Former Ivory Coast president retains party post


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ABIDJAN, Ivory Coast (AP) - Henri Konan Bedie, the 79-year-old former president of Ivory Coast, held on to his party leadership post Sunday after delegates overwhelmingly backed him even though he technically was too old to run under existing rules.

The move paves the way for Bedie to run for president again in Ivory Coast's next election in 2015 when he will be well into his 80s.

Bedie fended off a challenge from two other candidates including the president of the party's youth branch whose supporters argued it was time for a change. Party members on Friday voted to lift a rule barring candidates over 75 years old, and the party announced Sunday that Bedie had won with 93 percent of the vote.

Bedie, who led the country from 1993 to 1999, is nicknamed "the Sphinx of Daoukro," his hometown, for being unmovable. He was ousted by a military coup that ended the nearly 40-year reign of his Democratic Party of Ivory Coast, formerly headed by independence leader Felix Houphouet-Boigny.

The theme of the three-day party convention in Abidjan was "Renewal, Rejuvenation and Renaissance," though some Ivorians found this difficult to square with the age of the party's leader.

Yao Etienne, an Abidjan resident, acknowledges that Bedie's party is the one "that made this country."

"But it seems that they remain in the past," he said. "We all want the glory of the golden years back. But Bedie is too old. He had his chance and failed. Now this country needs to go forward."

His supporters, though, described Bedie's experience as an asset.

"Some people say that he is too old, but it is in the old pot that you cook the best stew," said 62-year-old Paul N'Guessan Kouassi.

Germaine Akra, 67, said youth wing leader and challenger Bertin Konan Kouadio was not ready to head the party.

"Nobody can fill the shoes yet. There is a new generation, but it is not their time yet," he said.

Bedie placed third in the country's disputed 2010 presidential election, taking about 25 percent of the vote. He then threw his support behind now-President Alassane Ouattara in the subsequent runoff vote.

Incumbent Laurent Gbagbo refused to accept Ouattara's victory, resulting in a standoff that claimed more than 3,000 lives before Gbagbo was arrested in April 2011.

Eighteen members of Bedie's party had tried to cancel the weekend convention through the courts, denouncing organizational irregularities and a perceived bias of the political office in favor of Bedie. On Wednesday, an Abidjan court stated that it did not have the jurisdiction to rule on that demand.

(Copyright 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.)

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MARC-ANDRE BOISVERT

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