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WSWS : News
& Analysis : Africa
Sierra Leone peace talks expose Blair's "ethical"
foreign policy
By Chris Talbot
9 June 1999
Use
this version to print
British Prime Minister Tony Blair's moral justification for
war obviously does not extend to the small West African country
of Sierra Leone. A cease-fire was declared last month and peace
negotiations with the Revolutionary United Front (RUF) rebels
have now begun in Lomé, in nearby Togo. Both Britain and
the United States have sanctioned these negotiations.
Only last year, Blair said that Britain was "quite right"
to break a United Nations arms embargo in sending Sandline International,
a mercenary force, to back the Sierra Leone government of President
Ahmed Tejan Kabbah fighting the RUF. The Labour government faced
down a major scandal, claiming what they did was justified because
the Kabbah regime was "democratically elected".
Up until the present peace talks, British and world media reported
extensively on RUF atrocities, while largely ignoring those committed
by government forces. The South African Mail and Guardian,
for example, states in a June 2 report that "independent
aid workers and victims agree that the RUF's trademark tactics
include hacking off people's hands, arms, legs, ears and noses,
in addition to raping, kidnapping and burning people alive."
A recent report from the French charity Médecines sans
Frontières (MSF) stated that out of 56 war victims they
were treating in Freetown, the capital of Sierra Leone, "ten
had at least one hand deliberately amputated by machete".
MSF point out that their report is about people who had survived
such mutilations and were able to reach Freetownthe total
of mutilated persons is far higher.
The moralistic propaganda which Blair and Cook used against
their critics to explain the hiring of Sandline has now been dropped.
Instead, the energies of the Blair government and Clinton administration
are being directed towards promoting the idea of reconciliation.
The Lomé talks between President Kabbah and RUF leader
Foday Sankoh were attended not only by representatives of the
UN and Organisation for African Unity (OAU), but by the Reverend
Jesse Jackson. Jackson is described as the "United States
Special Envoy for the Promotion of Democracy in Africa".
He expressed satisfaction that the cease-fire had been reached
on the eve of the African-American summit, due to be held in Accra.
With no explanation of why the US and Britain were calling off
their support for the eight-year-long war, Jackson said, We
are coming back to our roots, our fatherland, which is facing
several problems, but we are coming back with a lot of resources.
In one week we are going to celebrate a new era in Nigeria. We
will not rest until we celebrate peace in the DRC [Democratic
Republic of Congo], in Ethiopia and elsewhere.
The Sierra Leone cease-fire and peace negotiations, it should
be added, have received virtually no coverage in the British media.
Throughout the pages of reports lauding the Labour government's
war in Yugoslavia, no questions have been asked about how their
self-styled "ethical foreign policy" has been applied
in Africa. Very brief film clips of amputees in Freetown were
shown on television news, but the viewer would think that this
was another horrible African war with no obvious connection to
Blair and Foreign Secretary Robin Cook. It was suggested that
a "peace initiative" could bring some optimism to this
war-torn country.
In reality, from the end of 1997 Britain and the United States
organised a major military offensive in Sierra Leone against the
RUF. Fifteen thousand ECOMOG (Economic Community of West African
States Monitoring Group) troops from Nigeria, nominally in Sierra
Leone as "peacekeepers", were deployed against the RUF
with modern equipment, including jets and helicopters. As well
as financing the Nigerian involvement, thousands of Sierra Leone
government troops were regrouped and armed. Tens of thousands
of traditional hunters (kamajors) were supplied with modern weapons
to fight the RUF. British and US-based mercenaries, or private
security firms as they are euphemistically calledPacific
Architects and Engineers as well as Sandline Internationalwere
also deployed in training, logistics and, in some cases, in direct
combat. Over a hundred British military advisors and intelligence
experts have remained in Sierra Leone throughout this period.
Whilst a civil war has raged since 1991 between the RUF and
a series of British and US-backed regimeswith ECOMOG supportthe
intervention last year was a major offensive. A section of the
Sierra Leone army, led by Major Johnny Paul Koroma, had defected
from the Kabbah regime, sided with the RUF, and seized power in
May 1997. Although official UN diplomacy arranged negotiations
with Koroma and imposed an arms embargo, the British and US response
was to mount a military operation. Kabbah's regime was reinstalled
in the capital and the RUF pursued into the northern forests.
Kabbah was encouraged by his British advisors to institute
a hard-line policy against the RUF and its supporters. Under the
slogan "no peace without justice", two dozen soldiers
were executed and 40 civilians sentenced to death for supporting
the Koroma regime. Foday Sankoh, the long-standing RUF leader,
was imprisoned under sentence of death.
