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Ivory Coast dissolves electoral commission after criticism

By Thomson Reuters May 6, 2026 | 11:08 AM

ABIDJAN, May 6 (Reuters) – Ivory Coast’s government has dissolved the Independent Electoral Commission (CEI) following sustained criticism of the body over its handling ​of elections, government spokesperson Amadou Coulibaly said ‌on Wednesday.

• The decision was approved by the government following repeated disputes over the commission’s independence and its handling of elections, Coulibaly told a news conference after a cabinet ‌meeting.

• ​He said the move was ⁠intended to pave the ⁠way for a new election management system and help restore public confidence in the electoral process, with the aim of ensuring “peaceful polls”.

• Coulibaly ​said that discussions within the government would now decide what structure will replace the CEI.

• Ivory ⁠Coast last held a presidential ⁠election in October 2025, when President ​Alassane Ouattara won a fourth term with nearly 90% ​of the vote after several prominent opposition ‌figures were barred from running, prompting criticism from opposition and civil society groups over the inclusiveness of the process.

• The CEI, created in October 2001, ⁠has overseen all of Ivory Coast’s elections since the end of military rule and has been at the centre ⁠of nearly ‌every major electoral dispute, including the ⁠2010 presidential election whose contested outcome ​triggered ‌months of deadly violence.

• Opposition parties ​have long ⁠accused the commission of lacking independence, saying its membership is overly aligned with the ruling coalition, accusations authorities have previously rejected.

(Reporting by Loucoumane Coulibaly in Abidjan; Writing by Clement Bonnerot; Editing by Bate Felix and ​Andrea Ricci )