For the complete documentation index, see llms.txt.Skip to main content
Summary tailored to your query (Côte d’Ivoire foreign policy, politics, diplomacy, elections, economy, security): - Foreign policy and security - Côte d’Ivoire positions itself as a regional stabilizing force, strengthening border security and counterterrorism, with regional cooperation through the Accra Initiative and hosting the International Academy for the Fight against Terrorism (AILCT). - Joined and supports broader African security frameworks (Niamey Convention; A
2026-05-24Côte d’Ivoire’s October 25, 2025 presidential election faces high risk despite overall strong growth and a more secure security environment under Ouattara. Key points: - Political backdrop: Côte d’Ivoire has not seen a peaceful presidential power transfer since 1995. The pre-election period is tense, with risk of a tougher government-opposition struggle, potential protests, and security overreach if dialogue is lacking. - Security and stability: The armed forces have been re
2026-05-24Côte d’Ivoire’s foreign policy and diplomacy have evolved from close Franco-African ties to a broader, more diversified set of partnerships. Key points: - Regional and global stance: Active member of ECOWAS, AU, IMF, UN, WTO; headquarters of the African Development Bank in Abidjan; strong role in regional security against Sahelian extremism; pushing regional integration via AfCFTA. - Multilateral engagement: Early adopter of EU-RECIPROCITY (first West African state to apply
2026-05-24Summary: - The article examines foreign influence in Côte d’Ivoire’s 2025 presidential context, highlighting rising concerns over political stability and external meddling risks. - Russia: expanded influence via military cooperation and security services (AES bloc through the Africa Corp). A 2025 satellite/remote sensing deal with AES aims at border surveillance and disaster monitoring. Some view Gbagbo as potentially aligned with Russia if he returns to power, signaling a sh
2026-05-24Summary: The IRIS briefing on Côte d’Ivoire under Alassane Ouattara highlights a broadly positive macroeconomic trajectory over his three terms, with stable growth, ongoing infrastructure investment, and diversified financing (including eurobonds, a Samurai bond, and a CFA franc bond). Public finances show gradual consolidation, with the 2024 deficit around 4% of GDP and debt rising toward ~60% of GDP in 2024, signaling limited fiscal space and the need for stronger revenue m
2026-05-24