What has transpired since the beginning of this year has been
a military debacle for the ECOMOG forces, the Kabbah regime, and
their British and US backers. The RUF has taken control of large
parts of the country, and in January this year was even making
a push for the capital, Freetown. BBC reports of the Lomé
talks now speak of protracted negotiations with the RUF representatives,
a possible power sharing government with the rebels, a possible
amnesty for soldiers who supported Koroma, and discussions about
the release of Sankoh.
A few reports are emerging regarding the scale of the humanitarian
disaster brought about by this yearlong military intervention.
An indication of how the war was escalated by the British and
US is that whilst 20,000 people are estimated to have died in
the civil war since 1991, 5,000 of these deaths occurred since
January this year when ECOMOG stopped the RUF taking Freetown.
A May 20 report from the Office of US Foreign Disaster Assistance
states that almost one half of the country's 4.5 million inhabitants
have had to flee their homes. It estimates that between 700,000
and 1 million people are now officially "internally displaced
persons". UNHCR report that approximately 460,000 Sierra
Leoneans are refugees living in neighbouring countries. 12,000
of these have registered as refugees in Guinea since last December.
The January attack on Freetown left the city without electricity,
telephones and very little food or water. With the rainy season
approaching (May to November), aid agencies have been airlifting
plastic sheeting to provide temporary shelter for the displaced
persons camps around Freetown. A serious outbreak of cholera is
anticipated, due to the large concentrations of people living
together without proper sanitation.
The plight of people in the rebel-held areas, where aid agencies
had no access before the cease-fire, is likely to be dire. Fighting
has disrupted the economy in a country where most people live
off the land, growing vegetables, nuts, cocoa and rice. The scale
of the terror tactics of the RUF is not yet known in terms of
civilian casualties, but it has certainly exacerbated the food
crisis.
How did the RUF return from their jungle bases in the north
of Sierra Leone to mount a country-wide offensive, pushing a large
military force with far superior weaponry to the brink of defeat?
The RUF were able to do so because ECOMOG had little control over
the rural areas in the north. The traditional kamajor hunters,
armed to fight against the RUF, are only based in the south of
Sierra Leone. From their northern retreats, the RUF advanced its
guerrilla offensive on major towns and roads towards the end of
last year, scoring a series of victories against ECOMOG. Increasing
casualties amongst the underpaid ECOMOG troops, fighting a war
they had little interest in, led to demoralisation.
Having gained control of the key diamond areas, previously
defended by Sandline on behalf of international corporations,
the RUF were able to trade diamonds as well as palm oil and cacao
for arms, ammunitions, foodstuffs and petrol. With apparently
no Western backers, their only foreign support is in neighbouring
Liberia, where President Charles Taylor has unofficially allowed
them to establish bases in return for such lucrative trade. Although
they started out as a small group in the 1980s with Libyan backing
and a policy of overthrowing the corrupt and hated Western-backed
regime of Joseph Momoh, the RUF has long since abandoned any pretence
of winning political support on a popular programme. They have
looted the regions where they are based and terrorised the local
population into forced labour, as well as to fight for them.
The deeper reason for the turn in the RUF's fortunes lies in
the historic legacy of colonialism and imperialism. Regimes like
that of Kabbah, based on a tiny rich elite, can only survive with
Western military backing. Sierra Leone's economy was driven into
an impoverished and indebted state in the 1970s and 80s. External
debt grew to $1.2 billion, as the IMF attempted to squeeze even
more repayments out of Kabbah's regime when it was first installed
in 1996. Diamond production, the country's only valuable asset
for world markets, was sold off to international corporations.
Britain and the US have no intention of following up the latest
peace initiative with anything other than further crippling IMF
programmes and the restoration of diamond production to global
companieseven if under a different regime. The other major
interest of Western powers in this part of Africa that has cut
across the war with the RUF is the long sought after "democratic"
transformation taking place in Nigeria. As the dominant country
in West Africa, Nigeria provided the ECOMOG forces in both Sierra
Leone and Liberia. This was a major undertaking for Nigeria's
military rulers, for which they obtained substantial financial
backing from Britain and the US. The delicate transition from
military to civilian rule in Sierra Leone has brought to the fore
extensive grievances against the use of the Nigerian army as an
agency of imperialism, including their loss of credibility and
the mounting death toll in this impoverished African country.
See Also:
Fresh fighting in Sierra Leone
capital intensifies crisis in West Africa
[16 January 1999]
Nigeria
& Sierre Leone
[WSWS Full Coverage]
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