Strongman Laurent Gbagbo is/out, but Pat Robertson still supports
The other day I wrote about the ties between the Christian right -- including the secretive group known as the Fellowship -- and Laurent Gbagbo, the leader who refused to step down as the president of Ivory Coast after losing an internationally certified election.
Despite the fact that Gbagbo looks as if he will be removed from office by forces loyal to his opponent as early as today, Christian right figures in the U.S. are still standing by the isolated strongman.
On "The 700 Club" today, Pat Robertson declared that Gbagbo is "a very fine man" and insisted that the election was "crooked," even though the U.S., the U.N. and the African Union all said that Gbagbo's opponent, Alassane Ouattara, was the winner.
Part of the dynamic that is clearly on Robertson's mind is that Gbagbo and his wife are evangelical Christians -- who have both attended the Fellowship's National Prayer Breakfast in Washington -- while Ouattara is Muslim.
Robertson was blunt today:
"This is a crooked election. But nevertheless the UN has said the other guy [Ouattara] won. Well, that may be. But the problem is that this is a country now that has been run by a Christian that's going to be into the hands of Muslims. So it's one more Muslim nation that's going to be built into that ring of Sharia law around the Middle East. It's one more country, one more danger spot, but we don't seem to see that right now, do we?"
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