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CHALLENGES
OF PEACE BUILDING AND SECURITY IN THE
ECOWAS SUB - REGION:"THE SIERRA LEONE PERSPECTIVE"
INAUGURAL
LECTURES AT THE NATIONAL WAR COLLEGE OF THE
FEDERAL REPUBLIC OF NIGERIA
DELIVERED BY HIS EXCELLENCY ALHAJI DR AHMAD TEJAN
KABBAH
PRESIDENT OF THE REPUBLIC OF SIERRA LEONE
THURSDAY, 21ST SEPTEMBER 2006
Your Excellency Chief Olusegun Obasanjo, President
of the Federal Republic of Nigeria,
Excellencies,
Colleague Heads of State and Government,
Governors
and Traditional Rulers
Honourable
Ministers,
Senators and Members of the House of Representatives
Excellencies, Members of the Diplomatic and Consular
Corps,
Chief
of Defence Staff of the Nigerian Armed Forces,
and Service Chiefs,
Commandant
of the National War College,
Military Commanders and Officers of the Nigerian
Armed Forces,
Participants
of the National War College Course 15,
Distinguished Guests,
Ladies and Gentlemen:
I
would like to thank the Commander-in-Chief of
the Nigerian Armed Forces, my brother and colleague
President, Chief Olusegun Obasanjo, President
of the Federal Republic of Nigeria and the Commandant
and members of Staff of the National War College,
for inviting me to deliver the 15th inaugural
lecture on the theme, "Challenges of Peacebuilding
and Security in the ECOWAS Sub Region: The Sierra
Leonean Perspective." I consider the invitation
to address this prestigious institution a singular
honour not only to me personally but to Sierra
Leone.
This
is obviously a Nigerian College. However, given
the increasing number of participants from other
African countries, it could also be described
as an African college. Established in 1992, it
is already ranked among the leading African institutions
of higher military education south of the Sahara.
I understand that the College has also received
participants from Asia and Europe - an indication
of the quality of its training programmes. I have
no doubt that it will continue to serve Nigeria
and Africa well by contributing to the security
and stability of our Continent and to the maintenance
of international peace and security.
ECOWAS
and Peace-keeping in Sierra Leone
As
President of Sierra Leone, which recently emerged
from more than a decade of an unprecedented brutal
armed conflict, this forum personally affords
a unique opportunity to express my country's indebtedness
to the political leadership of the Federal Republic
of Nigeria and the gallant officers and men and
women of the Nigerian Armed Forces for sacrificing
their lives in ECOMOG in the service of Sierra
Leone during the bitter eleven years rebel conflict
in my country. Indeed the government and people
of the Federal Republic of Nigeria by sacrificing
precious Nigerian lives to bring peace and stability
to Sierra Leone, demonstrated their commitment
to the promotion of regional peace and stability.
To all intents and purposes ECOMOG led by Nigeria
and with the help of God, saved Sierra Leone at
a critical stage of the conflict. It paved the
way for the deployment of the United Nations Peace
Keeping Mission (UNAMSIL), as well as the military
Assistance of the United Kingdom. I recall in
particular, the professionalism and exemplary
leadership of past ECOMOG Commanders like the
late General Maxwell Khobe who was subsequently
seconded to the Sierra Leone Army and served as
its Chief of Defence Staff. He and many of his
compatriots played a leading role in the reconstruction
of our Armed Forces following the ousting of the
Junta and the RUF rebel regime. The people of
Sierra Leone will remain forever grateful to him
and others who helped bring the conflict to an
end. The mission was not merely to restore constitutional
authority but more importantly, to provide safety
and security for the people of Sierra Leone against
the aggression by the RUF rebels and their cohorts
beyond our borders as well as renegades of the-so-called
Armed Forces Revolutionary Council (AFRC). Further,
in conjunction with the United Nations and the
International Community, ECOWAS succeeded in halting
the violence through peace enforcement, peacekeeping
and peaceful negotiation of the conflict, which
has led to current peace-building activities.
