Arab residents in Ivory Coast

There are over 100,000 Arab cultural residents in Ivory Coast as of 2009. Most are either former expatriates or current shopkeepers' families who are descended from immigrants of Middle Eastern and North African origin.

History

Anti-Arab riots

In 2004, the Young Patriots of Abidjan, a strongly nationalist organisation, rallied by the State media, plundered possessions of foreign nationals in Abidjan. Calls for violence against whites and non-Ivorians were broadcast on national radio and TV after the Young Patriots seized control of its offices. Rapes, beatings, and murders of white expatriates and local Lebanese followed. Thousands of expatriates and ethnic Lebanese fled. The attacks drew international condemnation.[1][2]

gollark: ++delete `git pull`
gollark: ++delete the letter e
gollark: Do you do *any testing*?
gollark: ++delete cogs/japanese.py
gollark: ++delete <@341618941317349376>'s authority

References

  1. Randall, Colin (19 Nov 2004). "The night westerners were hunted for being white". The Daily Telegraph. London. Retrieved 2009-06-26.
  2. Handloff, Robert E., ed. (1988). "The Levantine Community". Ivory Coast: A Country Study. Country Studies. Washington, DC: GPO for the Library of Congress.

See also

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.