- Associated Press - Wednesday, April 6, 2011

ABIDJAN, Ivory Coast (AP) — Heavy-arms fire rang out Wednesday near the home of the country’s strongman, who remained holed up in a subterranean bunker as forces backing his rival assaulted the residence to try to force him out, diplomats and witnesses said.

A spokeswoman for the government of democratically elected President Alassane Ouattara said on France-24 television that pro-Ouattara forces had entered the gates of Laurent Gbagbo’s residence.

“At the current moment they have not yet captured Gbagbo, but it will happen soon,” Affoussy Bamba said by telephone from Abidjan. “They opened the gates and noted that the residence is surrounded by heavy weaponry,” she said. “Now the objective is to capture him.”

Mr. Gbagbo on Tuesday appeared to be on the point of surrender, sending an emissary to meet with foreign ambassadors in order to negotiate the terms of his resignation. But a senior diplomat who asked not to be named because he is not authorized to speak to the press said that the overture appeared to be a foil and that Mr. Gbagbo simply was playing for time.

On Wednesday, French radio RFI broadcast an interview with Mr. Gbagbo in which he said he had won last November’s election and that there was no question of his leaving.

“We are not at the negotiating phase. And my departure from where? My departure to where?” he said.

Mr. Gbagbo has refused to accept defeat to Mr. Ouattara in last year’s election and took his country to the precipice of civil war in his bid to preserve power. His security forces are accused of using cannons, mortars and machine guns to mow down opponents in the four months since Mr. Ouattara was declared the winner of the contested vote.

But analysts say Mr. Ouattara is acutely aware that while he won last year’s election with 54 percent of the vote, Mr. Gbagbo received 46 percent — representing nearly half the electorate. A diplomat who speaks to Mr. Ouattara frequently said that the leader is aware of the danger involved at this stage, because if Mr. Gbagbo is killed, it may galvanize his supporters.

In Europe, Mr. Gbagbo’s spokesman attempted to spin the attack on the residence by Mr. Ouattara’s forces as a foreign intervention. He claimed it was the French who were storming the home of the former leader, a claim the French military vigorously denied.

U.N. attack helicopters helped by French troops bombarded the ruler’s arsenal late Monday, acting on a Security Council resolution authorizing them to take out his heavy weapons because they had been used against the population. The international forces have not been involved in the ground attack Wednesday on the residence, said diplomats and French military spokesman Thierry Burkhard.

“France will be held responsible for the death of President Gbagbo, his wife and family members and all those who are inside the residence, which is being bombarded by the French army,” Mr. Gbagbo’s Paris-based adviser, Toussaint Alain, said. He added that “there is a real danger” Mr. Gbagbo and the others could be killed in the operation.

Associated Press writers Edith M. Lederer at the United Nations; Michelle Faul in Accra, Ghana; and Jenny Barchfield and Angela Charlton in Paris contributed to this report.

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