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Africa: Peacekeeping Trends, 2
AfricaFocus Bulletin
Jan 31, 2004 (040131)
(Reposted from sources cited below)
Editor's Note
"After so many years of destruction, something new is happening, at
last. The killing has largely stopped. ... One point to note in all
this: the peace processes are mostly home-grown" - Jean-Marie
Guehenno, UN Under Secretary General for Peacekeeping Operations.
By the end of 2003, 27 countries had ratified the protocol
establishing the new Peace and Security Council of the African
Union, clearing the way for establishment of an African Standby
Force and further institutionalization of Africa's regional
peacemaking capacity. "The chances of peace in Africa have never
been greater," concluded Mr. Guehenno's op-ed in the International
Herald Tribune. But he also warned that "a lapse back into conflict
is very possible" and called for greater international support for
African efforts.
Today's two issues of AfricaFocus Bulletin contain a variety of
commentary and background information on the status of African
peacekeeping as the year begins. This issue contains excerpts from
an essay appearing in Human Rights Watch World Report
(http://hrw.org/wr2k4); another issue contains additional relevant
background from the United Nations and the African Union.
++++++++++++++++++++++end editor's note+++++++++++++++++++++++
Africa on its Own: Regional Intervention and Human Rights
By Binaifer Nowrojee
[Excerpts only; for full report and credits see:
http://hrw.org/wr2k4]
Despite the continued gloomy reality of much reporting from Africa,
the current moment is in fact one of hope for the continent. Though
a quarter of Africa's countries were affected by conflict in 2003,
several long-running wars have recently ended ...
Perhaps more importantly, new continental institutions and policy
frameworks are creating the political space needed to discuss
openly the roots of conflict - the source of Africa's worst abuses
- in threats to democracy, human rights, and the rule of law. The
transformation of the Organization of African Unity (OAU) into the
African Union (A.U.) in 2002 offers unprecedented opportunities to
begin to address the reasons why Africa has been such a troubled
continent since most of its states achieved independence forty or
so years ago.
At the level of peacekeeping or "peace enforcement," military
intervention in conflict-affected countries sponsored by African
continental or sub-regional institutions is increasingly becoming
a reality. The major world powers have not given the United Nations
(U.N.) the capacity to respond effectively to Africa's wars. And,
though Africa's former colonizers have sent troops in recent years
to areas ravaged by conflict - including the 2000 British
intervention in Sierra Leone and the ongoing French engagement in
C“te d'Ivoire since late 2002 - the major powers have repeatedly
made it clear that they will not make the necessary commitment to
prevent the massive human rights violations in Africa that result
from conflict (Rwanda, the DRC, Burundi, and the Central African
Republic being some examples of such neglect). The European Union
intervention in the northeastern region of Ituri was an exception,
prompted by fear of genocide and strictly limited in time to the
period necessary for the U.N. to increase its forces in that
troubled region. In this context, African states have no choice but
to take up the challenge. ...
This essay outlines the new institutions of the A.U. and the
commitments to human rights that they make. It then considers four
recent military peacekeeping interventions - in Burundi, Liberia,
C“te d'Ivoire, and the DRC - that have been endorsed by African
regional institutions. Although these interventions were undertaken
with explicitly humanitarian motives, the human rights component
has continued to be inadequate. ...
Building Institutional Capacity to Intervene:
the A.U. and Conflict Prevention
African leaders have recently reformed, fairly radically, the
continent's institutions and policies. In 2002, the forty-year-old
OAU was dissolved and reconstituted as the A.U. In contrast to the
OAU, the A.U.is provided with the Constitutive Act that envisages
a more integrated level of continental governance, possibly
eventually paralleling that of the European Union. Under the OAU,
state sovereignty was paramount: non-interference in the internal
affairs of member states was its trademark. Regional or
sub-regional interventions like those by the Economic Community of
West African States (ECOWAS) in conflicts in Liberia and Sierra
Leone were the exception, not the rule.
