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Ivory Coast has been gripped by a series of revolts this year by various factions of the military seeking bonus pay, after the government conceded to the demands of an initial group of mutineers in January.
The journalists were arrested on Sunday and after several hours of questioning were taken to a police camp in Agban where they are still being held, media union SYNAPPCI said.
“Unfortunately we have noted that, in relation to these movements, certain media outlets are spreading false information that could incite soldiers to revolt,” state prosecutor Adou Richard said in a statement read on national television.
“This applies notably to the publications of Saturday, Feb. 11, 2017 by daily newspapers Soir Info, Le Temps, Notre Voie and l’Inter,” he said, listing four well-known Ivorian papers.
It was not immediately clear which articles he was referring to, although SYNAPPCI suggested in a statement that the articles referred to deals between mutineering soldiers and the government.
Ivory Coast emerged from a decade-long political crisis and civil war in 2011 with one of the world’s fastest growing economies and as a darling of frontier market investors.
