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Liberia, Sierra Leone and Guineano peace for the masses
By Trevor Johnson
27 September 1999
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Two years after the end of Liberia's 1989-97 civil war, and
with the Sierra Leone conflict supposedly over, life for the mass
of people in the region is still beset by instability, violence
and the threat of war.
For 7,000 Sierra Leoneans this has meant being forced to make
a five-day trek from their refugee camp at Kolahun in Liberia's
upper Lofa Country to Tarvey in lower Lofa, to escape constant
harassment by Liberian security forces. When they arrive in Tarvey
they face overcrowded camps, where the occupants already suffer
bloody diarrhoea, and run the risk of epidemics such as cholera.
Even this escape route was closed for 600 refugees from the Kolahun
camp, who were too weak to make the journey.
From February 1998 until August this year, some 16,000 Sierra
Leoneans had been living in the Kolahun camp. Eight thousand had
already made the trek to Tarvey in August, following dissident
activity in the area, according to Médecins sans frontières,
the French aid agency.
All the Sierra Leonean refugees in Lofa County are being relocated
because of government-backed harassment. A spokesman for the UNHCR
said the refugees would be relocated to Sinje, Grand Cape Mount
County. There are already 5,000 Sierra Leonean refugees in Sinje.
Lofa County is close to the point where Liberia, Sierra Leone
and Guinea meet. It contains a densely forested area criss-crossed
by rivers, which is difficult for government forces to reach.
Due to years of oppression and corruption, people have fled there
from Sierra Leone and Liberia, preferring the difficulties of
life in the forest to the threats of death or mutilation at home.
Many of the victims who have fled there are from minority ethnic
groups such as the Krahns and Mandingoes.
Charles Taylor's regime, put in power with Western backing
in 1997, is responsible for continuing atrocities, particularly
against ethnic minorities and political opponents. In September
1998, Taylor ordered his forces to storm a densely populated area
of Monrovia, the Liberian capital, with artillery weapons, mortars,
machine guns and bombs. According to the US State Department,
about 300 people, mostly ethnic Krahns, were gunned down. Other
reports put the number of people killed at over 1,500. This led
to an exodus of Krahns out of the country, with as many as 18,000
fleeing into refugee camps.
In April 1999, the campaign of terror intensified. The border
town of Voinjama was attacked. The government first claimed that
dissident forces based in Guinea were responsible. Weeks later
it admitted that the atrocities were the work of its own security
forces.
The authorities in Liberia and Guinea both claim that armed
groups invaded the border area in August. Liberia accused Guinea
of allowing rebels based there to attack Liberia. Guinea counter-charged
that a group from Liberia had killed around 30 people in an incursion.
Each side has said that the attacks upon it could only take place
with the backing of the other country, while denying having any
influence upon rebel groups themselves.
This would not be the first time that the Taylor regime has
destabilised a neighbouring country by supporting armed incursions
by rebel groups. Taylor is known to have supported the Revolutionary
United Front (RUF), the group which was fighting the Kabbah regime
in Sierra Leone and which was responsible for many of the atrocities
there. The RUF has operated out of western Liberia for some time.
An attempt to agree a common approach to the issue by the governments
of the three countries was made at a summit last week, held under
the auspices of ECOWAS, the regional group dominated by Nigeria.
Hosted by Nigerian President Olusegun Obasanjo, it included representatives
from Ghana, Côte d'Ivoire, Sierra Leone, Liberia, Guinea
and Togo.
The leaders of Liberia, Sierra Leone and Guinea agreed to set
up a joint security committee to establish military collaboration
in the border area, expelling those not wanted so that they could
be dealt with in their country of origin. The three states agreed
to swap lists of dissidents for this purpose.
It will only be a short time before this agreement is broken.
The armed occupying force, known as ECOMOG (comprising mainly
Nigerian troops), was sent into both Liberia and Sierra Leone
to police the conflicts, without achieving any real stability.
Taylor's National Patriotic Front was elevated into power in Liberia,
and efforts are being made to establish a coalition in Sierra
Leone made up of the former Kabbah regime and the RUF. Whilst
this has given state power to some of the participants in the
conflicts, it has not resolved the issue. Despite this, ECOMOG
troops have pulled out of Liberia, and are in the process of pulling
out of Sierra Leone.
The economies of Liberia and Sierra Leone are at present dysfunctional,
having been ravaged during years of civil war. Both Sierra Leone
and Liberia are rich in mineralssuch as diamonds, bauxite
and iron orebut their inhabitants suffer extreme poverty,
with life expectancy down to 37 years in Sierra Leone.
Nigeria has always acted as self-appointed policeman in the
region, and is likely to be pressuring the smaller countries to
resolve their most obvious manifestations of instability so that
big business can move in. However, none of the governments of
the region will do anything to lessen the suffering of the masses
there, and now Guinea could also be drawn into the same downward
spiral as her two neighbours.
See Also:
The Sierra Leone peace deal
[31 July 1999]
President Taylor cracks down
in Liberia
[22 June 1999]
Africa
[WSWS Full Coverage]
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