Editorial
CAR And Peace In Africa
Unspeakable horrors are unfolding in the
Central African Republic. The crisis ap
pears to have assumed a very pitiable dimension as fellow countrymen kill themselves without batting an eye. It is particularly condemnable because any conflict based on ethnic and religious lines amounts to a fight in the family.
The Central African Republic has endured five coups since it gained independence in 1960. Late last year, a long-running civil war between the Seleka rebels, including bandits and mercenaries from Chad and Sudan and the government of President Francois Bozize Yangovonda resulted in the overthrow of Bozize and his flight from the country.
The Seleka leader, Michel Djotodia, appointed himself president, but remnants of the largely Muslim rebel force now roam over large parts of the country, killing, looting and burning out the Christian majority population, which has itself resorted to violence, thus escalating sectarian tensions.
The toll on the people of CAR is huge. Men and women tied together and thrown to crocodiles, a father had to watch his four-year-old son’s throat being slit. Rape is endemic. Children are being forced into militias. Amnesty International describes human rights violation on “an unprecedented scale”.
International troops, too few to prevent the conflict growing, are there. The crisis in CAR is not yet genocide or a sectarian civil war but, as the United Nations (UN) and France said, it is headed in that direction. The Deputy Secretary General of the UN, Jan Eliasson, acknowledges that the situation in CAR is deteriorating fast.
We are glad that the international powers have moved in and convinced the president to step aside, and interim president selected. The interim president selected on Monday at a ran- corous, five hours session of a “national transition council” of rebels, rivals and politicians was Catherine Samba- Panza, a French-educated lawyer with no ties either to the Muslim rebels or the Christian militia
Her selection was especially welcomed by many people who felt that men had done nothing but lead the country on its vicious downward spiral.
On the same day at Ms Samba-Panza’s selection, the European Union agreed to send a force and several hundred soldiers to assist the 1,600 French troops and 4,400 African Union soldiers already in the Central African Republic.
The European forces are expected to remain for six months by which time the African Union forces would have risen to 6,000. The European Union forces are seriously needed, especially to secure the airport so that humanitarian aid can start arriving.
At another meeting in Brussels, the European Union pledged nearly $500 million in humanitarian aid, while the United States announced that it would be proving nearly $30 million in additional help, on top of $15 million previously pledged.
Whether the money and the troops are enough to restore order in a country in “free all”, as the United Nations Secretary General, Ban Ki-moon, described it, is far from certain. So far, the foreign peacekeepers have been largely clustered in Bangui, while the far reaches of the country have been racked with violence, which has continued unabated.
But at least, the suffering country now has a head of state who is not part of the problem, as all her predecessors were, and the financial and military aid, should at least give Ms Samba-Panza some means and time to show that there is an alternative to chaos and violence.
The UN Security Council is likely to turn the African Union-led force into a UN peacekeeping operation, but it will take months to organise. With the assumption of office of an interim president, the crisis should actually end. The current ethno-religious cleansing is condemnable.
While we urge the people to realise that there is a time to disagree and a time to make peace, neighbouring countries should aid the return of peace rather than fuel it.
The truth is that there has been too many wars in Africa and every single one takes the continent many years backward. Indeed, the ripple effect of these crises in some cases are felt beyond Africa.
The Tide wonders if the African Union has instruments that should address this problem. AU should have proactive policies that can nip in-the-bud conflicts rather than play the fire brigade.
As some people take up the humanitarian crisis arising from these crises, regional bodies must think about how to enforce charters that will grow peace in Africa. Africans must come to terms with the fact that conflicts are inevitable and that every conflict must not result in bloodbath.
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