The
significance of the role that ECOMOG played in
resolving the conflict in Sierra Leone became
even more evident from the reaction of the UN
Secretary General, Kofi Annan who on learning
in December 1999, that President Obasabjo had
decided to withdraw Nigerian troops from ECOMOG,
as UN troops were to be deployed in the country
immediately expressed concern about "the
repercussions, which a premature withdrawal of
ECOMOG could have on the security situation in
Sierra Leone". In a letter to the UN Security
Council, he recalled his appeal to President Obasanjo
to review his decision. He also had extensive
contacts with other leaders in the ECOWAS sub-region
to impress on their minds the need to maintain
a sizeable ECOMOG presence in Sierra Leone to
perform the vital functions of providing security
in Freetown, the Lungi International Airport and
protecting my government. I myself also had a
meeting with President Obasanjo and pleaded with
him to review his decision.
It
was not easy especially at a time when there were
exaggerated reports in the media that Nigeria
was spending about a million US dollars a day
in ECOMOG operations in Sierra Leone and some
detractors were questioning the legality of ECOMOG`s
intervention in the Sierra Leone conflict. However,
confirmation of the legality and usefulness of
ECOMOG`s intervention in Sierra Leone has come
from no less a source than the Security Council
itself which, on several occasions, had welcomed
and commended the role of ECOMOG. For instance,
in authorizing the establishment of UNAMSIL, the
Council reiterated its "appreciation for
the indispensable role which ECOMOG forces continued
to play in the maintenance of security, stability
and protection of the people of Sierra Leone".
For the first time in the history of the Security
Council, acting under Chapter VIII of the Charter,
the Council authorized a regional organization,
namely ECOWAS and its monitoring group ECOMOG,
to monitor the strict implementation of the Council's
arms and petroleum embargo. I thought I should
mention this aspect of the Peace Keeping role
of ECOMOG as a preface to my substantive remarks
on the challenges of Peace building and security
in the ECOWAS sub-region, the theme I have been
asked to speak about today.
The
Concept of Peace-building and Security
The
topic "Challenges of Peace-building and Security
in the ECOWAS Sub-Region: the Sierra Leonean Perspective"
has two words that are fundamental to my address,
and which need conceptual definitions. These are
"Peace-building" and "Security."
Peace-building
The
United Nations has presented a prescriptive and
conceptual definition of Peace-building. In February
2001, the Security Council of the United Nations
recognized that "peace-building is aimed
at preventing the outbreak, the recurrence or
continuation of armed conflict and therefore encompasses
a wide range of political, developmental, humanitarian
and human rights programmes and mechanisms. These
actions should focus on fostering sustainable
institutions and processes in areas such as sustainable
development, the eradication of poverty and inequalities,
transparent and accountable governance, the promotion
of democracy, respect for human rights and the
rule of law, and the promotion of a culture of
peace and non-violence".
The
concept of (Post-conflict) peace-building not
only focuses on the structural analysis of the
root causes of the conflict but aims at fostering
economic and social cooperation with the purpose
of building confidence among previously warring
parties and laying the foundation for a durable
peace. According to one informed commentator,
the infrastructure of peace-building is a 'process
structure' that seeks to transform a war system
characterized by deeply divided, hostile and violent
relationships, into a peace system characterized
by just and interdependent relationship with the
capacity to seek non violent means for expressing
and dealing with conflicts (Lederach, 1997). This
process structure anchors on reconciliation and
the redefinition and restoration of broken relationships.
Security
Security
as a concept is characterized by its ambiguity.
Due to the state centric nature of the "international"
system and due also to the historic preoccupation
of international relations with wars, the concept
of security has traditionally been militarily
defined. Thus, security is conceptualized in terms
of "preservation of independence and sovereignty
of nation states". Walter Lippman, for example
considers a country to be secure to the extent
that it is "not in danger of having to sacrifice
'core values'. Such core values denote the preservation
of territorial integrity and sovereignty of the
state. Security here therefore is the ability
to deter an attack, or to defeat it.
