Some 8,400 Ivory Coast soldiers who mutinied in January apologised to President Alassane Ouattara in an orchestrated ceremony that was aired on national television late Thursday.
Organised without the knowledge of the press, the event — broadcast after it took place at the presidential palace — signalled a dramatic end to the protest movement.
As well as apologising the rebels said they were giving up all their financial demands.
Ouattara said of the rebels that he “believed their words were sincere” and they would now be “exemplary soldiers”.
A spokesman for the rebels, named as Sergeant Fofana said: “We apologise for the various situations we know we have caused. We definitively renounce all our financial demands.”
He then, in a sign of allegiance, saluted the president, the images showed.
At the start of January, former rebels integrated into army ranks staged a mutiny that paralysed activity in several towns of the west African country while they pressed for bonuses.
In meeting the demands of the ex-rebels, who controlled the northern half of Africa’s biggest cocoa producer between 2002 and 2011, the authorities provoked a fresh mutiny by other troops and paramilitary gendarmes.
Clashes claimed four lives in the political capital Yamoussoukro.
The mutineers, who demanded 12 million CFA francs (18,000 euros) in payments for each soldier, obtained 5 million francs (7,500 euros) in January and are to receive the rest of the sum this month, the rebels told AFP.
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