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Le Monde
Le Monde
23 Dec 2023


Images Le Monde.fr

Ivorian-French banker Tidjane Thiam was elected on Friday, December 22, leader of the main opposition Democratic Party of Ivory Coast – a victory which puts him in position to contest the next presidential election in 2025. Thiam, a former boss of banking giant Credit Suisse, won very comfortably with 96.5 percent of the vote against 3.2 percent for his rival Jean-Marc Yace, the mayor of a commune in the economic hub Abidjan, according to the results announced late Friday. At 61, Thiam is a relatively young top political figure in the West African nation and is returning after more than 20 years abroad.

"It is with great humility that I accept the responsibility that you have decided to entrust to me," Thiam said. More than 6,000 delegates took part in the vote at a party congress in the capital Yamoussoukro.

"Our new president will have to put us back in working order. He will have to give more responsibilities to the young people of the party," said interim party president Philippe Cowppli-Bony, 91. "We have been treated too much as a party of old people. It's positive to see two young candidates, it's nice," said Ohoueu Assi, a congressman from Guiglo in the west.

The party, which is eyeing a return to power in two years, also proposed supporting Thiam's nomination for the 2025 race. "2025 will be a crucial electoral year for our party, we must be ready," Thiam said.

"If Thiam is our candidate, which I hope, we will have the capacity to return to power," said Cyprien Koffi, a delegate from San Pedro in the southwest. "He can breathe new life into it."

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More than two decades after leaving Ivory Coast following the 1999 coup, Thiam returns after a high-profile business career. In 1982 he was the first Ivorian to pass the entrance exam for the Ecole Polytechnique in Paris, from which he graduated two years later before an initial career as an engineer. He then spent a few years with consulting firm McKinsey before being tapped by the powers that be in Ivory Coast.

An early career as a government minister was interrupted in 1999 when a coup toppled president Bedie and the PDCI has not regained power since. He then went into the private sector abroad, first with insurance firm Aviva and then as CEO of Prudential before becoming head of Credit Suisse in 2015.

After leading a restructuring of the bank, his initially praised strategy was criticized after three consecutive years of losses and a fall in its share price. He stepped down in 2020 after a corporate espionage scandal at the bank, which he denied involvement in.

Le Monde with AFP