Source: United Nations News Centre In unanimously adopting resolution 1975, the Council urged Mr. Gbagbo to  immediately step aside, repeating the calls made for months following  his UN-certified defeat in November’s presidential run-off, which was  won by opposition leader Alassane Ouattara. Top UN officials have voiced growing concern about the situation inside  Côte d’Ivoire, where up to 1 million people have been displaced – some  internally, and some to neighbouring nations – since fighting first  broke out in the wake of the polls, which were meant to reunite a  country split by civil war in 2002 into a Government-held south and  rebel-controlled north. Nearly 500 people are reported to have been killed, and the violence  appears to have stepped up in recent weeks, including the use of heavy  weapons. The Council “condemns in the strongest terms the recent escalation of  violence throughout the country which could amount to crimes against  humanity,” the 15-member body said in the resolution. The UN peacekeeping mission in Côte d’Ivoire (UNOCI),  which continues to protect civilians during this period of increased  fighting to the best of its abilities in line with its mandate, has also  been targeted, with a UN-marked bus damaged by stone-throwing  demonstrators earlier this week. The Council condemned the use of Radiodiffusion Télévision Ivoirienne  (RTI) and other media to incite discrimination, hostility, hatred and  violence, including against UNOCI, and demanded that all parties abide  “scrupulously” by their obligation to respect the safety of UNOCI and  other UN personnel and ensure their freedom of movement. It decided to adopt targeted sanctions against those individuals who  meet the criteria set out in previous resolutions, including those who  obstruct peace and reconciliation in the country, obstruct the work of  UNOCI and other international actors and commit serious violations of  human rights and international humanitarian law. In addition to Mr. Gbagbo and his wife, Simone, today’s resolution  imposed targeted financial and travel measures against Désiré Tagro,  Secretary General in the so-called ‘presidency’ of Mr. Gbagbo; Pascal  Affi N’Guessan, Chairman of the Ivorian Popular Front; and Alcide  Djédjé, a close advisor to Mr. Gbagbo.   Displaced people in western Côte d'Ivoire queue up for relief items
With  the post-electoral deadlock in Côte d’Ivoire now entering its fifth  month and the crisis showing no signs of abating, the Security Council  today demanded an immediate end to the violence against civilians and  decided to impose targeted sanctions against former president Laurent  Gbagbo, his wife and three associates. 
 
