WIMAM ADMINISTRATION
2006 - 2008
LATEST NEWS IN AFRICA AND THE WORLD
SERVICES FOR
MEMBERS
Copyright © 2006 The Wisconsin Mandingo Association of Milwaukee ( WIMAM ) Inc. All rights reserved.
AFFILIATES LINKS
MEDIA LINKS
THIS SITE IS SPONSORED
BY:
CLUB TIMBUKTU
African Night Club
And Restaurant
520 East Center Street
Minutes From Down
Town Milwaukee
V.P. of WIMAM Wedding Picture
WIMAM at the ULAA Election
FREE TRANSLATION
SERVICES OFFERED BY
Abraham A.S. Bility
FOR
APPOINTMENTS
CALL
(414) 467-7555
Services include:
Mandingo to English
French to English
And verse-versa
We also review
immigration cases and
give prompt advice
Vice President Moniba is Dead
PRESIDENT
Mamadee Konneh
VICE PRESIDENT
Assata Sheriff
SECRETARY GENERAL
Morris M. Kromah
Arts & Culture
ARTICLE
Abraham Kromah Speech
WIMAM Inauguration
Congratulations
Mr. & Mrs. Bility
Latest Photos From
Abraham And Isatu
Wedding
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Let us come together as
one and let go our
differences.
By: Mr. Mamadee Konneh,
WIMAM's President, July 9, 2006

It has been said and as we all are
aware, “United We Stand, Divided
We Fall”. Why can't we be good
listeners and allow others to
express their opinions?
I would like to point out some
issues that are affecting our
community, and my administration
will do every thing to solve this
dispute if Allah’s agree.
Read full Story
Rebel Chief Named Ivory Coast Prime Minister
By Phuong Tran Dakar 27 March 2007

In Ivory Coast, government officials and rebels have agreed to name New Forces rebel leader Guillaume Soro as prime
minister. Tuesday's announcement comes three weeks after Mr. Soro and Ivory Coast President Laurent Gbagbo signed an
agreement to create a new government. Phuong Tran has more from VOA's West Africa Bureau in Dakar.

Guillaume Soro's deputy, Cisse Sindou, says the rebel leader agreed to accept the nomination late on Monday after receiving
a guarantee from government officials that he would have all the necessary powers to organize presidential elections by the
end of October.

"Power sharing is whatever power [is] necessary to the prime minister," he said. "Areas like identification, election will be given
to Soro. [President] Gbagbo will not have to interfere with that."

The presidential vote, originally scheduled for October 2005, has been postponed two times.

Voter identity cards have been a key demand for the rebels who took up arms four years ago to defend the rights of
northerners who do not have Ivorian identification papers.

But analyst Daniel Balint-Kurti, with London-based Chatham House, says Mr. Soro's pending nomination is not enough to
guarantee reunification of the country split since 2002.

"It is one thing naming Soro as prime minister," he said. "But actually sharing power with him on a day-to-day basis and putting
in place measures to resolve some of the real problems in the country is another matter."

In the past, the debate over voting cards and disarmament of former fighters has stalled efforts to reunite Ivory Coast.

The peace agreement brokered earlier this month in Ouagadougou by Burkina Faso's president and leader of the Economic
Community of West African States, Blaise Compaore, is the latest in a string of more than 10 agreements that have thus far
failed to reunite the country. But this is the first agreement that was achieved through direct dialogue between the rebels and
the government. And this makes Cisse Sindou hopeful that this plan will succeed in reuniting the country.

"Nothing is easy," he said. "But we think that the Ouaga[dougou peace deal] accord is the proposition of [President] Gbagbo
himself."

This agreement has led to the creation of a joint army command center that will work on demobilizing militia fighters from both
sides.

The power sharing announcement comes as France prepares to pull out 500 troops from the U.N. controlled buffer zone
between the rebel-held north and government-controlled south.

Pending President Gbagbo's formal nomination by decree, Mr. Soro will replace the current U.N.-appointed prime minister
Charles Konan Banny, who has said he is ready to resign in the interests of his country.