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Ivory Coast state TV signal cut off; UN official says at least 173 killed

Ivory Coast state television disappeared from the airwaves outside the nation’s largest city late Thursday, a blow to the incumbent president’s attempts to cling to power in the bloody aftermath of an election most of the world says he lost.

vory Coast state television disappeared from the airwaves outside the nation’s largest city late Thursday, a blow to the incumbent president’s attempts to cling to power in the bloody aftermath of an election most of the world says he lost.

Also Thursday, the United Nations recognized incumbent Laurent Gbagdo’s challenger, Alassane Ouattara, as the winner of the Nov. 28 runoff vote. The 192-nation U.N. General Assembly rescinded the credentials of Ivory Coast’s U.N. Ambassador Ilahiri Djedje, a Gbagbo supporter, and accepted those of Ouattara’s choice, veteran diplomat Youssouf Bamba.

The U.N. deputy human rights commissioner in Geneva, Kyung-wha Kang, said at least 173 people had died in violence since the election. She detailed hundreds of arrests and detentions, dozens of cases of torture and mistreatment, and said government forces were preventing investigators from looking into other reports of human-rights violations, including possible mass graves.

The state television channel controlled by incumbent Gbagbo continued to air in Abidjan, but only black and white snow appeared in at least six other cities around the West African nation just minutes before Ivorians sat down to their nightly newscast, residents told The Associated Press.

It was not immediately clear how the signal was cut off. Advisers to Ouattara refused to comment, but the event falls in line with a series of strategies Ouattara has been employing to try to break Gbagbo’s stranglehold on the news.

A week ago, Ouattara’s supporters unsuccessfully attempted to seize control of the channel. Ouattara has been broadcasting a private radio station that intersperses rally songs with news broadcasts from the Golf Hotel, where he has been holed up since the election. Ouattara also had said that he planned to launch his own version of state TV.

There was no immediate comment late Thursday from representatives for Gbagbo.

The U.N., U.S., France and others have said Ouattara won the runoff vote, but Gbagbo has refused to step down. State TV ran continuous footage of Gbagbo taking the oath of office in the days after he declared victory without mentioning that his claim was heavily contested.

The U.N. Human Rights Council adopted a resolution late Thursday calling for an end to the violence, which has raised fears of a return to civil war. Kyung-wha told diplomats that there may be more fatalities than the ones she was able to document.

“Unfortunately it has been impossible to investigate all the allegations of serious human rights violations, including reports of mass graves, due to restrictions on movement by U.N. personnel,” Kyung-wha said. “Indeed, the Special Representative of the Secretary-General was stopped at gunpoint as he sought to verify such allegations.”

U.N. deputy spokesman Farhan Haq said that forces loyal to Gbagbo, supported by masked men armed with rocket launchers, were blocking the road to a village outside Abidjan “where allegations point to the existence of a mass grave.”

Kyung-wha also expressed concern about how Ivory Coast media being controlled by political allies of Gbagbo. She said state television and some private newspapers were inciting “hatred and violence” and releasing “false and inflammatory information against the United Nations.”

Amid the rising concerns over violence, the United States has said it and other countries are discussing ways to help quell the postelection violence.

“We are in discussions with other regional countries to see if there are ways in which we can reinforce the U.N. peacekeeping force,” spokesman P.J. Crowley told reporters Wednesday. “It could be that that kind of reinforcement could be another way to send a clear message to President Gbagbo.”

Crowley declined to name the countries that have been contacted but noted that Nigeria is a major troop contributor to West African peacekeeping forces. He also noted that France has interests in Ivory Coast, a former French colony where at least 13,000 French citizens reside.

A Nigerian military spokesman said Thursday that military intervention into another country could only be decided by the president, and a presidential spokesman could not be reached for comment. The regional bloc ECOWAS is due to hold a meeting on the crisis late Friday.

There has been little international interest so far in a military intervention in Ivory Coast, which suffered a 2002-2003 civil war. The United States and the European Union are imposing sanctions targeting Gbagbo, his wife and political allies. Hundreds of U.N. peacekeepers have been protecting the hotel where Ouattara is based.

Over the weekend, Gbagbo ordered all U.N. peacekeepers out of the country immediately. The U.N. considers Ouattara president and is staying put, raising fears that U.N. personnel and other foreigners could be targeted as tensions mount.

Charles Ble Goude, Gbagbo’s minister of youth, called for demonstrations next Wednesday. Goude is the subject of a 2006 United Nations sanction for his role in inciting the Young Patriots, a pro-Gbagbo group that led violent attacks against foreigners, especially French citizens.

The U.S. State Department has ordered most of its personnel to leave because of the deteriorating security situation and growing anti-Western sentiment. France and Germany also have recommended that their citizens leave.

On Thursday, the U.N. said at least 471 arrests and detentions had been substantiated between Dec. 16 and 21. It said at least 90 people have been tortured or treated inhumanely, and that there have been 24 cases of disappearances.

The U.N. also has expressed serious concern about the involvement of foreign mercenaries from neighbouring Liberia, which suffered brutal back-to-back civil wars until 2003.

U.N. peacekeeping chief Alain Le Roy has confirmed that the mission in Ivory Coast “has seen what appear to be mercenaries from Liberia and perhaps Angola.” He said they did not speak any of the local languages in Ivory Coast.

Ivory Coast’s 2002-2003 civil war saw the involvement of Liberians fighting on nearly all sides of the conflict. The two countries share a porous, 370-mile-(600-kilometre)-long border. Liberia’s president has urged citizens not to get involved in Ivory Coast’s political crisis.

Ivory Coast was once an economic hub because of its role as the world’s top cocoa producer. The 2002-2003 civil war split the country into a rebel-controlled north and a loyalist south. While the country officially reunited in a 2007 peace deal, Ouattara draws his support from the northern half of the country, where he was born, while Gbagbo’s power base is in the south.

Gbagbo claimed victory in the presidential election only after his allies threw out half a million ballots from Ouattara strongholds in the north, a move that infuriated residents there who have long felt that they are treated as foreigners in their own country by southerners.

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Associated Press writers John Heilprin in Geneva, Edith M. Lederer at the United Nations, Yinka Ibukun in Lagos, Nigeria and Matthew Lee in Washington contributed to this report.