Under the A.U.'s Constitutive Act, there is a commitment to
"promote and protect human and peoples' rights," and it specifies
that "governments which shall come to power through
unconstitutional means shall not be allowed to participate in the
activities of the Union." It also provides for a fifteen-member
Peace and Security Council to replace the OAU's Mechanism for
Conflict Prevention, Management, and Resolution. Once established,
the council will facilitate the A.U.'s response to crises and will
"promote and encourage democratic practices, good governance and
the rule of law, protect human rights and fundamental freedoms,
respect for the sanctity of human life and international
humanitarian law, as part of efforts for preventing conflicts." ...
At the same time as the process establishing the A.U. was ongoing,
African governments - led by South Africa, Nigeria, Senegal and
Algeria - created another new mechanism to promote good governance
and economic development: the New Partnership for Africa's
Development (NEPAD), and the related African Peer Review Mechanism.
NEPAD is focused on economic development, but unusually, explicitly
recognizes that: "Peace, security, democracy, good governance,
human rights, and sound economic management are conditions for
sustainable development." It proposes systems for monitoring
adherence to the rule of law that can promote respect for human
rights, in addition to perhaps serving as a check to prevent
conditions in a given country from deteriorating to the point of
insurgency or conflict. NEPAD has now been adopted as a formal
program of the A.U. ...
The Conference on Security, Stability, Development and Cooperation
in Africa - on which the A.U. also adopted a Memorandum of
Understanding in 2002 - includes a set of undertakings on a wide
range of issues related to human rights, democracy, and the rule of
law. The CSSDCA, loosely modeled on the Organization for Security
and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE), has a peer review implementation
mechanism that resembles but in some respects is stronger than
NEPAD's. There are obvious areas of overlap between the CSSDCA and
NEPAD, and there is now an attempt to coordinate the two processes
...
NEPAD has been endorsed by virtually all international agencies and
bilateral donors ,,, Perhaps most important among these
endorsements is that of the Group of Eight (G8) industrialized
countries, which adopted an Africa Action Plan at its 2002 summit.
... in practice there have been more words than action or financial
support. ...
Regional Interventions
We are likely to see more African interventions to stem conflict in
the coming years. Though they can make a useful contribution, as
the examples below demonstrate, there are also many possible
pitfalls; as these and other cases have already shown. ...
Lastly, African regional interventions may encourage the wider
international community in its tendency to abdicate its
responsibility to respond to African crises. The reality is that
Africa's peacekeeping capabilities cannot in the short run equal
those of wealthier countries. Even if wealthier countries make a
more serious financial commitment to peacekeeping in Africa than
has historically been the case - that is, even if the G8's promises
are fulfilled - Africa should not be expected to take sole charge
of the burden of attempting to prevent or respond to war on the
continent.
In 2003, regional and continental African bodies demonstrated an
increased willingness to respond both militarily and politically to
regional crises. Of all the sub-regional bodies, the West African
group ECOWAS continued to play the most prominent role in
addressing conflicts in C“te d'Ivoire and Liberia. In May, the
ECOWAS security committee resolved to create a rapid response
military force to tackle sub-regional crises, and also agreed to
strengthen the regional arms moratorium. ECOWAS is also in the
process of establishing early warning centers in the troubled West
African region.
The trend towards greater regional intervention was most evident in
four countries:
- Burundi, where the A.U. mounted its first peacekeeping operation
in 2003.
- C“te d'Ivoire, where some 1,300 ECOWAS troops coordinated with
3,800 French forces in monitoring the fragile cease-fire that ended
the civil war sparked in September 2002.
- Liberia, where, after President Charles Taylor stepped down,
3,500 ECOWAS peacekeepers deployed in and around the capital,
Monrovia, pending the arrival of U.N. forces. ECOWAS also brokered
an August 2003 ceasefire and an agreement to establish an interim
government.
- Democratic Republic of Congo, where the Southern African
Development Community (SADC) justified intervention on the grounds
that a SADC member state was fighting an extra-territorial threat.
The intervention included attempts to mediate peace in DRC and the
deployment of troops.
All of these interventions were prompted by conflict that has
caused massive suffering to civilian populations. Yet their human
rights component remained marginal.
Burundi
The decade-long civil war in Burundi was sparked when an elected
Hutu president was assassinated in 1993 by soldiers from the
Tutsi-dominated government army. The war has claimed more than
200,000 lives and has been marked by daily violations of
international humanitarian law by all sides: killings, rape, and
torture of civilians, the use of child soldiers, and the forced
displacement of populations.
