Gunfire rang out across Bouake, the second-largest city in this West African nation, starting around 1 a.M., according to residents. Similar mutinies erupted later in Daloa, in the central region, and Korhogo in the north.
"They are heavily armed and parading through the city of Daloa," said Karim Sanogo, a student who lives there.
"Security forces have abandoned their posts. Everyone has returned home to seek shelter."
Defense Minister Alain Donwahi said discussions were under way with the soldiers, and he called on all troops to return to their barracks.
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That was the start of a civil war that ended months later in a stalemate that left rebels in control of the northern half of the country, with their stronghold in Bouake.
A breakthrough came in 2007 with a peace deal that saw rebel leader Guillaume Soro appointed prime minister in a unity government.
The soldiers, however, now say not all the promises made in that 2007 agreement were implemented.
France has a military presence in Ivory Coast, with most of its 900 troops stationed in and near Abidjan. It was not immediately known whether the Ivory Coast government had asked for their help Friday in calming the situation, as it has in the past.
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