The
current world view concept of Human Security which
places individual human beings (the citizens of
a country) at the center of security transcends
the absence of war. In other words, implicit in
the classical definition, security is the protection
of the state, whereas, what is now also critical
is the protection and welfare of the individual
citizens living in a state, which is the fundamental
focus of Human Security. In other words Human
Security is a 'people-centered concept'. It is
based on the same premise as the related concepts
of human rights and human development all of which
place the human being as the principal object
of concern regardless of race, religion, creed,
colour, ideology or nationality.
The Human Development Report listed seven components
or values of human security and the following
threats to them are economic, food, health, environmental,
community and political security.
From
the perspective of Sierra Leone, security is considered
in its holistic sense as, "covering all aspects
including the independence, sovereignty and territorial
integrity of the state, the security of natural
resources, the protection of the revenue generating
capacity of the state and the social and material
wellbeing of the people
.also guaranteeing
the freedom of the people from threats to their
persons, property and democratic way of life as
well as freeing them from the scourges of war,
poverty and social injustice" (Sierra Leone
National Security Policy Paper, Dec. 2000).
Distinguished
Ladies and Gentlemen, for the purpose of this
lecture, these two fundamental keywords of Peace-building
and Security as conceptually defined will form
the basis of my presentation.
Challenges
to Peace-building and Security in Sierra Leone
For
Sierra Leone, at the present moment, the terms
Peace-building and Security denote "A process
of creating the conditions for social reconstruction
and economic recovery and sustainable development".
The Sierra Leone Armed Conflict, which started
in 1991 and ended in 2002, was a product of long
years of state failure, and bad governance. The
conflict had its roots in bad governance, violation
of basic rights and endemic poverty. Government
accountability was non-existent, freedom of expression
and dissent had been crushed, and each regime
became increasingly impervious to the wishes and
needs of the people. Democracy and the rule of
law were dead. By 1991, Sierra Leone was a deeply
divided society and full of the potential for
violence.
By
the end of the brutal war nearly 50,000 Sierra
Leoneans had lost their lives, thousands had been
maimed, a quarter of the population had been made
refugees, a similar number had been internally
displaced, the economy was in shambles, poverty
had been entrenched. Hatred, vengeance and a culture
of violence had divided communities further, and
the country ranked in the lowest position in the
United Nations Human Development Index.
The
challenges to Peace-building and Security remain
enormous for Sierra Leone as the country strives
to transform itself from a war-torn society to
a rejuvenated nation capable of meeting the basic
needs of its people. Strictly speaking, peace
building does not begin only when peacekeeping
operations end and peacekeepers such as those
of UNAMSIL or ECOMOG leave the area of armed conflict.
For instance, our National Commission for Reconstruction,
Resettlement and Reintegration (NCRRR) and its
successor the National Commission for Social Action
(NaCSA) performed their peace building-related
functions in tandem with the peacekeeping activities
of ECOMOG and the United Nations. While security
was and still is at the top of the agenda of my
Government, the livelihood of the people, in terms
of food and basic social services, has remained
a national priority. The challenges to peace-building
and security for the country therefore encompass
the institution of measures to address the root
causes of the conflict, putting in place mechanisms
to prevent the recurrence of violent conflict
and creating a conducive environment for reconciliation
and socio-economic development. To achieve these
goals, Government, in close collaboration with
the International Community, NGOs, bilateral and
multilateral partners embarked upon a broad programme
of governance reform as a means of obtaining sustained
human and material development focusing on establishing
a safe and secure environment, reducing poverty,
rebuilding a democratic political system, improving
the legal system, combating corruption, promoting
human rights and enhancing grass-roots participation
in national development. The major components
of this programme include:
o
National Recovery and Rehabilitation
o Public Sector Reform
o Fighting Corruption
o Decentralisation and Local Government Reform
o Security Sector Reform
o Poverty Reduction Strategy
o Justice, the Rule of Law and Human Rights
o Community Disarmament and Small Arms Control
o Youth Empowerment/Employment
From
the foregoing, there is evidence that considerable
progress has been made towards the consolidation
of peace and improving security in our country
since the end of the war. However, challenges
to peace-building and security in one state often
transcend the experiences and capabilities of
individual states and may encompass an entire
region and the International Community. Responses
to such challenges may therefore demand the involvement
of regional and international actors. An analysis
of the challenges to peace-building and security
in the ECOWAS sub-region will not be complete
without a regional and international perspective.
