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WSWS : News
& Analysis : Africa
War in Sierra Leone and Guinea spreads to Liberia
By Chris Talbot
4 May 2001
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Reports from Liberia over the last few days indicate that conflict
has sharply escalated between the government and rebel groups
in the north of the country. The groups are backed by Guinea,
which the Liberian regime has accused of conducting long-range
shelling and bombing raids on its territory. Whilst sporadic fighting
with the rebels has continued in the northern Lofa county area
of Liberia since the civil war ended in 1997, the present hostilities
appear to be on a much larger scale. Liberian reports say rebels
have taken Zorzor town and the fighting has moved south to Salayea
district. This is only 50 miles from Gbarnga, the key town in
northern Liberia.
Last month, the Liberian defence minister, back from the frontline,
said the seizure of Voinjama by the rebels in the most northern
part of Liberia, amounted to an overt declaration of war.
Liberia's President Charles Taylor has placed the country on a
war footing. Any signs of opposition to his regime are being more
ruthlessly suppressed than usual and 15,000 veterans of his guerrilla
army from the 1990s civil war are being called up for active service.
There has been no confirmation of the scale of the fighting
from Guinea or from other sources, but a United Nations relief
coordinator in the area, Carolyn McAskie, said that 15,000 people
had fled their homes in the region in the last three weeks. UN
officials report that in total over 60,000 people have been displaced
from the northern part of Liberia.
Fighting has spread into Liberia from the so-called Parrot's
Beak region of southern Guinea, where rebel forces backed
by Liberia have been fighting the Guinean regime for several months.
McAskie, who had been on a three day UN mission to Liberia, Guinea
and Sierra Leone, said that there were still some 300,000 refugees
from Sierra Leone and Liberia trapped in this part of Guinea.
This is despite the fact that tens of thousands of refugees are
known to have fled the fighting, making the risky journey back
into the eastern diamond-rich regions of Sierra Leone that are
under the control of the Revolutionary United Front (RUF). McAskie
said that the UN were still negotiating with the Guinean government
to secure safe passage for the refugees to areas further north,
away from the border with Sierra Leone and Liberia.
Former Dutch Prime Minister Ruud Lubbers, recently appointed
as the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) described
the refugee crisis as the worst in the world. However, Western
support for the refugees has been pitiful. McAskie said that last
months UN appeal for $65 million to deal with the crisis had so
far raised a mere $2-3 million.
Moreover, Western interventions in the region have escalated
the conflict. As the military strongman leading the most successful
faction in the eight-year Liberian civil war, Charles Taylor was
allowed to take power in the 1997 elections with US and Western
backing. Now the US and Britain denounce Taylor for being at the
centre of illicit diamond trading in Africa, and in particular
for backing the RUF in Sierra Leonean outfit that controls
much of the diamond areas. A UN resolution tabled by the US and
Britain calls for economic sanctions against Liberia, specifically
a moratorium on diamond exports, however, there will not be a
ban on rubber exports to the US. Under the terms of the resolution,
Taylor is supposed to end his ties with the RUFa UN committee
has been investigating his claims that he has cut off this supportotherwise
the sanctions will be imposed May 7.
It is clear that Western pressure is already being applied;
Liberia is in a state of virtual economic collapse, with little
running water or electricity in the capital Monrovia, civil servants
have gone unpaid since January, the sewage system fails to work,
and garbage is piling up everywhere. This cannot be simply ascribed
to Taylor's personal corruptionhe is said to run the economy
as his private companybut must reflect cuts in Western support.
It is hardly surprising that Taylor's response is a military one.
Britain has been a major contributor to instability in the
region. British troops are presently training the Sierra Leone
army and British advisors are involved in every aspect
of running the government of President Kabbah. Because of the
British military presence, the RUF agreed to a peace deal last
November. The RUF has now allowed UN troops into the area it controls,
although it is opposed to any collaboration with the Kabbah regime.
RUF fighters have been engaged instead in the war in Guinea, siding
with Liberian troops and Guinean rebels fighting against the Guinea
government.
