Nigerian military topples Sierra Leone junta
21 February 1998
By Bill Vann
Following a nine-day offensive and a bombardment of the city
of Freetown, Nigerian military forces succeeded in toppling the
military junta which seized power in the West African state of
Sierra Leone in May of last year.
Nigerian troops, operating under the auspices of a West African
peace-keeping force known as ECOMOG, took control of Freetown
on February 13. The fighting left thousands dead and wounded and
turned tens of thousands into refugees. Sierra Leone faces the
most severe famine threat of any African country, with as many
as half a million in danger of starving. Looting broke out in
the capital and other cities and there were reports of crowds
killing supporters of the junta in the streets.
This is the second major intervention by Nigerian forces in
West Africa in the guise of peace-keepers. ECOMOG was created
as the vehicle for Nigeria's intervention into the eight-year-long
civil war in Liberia. It began its Liberian intervention in 1990
with the principal aim of preventing warlord Charles Taylor from
coming to power. After seven years of fighting and tens of thousands
of deaths, the mission was declared a success following elections
which placed Taylor, who had reached an understanding with Nigeria's
ruling clique, in the presidency.
In Sierra Leone, the stated mission of the Nigerian-dominated
peace-keepers was to restore the country's elected president Alhaji
Ahmad Tejan Kabbah to power. Kabbah was overthrown on May 25 of
last year, in the third coup attempt launched by the military
during his 14 months in office.
Nigerian commanders claimed that the decision to launch a final
offensive against the military junta of Major Johnny-Paul Koromah
was provoked by an incident in which a Nigerian soldier stepped
on a land mine. In reality, Nigeria had grown increasingly impatient
with the junta's stalling on an accord reached last October calling
for the disarming and demobilization of both the junta's forces
and militias backing Kabbah, and the reinstatement of Kabbah's
government by April 22.
Nigeria has assumed its internationally-recognized role as
the chief enforcer of constitutional order in West Africa despite
the fact that the country itself is ruled by a corrupt and despotic
military regime. Headed by General Sani Abacha, this dictatorship
came to power following the abrogation of the election won by
Moshood Abiola five years ago. Abiola remains imprisoned as do
hundreds of other opposition leaders, trade union officials, journalists
and accused military opponents of the regime. To retain its power
the regime has resorted to mass arrests, terror and executions,
such as the 1995 hanging of Ken Saro-Wiwa and his associates,
as well as assassinations, as in the case of Abiola's wife.
For Abacha and his cronies, the peace-keeping role has proven
a godsend. Just as their regime has robbed Nigeria of staggering
amounts of wealth, so too it has managed to turn war into a very
profitable business. Nigerian business interests connected with
the military have carved out a major role in Liberia and are doubtless
pursuing a similar path in Sierra Leone. Others have grown rich
through war profiteering, supplying arms, food, fuel and other
supplies both to the ECOMOG forces and the various factions in
the war-torn West African countries themselves.
Nigeria's function as peacekeeper has likewise helped legitimize
the regime internationally. There might seem to be a contradiction
in Abacha playing the role of chief enforcer of United Nations
Security Council resolutions in West Africa at the same time as
the Clinton administration is denouncing Saddam Hussein as a "tyrant"
and invoking the resolutions of the Security Council as a pretext
for launching an attack on Iraq.
One word, oil, goes a long way toward explaining this apparent
anomaly. In the case of Iraq, military action helps solidify US
control over the vast reserves in the Persian Gulf. In Nigeria,
however, Abacha is already safeguarding the profits of the US
oil conglomerates, while the fate of the other impoverished countries
of West Africa is of little consequence to Washington.
However, as Saddam Hussein's case proves, there is nothing
permanent in such relations. Abacha may find himself one day transformed
into Washington's bogeyman and a target for US attack, should
the interests of the US-based multinationals so require.
Most of the approximately $12 billion in oil pumped out of
Nigeria every year goes to the US. Oil accounts for 95 percent
of Nigeria's foreign earnings. The exploitation of this natural
resource, however, has benefited only the oil companies and Nigeria's
ruling clique, at the expense of the country's 90 million people.
More than 30 percent of Nigeria's national income presently
goes to service a $30 billion foreign debt, incurred under a structural
adjustment program imposed by the International Monetary Fund.
Unemployment has soared as the value of the Nigerian currency
has plummeted.
Under the Abacha regime Chevron and Mobil oil, which are tied
to Bank of America and Citibank respectively, have managed to
strengthen their grip over Nigerian oil, at the expense of their
French, British and Italian competitors.
As long as these interests are served, the Clinton administration
and Congress are content to use Nigeria as a regional policeman
and instrument for suppressing the strivings of the Nigerian workers
and oppressed.
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