I will be remiss in my lecture therefore, if I
fail to discuss the role of ECOWAS in peace-building
and security in the sub-region.
ECOWAS
in Peace-building and Security in the Sub-region
As
the saying goes, there can be no peace and security
without development and no development without
peace and security. The same goes for ECOWAS.
In speaking about the challenges of both economic
development and peace and security in our sub
region therefore, one must not forget that ECOWAS
rests on two inseparable pillars namely, economic
development and political stability. In our view,
ECOWAS is an instrument for promoting economic
development as well as security and political
stability.
When
the Founding Fathers established ECOWAS in 1975
however, what was uppermost on their minds was
economic integration as a means of improving the
lives of their people. As stated in the Founding
Treaty of 1975, the objectives of the organisation
were -
"
To promote cooperation and integration leading
to the establishment of an economic union in West
Africa in order to raise the living standards
of its people and to maintain and enhance economic
stability, foster relations among member states,
and contribute to the progress and development
of the African continent".
The
subsequent fourteen chapters and sixty-five articles
of the Founding Treaty equally focused exclusively
on economic matters. From its inception therefore,
ECOWAS was perceived purely as an economic enterprise.
In the light of rising tensions and increasing
conflicts in the sub-region however, ECOWAS was
compelled to adapt and reorient itself to issues
of security and stability at the same time as
it was preoccupied with economic integration.
Available evidence shows that in the period between
1970 and 1990, West Africa alone had a total number
of 31 successful military takeovers, 21 attempted
coups and 54 plots to overthrow governments. Most
of these political upheavals spilled over to neighbouring
states in terms of refugee flows and sub-regional
instability. The Mano River Basin itself is just
emerging from brutal and destructive intrastate
violent conflicts, which started in 1989, and
destabilized Liberia, Sierra Leone and Guinea.
Currently, La Cote D'Voire, is embroiled in a
fragile peace. The region has also experienced
low intensity armed conflict in Guinea Bissau,
Mali and Senegal. ECOWAS was therefore confronted
by the dual challenge of adaptability and effective
response to the security concerns of the sub-region.
The organisation responded by taking measures
to create institutions, mechanisms and procedures
aimed at promoting peace and security in the sub-region
such as the signing and implementation of the
following agreements:
"
The Protocol on Non-aggression in 1978
" The protocol on Mutual Assistance in Defence
in 1981
" The 1991 Declaration of Principles
" The Revised 1993 ECOWAS Treaty
" The 1998 Declaration of a Moratorium on
the Importation, Exportation and Manufacture of
Light Weapons in West Africa and
" The Mechanism for Conflict Prevention,
Management, Resolution, Peace-building and Security
in 1999.
ECOWAS
symbolizes the interrelationship between economic
development, peace and security. For instance,
the preamble to its protocol relating to Mutual
Assistance in Defence, signed in Freetown in 1981,
states clearly that "economic progress cannot
be achieved unless the necessary conditions for
security are ensured in all Member States of the
Community." The linkage is also enunciated
in Article 4 of the ECOWAS Revised Treaty which
states for example, that "Members affirm
and declare adherence to the maintenance of regional
peace, stability and security through the promotion
of good neighbourliness", and that "the
promotion of a peaceful environment is a prerequisite
for economic development". The establishment
of ECOMOG and its interventions in Liberia, Sierra
Leone and Guinea Bissau must be seen in the context
of this same fundamental principle.