There have been recent reports of forces from Guinea entering
the RUF controlled east of Sierra Leone in order to pursue the
RUF. Gibril Massaquoi, an RUF spokesman, told reporters they had
come under attack in the diamond area known as Tongo Field and
the main diamond area of Kono, close to the border with Guinea
and Liberia. Massaquoi said, The forces attacking are Sierra
Leonean but they are being given covering shelling by the Guineans.
He indicated that the troops were Kamajors, a tribal grouping
being trained by Britain as part of the Sierra Leone army, and
allied with Liberian rebels. Although Massaquoi provided no proof,
he suggested that British-trained troops were involved.
It would not be surprising if the Western powers were now backing
Guinea, as well as using British-trained troops to deal with both
the Liberian regime and the RUF. There is growing impatience with
the UN peacekeeping initiative. According to the Independent
newspaper, on her recent visit to Sierra Leone Clare Short, British
Secretary of State for International Development, handbagged
Oluyemi Adeniji, head of the UN mission in Sierra Leone, demanding
to know why the UN forces were not disarming the RUF. Focusing
on the brutal murders and mutilations committed by the RUF, Short
accused the UN of being dominated by bureaucratic malaise and
refusing to learn the lessons of Rwanda and Somalia when atrocities
could allegedly have been prevented by UN action. Short can hardly
be unaware that the ineffectiveness of the UN is due in no small
part to lack of support from the Western powers, not to mention
their conflicting interests in the region.
The influential Brussels-based think tank the International
Crisis Group (ICG) has called for an end to UN negotiations with
the RUF. Calling Charles Taylor the Milosevic of West Africa,
it demands a common approach of the West and the UN to take on
the RUF and Liberia, as well as an international effort
to help Sierra Leone re-establish good governance and reconstruct
its shattered society. The ICG does not consider from where
this international support will come; nor that society in Sierra
Leone, Liberia and Guinea has been shattered precisely because
of the way their resources of diamonds, timber and minerals have
been appropriated by the West, and before that their peoples used
as slaves. After winning initial support from the population of
Sierra Leone, disaffection with President Kabbah has grown, taking
on the form of strikes and demonstrations, as it becomes clear
that apart from military support there will be no significant
Western aid to rebuild the economy. If the diamond areas are won
back from the RUF, their revenues have already been promised to
international corporations, rather than the local people.
The US is known to be involved in training the Guinean military,
and US Republican Congressman Ed Royce recently gave a speech
denouncing Charles Taylor. Royce called for sanctions to be implemented
immediately, including timber as well as diamonds (France and
China have opposed timber sanctions, as it would affect their
trade with Liberia, and Royce did not mention the export of rubber
to the US). Royce said, The survival of Guinea is on the
line... Conakry [capital of Guinea] has requested US military
aid to bolster its armed forces' ability to secure its border.
The US must strongly consider providing that aid now.
France is also shifting its stance and endorsed denunciations
of Taylor. Charles Josselin, the French minister with responsibility
for Africa, accompanied Clare Short on her recent visit to Sierra
Leone. According to reports, he agreed with UN sanctions against
Liberia, saying there was no indication that Taylor was complying
with UN demands to stop supporting the RUF. There have, however,
been no details given of French involvement in the region.
According to Africa Confidential magazine, French Prime
Minister Lionel Jospin has opposed any open support for the Guinean
regime of President Conte. Since several African corruption scandals
have rocked the French political establishment, espousing open
support for a regime that is notorious for its human rights violations
and suppression of opposition would be an embarrassment. In the
past France has looked favourably on Taylor, who works closely
with President Compaoré of Burkina Faso and Libyan leader
Colonel Gadaffi in his arms and diamond trading deals. France
is apparently hoping for lucrative deals with Libya over oil and
infrastructure projects, as well as the sale of military hardware
and Airbus jets. However, there is now a serious threat of civil
war in the key French ex-colony of Côte d'Ivoire.
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