Queues form at Ivory Coast banks as crisis deepens

ABIDJAN, (Reuters) – Long queues formed outside banks  in Ivory Coast’s main city, Abidjan, yesterday as Ivorians  rushed to withdraw their cash from a banking system that has  been paralysed by the country’s post-election power struggle. In the first sign of an anticipated run on the banks in the  world’s top cocoa grower, nervous account holders hoarded money  as cash machines ran dry and banks limited withdrawals.

Ivory Coast has been in turmoil since a disputed Nov. 28  poll between incumbent Laurent Gbagbo and his rival Alassane  Ouattara, widely recognised as winner of a poll that Gbagbo has  been internationally condemned for refusing to concede.

Standard Chartered became the latest international bank to  suspend operations in Ivory Coast, bringing the total to four.

Other banks are expected to follow. Liquidity has dried up  since West Africa’s central bank cut Gbagbo’s access to state  accounts and he responded by seizing its Abidjan branch.

“I’ve come to the bank because I need to get my money out as  soon as possible,” said Koni Mamadou, a 40-year-old trader in a  shiny silk robe, mark of West Africa’s affluent middle classes.

“We’re all afraid because you never know what will happen  next,” he added, waiting in a line of 50 or 60 people outside a  branch of Ecobank in Abidjan’s leafy Deux Plateaux suburb.

Some jostled at the front as a security guard held them  back, a scene repeated at banks across the lagoon-side city.

Ecobank limited withdrawals to 1 million CFA ($2,000) a day.  “As you can see, we are swamped by clients. People .. are coming  to empty their accounts,” said one of the bank’s managers.

U.N.-certified election results showed Ouattara won the  poll, but a pro-Gbagbo legal body reversed the decision and  declared the incumbent winner, stirring international outrage.

“WE AWAIT THEIR RETURN”

Sanctions on his camp and backers like ports and cocoa  administrators are biting, and Gbagbo has sought a parallel bank  clearing system to replace the regional central bank one.

French bank BNP Paribas’s Ivorian unit, the second biggest  bank, and Citibank suspended operations on Monday, on security  fears and difficulties operating. Gbagbo’s government has threatened to take them to court.

Nigeria’s Access Bank and Standard Chartered said they had  followed suit yesterday. Bankers had privately reported death threats and invasions  of bank buildings by soldiers to intimidate them.

But in a sign the Gbagbo government’s may have been unnerved  by the banking exodus, planning minister Justin Kone rowed back  on insisting banks clear cheques through their system — some  banks had refused, to comply with EU and U.S. sanctions  forbidding cooperation with Gbagbo’s government.

“Because they say that this would reassure them, we say go  ahead then,” he said, explicitly mentioning BNP Paribas. “For  us, there is one system — (our) multilateral one, but those who  want to do clearing bilaterally, we can make concessions.”