The National Coalition for Change, a new bloc composed largely of
PDCI dissidents and a faction of FPI hardliners, is also expected to
provide a challenge.
Ouattara is the favourite to win, having revived the economy since a civil war ended in 2011.
"I am a candidate to put Ivory Coast and Ivorians at the centre of the nation's priorities," Banny said.
He was not directly a candidate of any party, he said.
The
elections are a step towards stability after a decade of political
turmoil and war. More than 3,000 people died in conflict that broke out
in 2010 when then President Laurent Gbagbo refused to accept defeat at
the polls to Ouattara.
Ivory Coast is
French-speaking Africa's largest economy and the world's biggest
producer of cocoa. Its post-war revival has seen it record some of the
continent's highest growth rates.
Banny served as prime minister from 2005 to 2007.
Affi N'Guessan,
who heads Gbagbo's Ivorian Patriotic Front (FPI), is expected to be
Ouattara's main challenger but the president is aided as he runs for a
second five-year term on Oct 25 by support from coalition partner the
Democratic Party of Ivory Coast (PDCI).
The
National Coalition for Change, a new bloc composed largely of PDCI
dissidents and a faction of FPI hardliners, is also expected to provide a
challenge.
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