Ivorian students take a beating from their headmaster – with the help of soldiers

 
A video sent by one of our Observers in Ivory Coast shows a secondary school headmaster beating two students who had set off firecrackers in the school’s courtyard. Soldiers were on hand, helping the headmaster carry out the punishment.
 
This video was filmed at the Voltaire secondary school, in the Marcory neighbourhood of Abidjan. The beating took place on December 14, one week before Christmas break. Two students were caught setting off firecrackers, which scared their fellow students. In Ivory Coast, students often set off firecrackers before the holidays in the hope that the chaos they create would allow them to go home early. However, with the country just coming out of a civil war, the sound of firecrackers now touches a raw nerve, as it closely resembles that of gunfire.
 
WARNING: These images show violence.
 
 
 
This video shows the two students being violently beaten with a tube by the school’s headmaster, Honoré Amousso. He told us his version of the incident.
 
These students first set off firecrackers at the secondary school in Treichville [an adjacent neighbourhood] with the help of friends in that school. Then, they came to this school to do the same thing. These two students attended Treichville’s school last year, but were kicked out due to disciplinary problems and enrolled in ours.”
 
The headmaster meted out the beating himself. He explains:
 
Their parents were present and wanted to punish their children themselves, but as the school’s headmaster, it was my duty to carry out the punishment. The parents and I agreed on ten spankings for each.”
 
The video shows that the punishment wasn’t spanking so much as a full-on beating. The headmaster was helped out by a member of the school staff and by soldiers from the Republican Forces of Ivory Coast (soldiers who were loyal to President Alassane Ouattara during the recent civil war.) They held the students down and tried to tie their feet together.
 
So why were these students so severely beaten? And what were the soldiers doing at the school? The headmaster explains:
 
When the students set off their firecrackers, everybody in the school panicked. The Republic Forces came to help us restore order; we were overwhelmed.”
 
Toward the end of the video, the headmaster warns the dozens of students gathered around the headmaster, while the punished students remain lying on the ground:
 
If anyone else dares to use a single ‘banger’ [a brand of firecracker] in this school before the Christmas holidays, you’ll receive the same punishment you’ve just witnessed.”
 
Firecrackers are illegal in Ivory Coast, but before the holidays, students manage to buy them from small vendors under the table. A firecracker created chaos on December 18 in the central city of Vavoua; five people died in the clashes that followed.
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I am worried for the

I am worried for the Headmaster now - the student would like to 'administer' a 'punishment' on him!

well

I hope they will. this is a free country, the people do what they want. Africa is free. No one can judge these uncivilised acts of cowardice. They are too much smarter than the rest of this planet and they are happy living like that.
This report is stupid and ridiculous. Another example of the French trying to prove the African people are crazy.

What part of the jungle (or

What part of the jungle (or the planet mars) are you from my little Green guy? This behaviour is forbidden in Cote d'Ivoire. Anyway, it has never been allowed in secondary school. Even in primary school where it was (it doesn't exist today) admitted, it has never reached such a level. What are you talking about? For all people who are reading this today, that is unfortunately our daily life since Ouattara is in power. It’s not a question of school. Nevertheless, I agreed with this guy about one thing: It's no use reporting this matter. There's no justice anymore in our new Côte d'Ivoire. The worst, there's no place to take it to, since people you're supposed to find there, are themselves involved in the facts...

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