Washington, Sept 25: The United States has sent troops to strife-torn ivory coast to protect US citizens, including about 160 schoolchildren trapped in a rebel-held city.

About 200 US Special Forces will go directly to the West African nation and military personnel and aircraft are to be placed in neighboring Ghana for a possible evacuation, US officials said yesterday. "At the request of the American ambassador to the ivory Coast, the European command intends to move forces there to ensure the safety of our American citizens," said lieutenant commander Don Sewell, a US navy spokesman.

"The purpose is to go there and assist in moving American citizens from the International Christian Academy, where they are, to a safe location, still within ivory coast," Sewell said. The dispatch order was given as Ivorian troops attacked mutineers in the central city of Bouake, where some 170 foreign schoolchildren, including the US students, are trapped.

About 1,000 foreigners live in Bouake, the country's second largest city. In addition to the US children who board at the school, there are about a dozen from Canada and The Netherlands. According to the navy spokesman, the move by US troops did not equate to an evacuation.

Late yesterday, the US state department issued a travel warning to US citizens urging them to "defer travel" to Ivory Coast at this time.

Bureau Report