After a series of ceasefire agreements between the government and
three of four rebel movements, a transitional government took
power. Legislators passed several laws important for delivering
justice, including a long-promised law against genocide, war
crimes, and crimes against humanity; and the country received a new
infusion of foreign aid. But the government and the leading rebel
movement, the Forces for the Defense of Democracy (FDD), continued
combat sporadically until October and November 2003 when they
signed protocols renewing their commitment to a cease-fire and
began incorporating FDD members into the government and the army.
The final ceasefire protocol included guarantees of unlimited and
undefined "provisional immunity" from prosecution for both forces,
calling into question all previous efforts to ensure accountability
for violations of international humanitarian law. Meanwhile the war
continued between government troops and a smaller rebel movement,
the Forces for National Liberation, that held territory around the
capital.
The A.U.'s initial intervention in Burundi was a traditional
peacekeeping mission, deployed to enforce the 2000 Arusha Peace
Accords rather than to curtail an immediate crisis. It was based on
and expanded a smaller force of South African troops present to
protect opposition political leaders under the terms of the Arusha
Accords. In January 2003, the A.U. authorized the dispatch of a
small military observer mission to monitor the ceasefire. A month
later, at an extraordinary summit, the A.U. approved a larger
peacekeeping mission, the African Mission in Burundi (AMIB). The
A.U. mandated AMIB to disarm, demobilize, and reintegrate into
society all rebel troops and to monitor the country's post-war
transition to democracy. By October, a 3,500-strong force had been
deployed to Burundi, largely from South Africa, Ethiopia, and
Mozambique. However, delays in donor funding, bureaucratic inertia,
and the absence of a political agreement initially frustrated the
A.U. peace effort. In addition, there was growing concern that
inadequate facilities and arrangements for the cantonment of Hutu
rebels would undermine the implementation of the ceasefire.
The Burundi peacekeeping mission charged peacekeepers with
protecting government buildings, facilitating rebel demobilization,
and paving the way for elections in 2004. The mandate says nothing
about protecting civilians, but its rules of engagement do provide
for intervention in the event of massive violence against
civilians. Still largely confined to the capital at this writing in
December 2003, AMIB soldiers had not played a role in limiting
abuses against non-combatants. Although the mission did not have a
human rights mandate, it did include election-related issues, a
first for A.U.-initiated interventions.
As with any such endeavor, difficulties and challenges abounded.
Because the parties to the peace process failed to resolve issues
such as the restructuring of the national army, the peacekeepers
could not move forward with programs to demobilize and reintegrate
combatants.
Regional leaders, led initially by Tanzania and Uganda, had long
attempted to end the war, but without success. South Africa assumed
a greater role after the Arusha Accords were signed. When the
United Nations, designated by the Accords to provide troops to
protect opposition leaders, refused to do so until there was an
effective ceasefire, South Africa provided the necessary soldiers
for implementation to go forward. South Africa paid the cost of
these soldiers, who later became the core of the AMIB force while
other contributors to AMIB, Ethiopia and Mozambique, received
support from the United States and the United Kingdom to help cover
their expenses. South Africa pushed vigorously for the October and
November 2003 protocols ending combat between the government and
the FDD rebels, in part because it could then ask the United
Nations to send peacekeepers to replace its own troops and end its
expensive commitment to peacekeeping in Burundi. In welcoming the
protocols, South African leaders said nothing about the guarantee
of provisional immunity. Other international leaders - including
U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan - equally anxious to end combat
in Burundi, also remained silent about the indefinite delay in
demanding justice for crimes against civilians.
Liberia
[see full version of chapter at http://hrw.org/wr2k4 ]
Côte d'Ivoire
Since September 19, 2002, Côte d'Ivoire has been gripped by an
internal conflict that has paralyzed the economy, split the
political leadership, and illuminated the stark polarization of
Ivorian society along ethnic, political, and religious lines. It is
a conflict that has been characterized by relatively little in the
way of active hostilities between combatants, but by widespread and
egregious abuses against civilians. It is a conflict that, while
primarily internal, developed regional dimensions when both the
Ivorian rebel groups and the government of Côte d'Ivoire recruited
Liberian mercenary fighters to support their forces in the west.