On
the whole, it can be said that ECOWSAS has responded
fairly well to both the challenge of adaptability
and the prevention and management of conflicts
in the sub-region. The record shows that it has
made every effort to address the challenge of
adaptation. For instance, the decision to strengthen
ECOMOG as an organ to assist the ECOWAS Mediation
and Security Council is a direct response to new
and emerging peace and security realities in the
sub-region. So is the establishment of the Mechanism
for Conflict Prevention, Management, Resolution,
Peacekeeping and Security. In the Protocol to
that Mechanism, it states that the Community had
been concerned about the proliferation of conflicts
which it says "constitute a threat to the
peace and security in the African Continent, and
undermines our efforts to improve the living standards
of our peoples." ECOWAS has not only adapted
itself to new realities by revising its Treaty,
it has found it necessary to enhance the 1999
Protocol by incorporating provisions concerning
issues such as prevention of internal crises,
democracy and good governance, the rule of law
and human rights. Its concern about the increasing
incidence of conflicts caused by religious intolerance,
political marginalization and non-transparent
elections has also been reflected in relevant
instruments and documents. The question now is
how does it keep responding to these realities
while keeping in tact its primary objective of
promoting economic cooperation and integration?
Another
challenge, perhaps the most formidable one, facing
ECOWAS in the areas of peace-building and security
is the challenge of capacity and capability. By
this I mean the problem of resources for peace-building
and for security. How, for instance, can we control
and secure our borders if the military is not
fully trained and equipped to perform its constitutional
responsibility for the protection of the State?
How can the Police maintain public law and order
without adequate training and equipment to facilitate
their mobility? How can we motivate our civil
and public servants if we cannot pay them well
or provide them with adequate support?
The
socio-economic status of the country is often
reflected in its capacity to provide adequate
safety and security for its population. An important
part of our peace-building process in Sierra Leone
has been the training and restructuring of the
military forces. We have benefited considerably
from the International Military Assistance Training
Programme (IMATT) led by the United Kingdom. Action
has been taken to upgrade and strengthen the training
facilities at Benguema and the establishment of
the Horton Academy. I also initiated Operation
Pebu, a housing project for our military. The
idea is that in providing training to improve
the skills of security personnel, we also have
to provide equipment and transportation facilities
as well as basic services such as housing for
them.
Many
of the threats to peace in our sub-region emerge
from poverty and economic and social instability.
From the Sierra Leone perspective, the greatest
threat to peace-building and security is the prevalence
of poverty. This is why we must address security
and peace in the context of our poverty reduction
programmes. Pervasive poverty is clearly a potential
source of instability and therefore a serious
threat to the consolidation of peace in the country.
In June 2001, the Government developed a poverty
reduction strategy in the form of an Interim Poverty
Reduction Strategy Paper (I-PRSP) whose main objective
was to reduce poverty through the implementation
of responsive poverty reduction programmes and
the promotion of pro-poor economic growth. In
October 2002, the Government launched the National
Recovery Strategy (NRS) whose focus was on consolidating
state authority and peace-building, the protection
of human rights, the promotion of reconciliation,
reintegration and resettlement, the rebuilding
of communities and improving service delivery
and economic recovery. In February 2005, these
two poverty reduction initiatives were followed
by the inauguration of the Poverty Reduction Strategy
Paper (PRSP) whose major thrust is the reduction
of poverty through the promotion of good governance,
security and peace; the promotion of pro-poor
sustainable growth for food security and job creation
and the promotion of human development.
These
concerns are reiterated in the 1999 Protocol,
where ECOWAS leaders acknowledge in Article 25,
that poverty alleviation and promotion of social
dialogue are important factors for peace. It says,
"Member States undertake to provide the basic
human needs of their populations" and in
Article 26, that they should undertake to fight
poverty effectively in their respective countries
and within the Community, especially by "creating
an environment to provide investment and the development
of a dynamic and competitive private sector".
