UN, French attack Gbagbo heavy weapons in I.Coast

ABIDJAN, (Reuters) – U.N. and French helicopters  attacked forces loyal to incumbent Ivory Coast leader Laurent  Gbagbo late into last night, damaging the presidential  residence and destroying heavy weapons that U.N. chief Ban  Ki-moon ordered silenced.

Gbagbo has refused to step down since U.N.-certified  elections last November showed his rival Alassane Ouattara won,  reigniting a civil war that has claimed over a thousand lives  and uprooted over a million people.

“The operations are on going,” Hamadoun Toure, spokesman for  UN mission in the country said late on Sunday.

“We had targeted and hit several different places where we  found heavy weapons, not only the areas around Gbagbo’s  residence, but all places where we know that there are heavy  weapons,” Toure said.

“We will review the situation tomorrow (Monday).” he added.

Ban said U.N. headquarters in Ivory Coast, Ouattara’s base  and two civilian districts had been hit by machinegun, sniper  and rocket-propelled grenade fire in recent days.

“These actions are unacceptable and cannot continue,” said  Ban, authorising U.N. peacekeepers to use “all necessary means”  to suppress the use of heavy weapons by Gbagbo’s troops.

U.N. forces had launched military operations “to prevent the  use of heavy weapons which threaten the civilian population of  Abidjan and our peacekeepers,” he said.

Pro-Gbagbo sites including a naval base and several military  bases around Abidjan were targeted, witnesses said.

Gbagbo’s spokesman Ahoua Don Mello said by telephone that  thick smoke billowed from the presidential residence after the  combined French-U.N. strikes, but he declined to say whether  Gbagbo was inside at the time.

“U.N. and French helicopters continue to fire at President  Gbagbo’s residence which has been partially destroyed,” he said  by telephone.

Residents near the presidential palace and Gbagbo’s  residence, where he is said to be holed up with his family,  close advisers and about 1,000 militiamen, said they heard heavy  cannon fire and shooting on Sunday afternoon.

Ouattara’s government said it had asked the United Nations  to carry out its mandate after its base in the U.N.-protected  Golf Hotel and civilians came under heavy weapons attack from  the Gbagbo camp.

They have launched a counter-attack against Ouattara’s  troops, who had swept from the north to coastal Abidjan almost  unopposed more than a week ago in a drive to install Ouattara as  the top cocoa producer’s leader.

Gbagbo’s defeat had appeared imminent last week and talks  took place between the two sides. But Gbagbo’s soldiers have dug  in, holding on to swathes of the city and frustrating hopes of a  swift end to the conflict.

The U.S. State Department condemned the attack on Ouattara’s  hotel and said in a statement Gbagbo’s attempts at negotiation  last week were nothing more than a ruse to regroup and rearm.