"It's impossible to organise elections as scheduled," one African diplomat in war-divided Cote d'Ivoire sighed. "The reason no-one is saying it officially is because they don't want to annoy the mediators." Ivorians are supposed to go to the polls on 30 October to restore peace to a country that was once an oasis of prosperity and stability in West Africa but for the last three years has been spilt into a government-run south and a rebel-held north. The African Union picked South African president Thabo Mbeki to oversee Cote d'Ivoire's transition to peace but he is repeatedly running up against obstacles, and dealing with each one is running down precious days on the elections timetable. The latest dispute is over a series of laws passed by Ivorian President Laurent Gbagbo in mid-July on nationality, identity and the electoral process. The South African mediation last week gave the reforms the green light, saying they conformed to the peace process, but the rebels have protested and are refusing to move into cantonment sites ahead of an eventual disarmament. "The crux of the blockage is the electoral commission," one Western diplomat told IRIN. Despite the fact there are just over two months to go until the planned polls, the Independent Electoral Commission is still not up and running because there is disagreement about what its responsibilities are. Gbagbo wants the National Statistics Institute to handle the drawing up of the electoral register and the distribution of voting cards as it always has done. But the opposition and the rebels are wary because the statistics body is controlled by the government and they fear it could distribute cards only to those who will vote for Gbagbo. Sources close to the mediation say the South Africans agreed with all parties that the statistics institute would hold on to its tasks but would carry them out only under the direct control of the electoral commission, where the opposition and rebel parties would also have seats. But the rebels are still unhappy, and on Wednesday began a meeting to decide whether they still had faith in Mbeki as a mediator and whether they would send representatives to sit on the elections body after all. "Even if everything came together on the political front this very moment though, there are still technical issues to deal with," the African diplomat said. For example, voter registers that were supposed to be published three months before election day have yet to be updated let alone displayed for citizens to check. A South African delegation headed to the rebel stronghold, Bouake, on Thursday to try to break the deadlock, and rebel leaders are expected to fly to Pretoria at the weekend to see Mbeki, diplomats said.
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This article was produced by IRIN News while it was part of the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs. Please send queries on copyright or liability to the UN. For more information: https://shop.un.org/rights-permissions