The burden of debt has been recognized as another
factor inhibiting the capacity of African countries
to create an enabling environment for peace and
development. Among the recommendations the UN
Secretary-General suggested a few years ago in
his report to the Security Council on the causes
of conflict and the promotion of durable peace
and sustainable development in Africa was that
creditors should seriously consider, in response
to the request of the African Union, cancelling
the entire debt of the poorest African countries
and convert into grants, all remaining official
bilateral debt of the poorest African countries.
Another important recommendation is that donors
should try to ensure that half of their aid to
Africa is spent in Africa and should be delivered
on time. These measures are all necessary to advance
our peace-building activities and meeting our
security needs.
The
challenge of capacity and capability can also
be discussed from the point of view of the changes
that ECOWAS has itself instituted in response
to new realities, especially in the area of security.
In this regard, the following questions are relevant.
How can we maintain the institutions we have created
in the areas of security, conflict management,
mediation, peacekeeping operations and conflict
resolution? Do we have the means and capacity
to fully implement the noble ideals we have enunciated
in the various protocols relating to security
matters? Take for example, peacekeeping and the
idea of an ECOWAS Standby Force under the aegis
of ECOMOG. Each Member State of the Community
needs resources for training its armed forces.
Unless the individual troop contributors for the
Standby Force are trained and equipped they will
not be in a position to participate meaningfully
in the activities of such a Force. The alternative
would be to rely on a few Member States with the
necessary capability. This of course will be inconsistent
with the principle of burden-sharing. One or two
States should not carry all the burden, as we
experienced during ECOMOG's operations in Liberia
and Sierra Leone. So, there is need to strengthen
the capacity of national contingents. The establishment
of this College and similar homegrown institutions
should, in my view, help us in meeting the challenge
of capacity building or training. Giving individuals
from other countries the opportunity to train
here is an indication that we are well on the
way to enhancing the capacity of individual member
states to fulfill their national security responsibilities
as well as those of the Community as a whole.
We should face the difficulties of reconciling
the peace-building and security needs of our Community
with determination. We should strengthen military-civilian
relations. In this regard, I understand that participants
in the courses offered in the National War College
are not only senior officers of the armed forces
and the Police but also senior civil servants.
What better example do we need to demonstrate
the integrated approach to peace-building which,
as noted earlier, includes a process of economic
recovery and sustainable development. I believe
that it is possible for us in ECOWAS and indeed
mandatory to continue to pursue simultaneously
or in parallel the objectives of promoting economic
cooperation and integration (peace-building) and
peacekeeping, conflict prevention, mediation and
security. However, we should not allow political
instability and conflict, especially armed conflict
to distract us. We should not allow these negative
forces to squander our human and material resources
that we desperately need to build the blocks of
sustainable development. ECOWAS has made tremendous
progress in promoting economic cooperation and
integration. However, it could have done better,
much better if the sub-region had not been plagued
by prolonged armed conflicts and political instability
over the last sixteen years. We have had far too
many wars, far too much destruction of economic
and social infrastructure. The negative impact
of these prolonged cycles of conflicts on our
human resources cannot be over-emphasized. In
Sierra Leone for instance, the eleven years of
rebel war and the devastation it brought in its
wake dragged the country, without exaggeration,
at least 25 years back in terms of economic and
social development. Thanks to the United Nations,
ECOWAS and other international and regional organizations,
as well as bilateral partners, Sierra Leone is
being described today as a model of peaceful transition
from conflict to post-conflict recovery.
As
you know, Sierra Leone is one of the two countries
on the agenda of the newly established United
Nations Peace-building Commission. In a sense,
Sierra Leone is a symbol of the challenges as
well as the hope of peace-building, security and
stability in the ECOWAS sub-region and Africa
as a whole. We have come a long way. We also recognize
that we still have a long way to go. However,
with the resilience that became the national symbol
of our people during the dark days of the 90s,
I have no doubt that we shall succeed in restoring
lasting peace, security and prosperity in the
country. Of course the other beneficiaries of
that success will be Nigerians, Ghanaians, Guineans,
Liberians, Togolese and others in this great family
of nations of the ECOWAS sub-region.
I
thank you.
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