ECOWAS quickly recognized the gravity of the Ivorian situation,
touching as it did the economic heart of the region, and began
mediation efforts within days of the initial uprising. ECOWAS
concerns largely centered on the economic and humanitarian impact
of the crisis and the risks to regional stability posed by the
conflict. In October 2002, ECOWAS mediators brokered a ceasefire,
and both the Ivorian government and the main rebel group, the
Patriotic Movement of Côte d'Ivoire (Mouvement Patriotique de la
Côte d'Ivoire, MPCI) authorized an ECOWAS monitoring mission.
However, the ECOWAS commitment to send troops was hampered by
funding constraints and stalled for more than two months after it
was made. In the interim, France agreed to fill the gap, expanding
its longstanding military presence and extending its mandate from
protection of French nationals to ceasefire monitoring.
Despite these efforts, the Ivorian conflict intensified with the
opening of the western front, the involvement of Liberian forces on
both sides, and the proliferation of rebel groups in December 2002.
ECOWAS military engagement remained minimal until early 2003,
despite consistent efforts to broker cease-fires, set up peace
negotiations, and bring the parties to conflict together. As ECOWAS
efforts stalled, French concern deepened and France's contributions
increased on both the military and political fronts. By early 2003,
there were over 2,500 French troops in Côte d'Ivoire working in
conjunction with over 500 ECOWAS forces, and a French-brokered
peace agreement, the Linas-Marcoussis accords, had been signed by
the government and all three rebel groups. ECOWAS and A.U.
officials continued to apply pressure to both the Ivorian
government and rebel forces, with Ghana's president, John Kufuor,
playing a particularly prominent role as head of ECOWAS.
Additional ceasefire agreements and negotiations led to an
officially-proclaimed end to the conflict in July 2003, but
implementation of the Linas-Marcoussis accords was slow. Working in
conjunction with a small U.N. political and military liaison
mission, MINUCI, and some 4,000 French troops, the ECOWAS operation
helped monitor compliance with the peace agreement between the
Ivorian government and rebel forces. As of late-May 2003,
approximately 1,300 ECOWAS troops were in place in the country.
However, insufficient resources remained a serious constraint.
In spite of intense regional and French efforts, Côte d'Ivoire's
hopes for peace remained deadlocked as of November 2003. At this
writing, disarmament has still not taken place, and the government
of reconciliation formed by the peace accord has been handicapped
by continuing splits between the warring parties. The growth of a
vocal, violent, pro-government militia movement with links to the
state armed forces, has done little to ease tensions. Abuses
against civilians, both in Abidjan and rural areas, have continued,
albeit on a lesser scale than during the "official" war.
Continuing impunity remains a fundamental problem. Despite
domestic, regional, and international recognition of the serious
abuses that took place during the conflict and in election-related
violence in 2000, to date there have been no significant steps
taken to bring perpetrators of abuses to justice. Key human rights
provisions in the peace accords included the establishment of a
national human rights commission and an international commission of
inquiry, yet neither has materialized. In February 2003, the A.U.
called for an investigation by the African Commission on Human
Rights, but has since remained silent on the subject. ,,,
From the start of the conflict, the U.N. deferred to France on
political and military matters concerning Côte d'Ivoire. A Security
Council resolution in February 2003 condemned human rights abuses
in the conflict and conferred authority on French and ECOWAS forces
to intervene. The U.N. Mission in Côte d'Ivoire (MINUCI) was
proposed in late April and approved in early May 2003. Initially,
the mission included military observers and liaison officers and a
vital human rights monitoring component. But the Security Council
cut human and financial resources for the mission's civilian
components, based mainly on U.S. concerns over the budget and
staffing. In advocating such cuts, the U.S. displayed serious
short-sightedness: the multitude of abuses in Côte d'Ivoire amply
underscored the urgent need for a human rights monitoring component
to be included in the peacekeeping effort. The international and
donor communities must press aggressively for accountability and
respect for human rights, including the use of sanctions and the
conditioning of aid. Even where African leaders are taking the
initiative, there is still an important continuing role for the
international community.
Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC)
[see full version of chapter at http://hrw.org/wr2k4 ]
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