and killing dozens in nighttime raids, according to the United Nations.
He has also sent around his minister of youth, Charles Bl Goud, known as the General of the Streets, to whip up popular fervor for an assault on the headquarters of his main rival, Alassane Ouattara, who has been declared the winner of the elections by the scores of countries of the United Nations General Assembly. On Wednesday, Mr. Bl Goud urged a cheering crowd to liberate the hotel where Mr. Ouattara is holed up, protected by peacekeepers.
Mr. Gbagbo proclaimed last week on state television that the international community has declared war on Ivory Coast, and that he was merely upholding the countrys Constitution against intruders, including the United Nations. On Tuesday a United Nations convoy was attacked by machete-wielding partisans in a pro-Gbagbo neighborhood, and a Bangladeshi soldier was injured.
As long as Mr. Gbagbo commands the loyalty of the army, he will be difficult to dislodge, analysts say. A potential blow to his hold on power came last week when African leaders blocked his access to money at the regional West African bank, possibly limiting his ability to pay his soldiers. But the impact of even that is uncertain, since the move did not put all state funds in Ivory Coast the worlds biggest cocoa exporter beyond the reach of Mr. Gbagbos entourage.
They think theyre Saudi Arabia, but theyre not; they have an obsession with autarky, said Rinaldo Depagne, an International Crisis Group analyst who has studied Ivory Coast closely, describing the Gbagbo governments belief in economic self-sufficiency.
They say, Were rich. They are ultranationalists.
Meanwhile, the principal pressure point on Mr. Gbagbo, Ecowas, is marching in new and uncertain territory. Although it has deployed military force in the past in conflicts in Sierra Leone, Liberia and Guinea-Bissau its previous interventions have been geared towards ending civil wars, not removing entrenched leaders, wrote Gilles Yabi, the new director of the International Crisis Groups West Africa project, in a recent paper.
Mr. Gbagbos control over fiercely loyal elite units like the Republican Guard, a force of about 1,000 to 1,500 soldiers that has been central in the current wave of repression against opponents, would make him a tough match militarily.
I really have trouble seeing how this would work, Mr. Yabi said in an interview from Dakar, Senegal, on Wednesday. There is no precedent.
The Western diplomat in Abuja, who has been following the Ecowas deliberations closely, said: The Ecowas standby force is something that exists only on paper. They would not be able to survive any kind of fight with Gbagbos forces.
And then there is the question of stomach for the fight. Ecowas has no desire for an offensive military operation, Mr. Yabi said Wednesday.
4-6个人的英语话剧剧本:新生理查德
关于在英语教学中实施新课程理念的思考
牛津3B M1U1教学随想
牛津英语二年级第二学期Unit1教学随笔
浅谈小学英语口语教学
ÎäÏÀÓ¢ÎÄ»°¾ç¾ç±¾ Î÷ÃÅ´µÑ©ÓëÒ¶¹Â³Ç
浅议高中课外英语词汇的学习方法
我与课例研修同行
英语话剧剧本:喜洋洋与灰太狼 Preasent Goat and Big Big Wolf
小学英语教学随笔五
中英对照《肖申克的救赎》经典台词
小学英语教后感
4A Module3 Unit1英语教学随笔
民族农村地区小学生英语学习兴趣的培养初探
怎样基于各校实际整合英语教材
英语话剧视频欣赏:《感恩的心》
中英小品搞笑剧本:路过西天遇见你
英语话剧剧本 小红帽 灰姑娘
随笔我的五年级英语教学
3-6人英语搞笑剧本:武松打虎剧本
在英语教学中渗透河培养学习策略
《圣诞夜惊魂》精彩对白与歌词
《 Unit 10 Grand Theatre Holidays in Shanghai 》教学随笔
初三英语总复习阶段中如何实施素质教育
二年级英语教学随笔--Unit2 Let’s talk
新目标英语七年级上学期教学随笔
谈爱心转化英语学困生的方法
如何提高英语课堂教学效率
小学英语教学随笔:第22课
英语剧本:小白兔和小灰狼(中英文对照)
| 不限 |
| 英语教案 |
| 英语课件 |
| 英语试题 |
| 不限 |
| 不限 |
| 上册 |
| 下册 |
| 不限 |