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US behind peace deals in Sudan and Congo
By Chris Talbot
9 August 2002
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Two recently brokered peace agreements in Africa, in Sudan
and the Congo, are extremely tenuous. Many experts have considered
them unlikely to bring the conflicts to an end in the near future.
In both cases there has been no cease fire and fighting continues.
Nevertheless, taken together with the peace agreement made in
Angola earlier this year, it demonstrates a marked change in the
involvement of the Western powers in Africa, particularly the
United States.
Between them the three countries account for a large part of
Africas oil and mineral wealth. Military and economic pressure
from the US was the lever used in pushing through the agreements
that will mean closer American relations with Sudan and increasing
reliance on the oil rich MPLA regime in Angola. In the Democratic
Republic of Congo (DRC), South Africa will play a leading role,
and the DRC government of President Joseph Kabila will receive
more Western backing. Rwanda, a major recipient of US support
under Clinton, has clearly been sidelined and heavily pressured
to pull out of the Congo. Given favourable treatment after the
1994 genocide, Rwanda has now been placed under the spotlight
for human rights abuses.
The Wall Street Journal gives a diplomatic gloss on
the increased US involvement, its selective downplaying of human
right issues, and willingness to work through proxies: The
West was certainly instrumental in encouraging the parties to
come to the table, but took a behind-the-scenes role in negotiations.
That was smart. Since the end of the Cold War, Europe and America
have seemed to lack the understanding and political will to effect
positive change in this region. Such efforts were too easily dismissed
by local politicians as mere meddling by supposedly racist former
colonial powers.
In Sudan the government has apparently agreed to a deal with
the rebel Sudanese Peoples Liberation Army (SPLA) that would
share control of the countrys oil wealth, much of which
is in the south where the SPLA is based. The Islamic regime has
dropped its insistence on applying Sharia law to the non-Muslim
south and has promised that, although the protocol of the agreement
gives unity a priority, they will allow a referendum
on secession of the south to take place in six years time.
Concerns raised by Egypt, the USs main ally in the region,
that control over the headwaters of the River Nile could pass
into hostile forces seem to have been overcome.
After September 11 the Sudanese government gave the US unprecedented
collaboration in security issues, using its previous connections
with Islamic militants. Desperate for financial backing and heavily
in debt, the regime had already initiated a charm offensive
to gain Western support which had won some response in Europe.
It was justifiably frightened at getting the same treatment as
the Taliban, being high up on the US list of axis of evil
regimes.
Given also the interest in the countrys oil wealth, the
Bush administration appointed a special envoy, former senator
John Danforth, to consider mediating in the 19-year-old civil
war. The issue divided American ruling circles, with the SPLA
strongly supported by right-wing Christian groups. Operation Lifeline
Sudan funded by the US, and the biggest aid project in Africa
assists the SPLA. Whilst during the Cold War the SPLA was backed
by the Soviet Union, in recent years it has been backed by the
US against the Islamic regime in Khartoum.
Danforth has been given the go ahead to intervene and US pressure
has now apparently extracted concessions from the Sudan regime.
Economic sanctions are still in place. Nevertheless, as the International
Crisis Group (ICG) points out: removing its opposition to
Paris Club financing, IMF lending and World Bank credits for Sudan
would probably be the largest incentive the US could offer Khartoum
at an appropriate tactical moment.
Recent reports from aid workers suggest the Sudanese government
is continuing its practice of bombing civilians in the southern
region, attempting to impose a scorched earth policy around the
oil fields. Although the revenue from the oil has given the Khartoum
government the military edge over the SPLA, experts state that
it must move further south and exploit the larger deposits of
oil there if it is to maintain its income.
Sudan may well agree to stop this military expansion after
further peace talks this month. Most of Sudans oil at present
goes to China and Malaysia. The Canadian firm Talisman is threatening
to pull out as a protest against human rights abuses. ICG point
out that only Western companies possess the technology necessary
for rapid expansion of oil production.
The Congo peace talks
The Congo peace talks took a new turn with a deal signed last
week between Joseph Kabila, President of the DRC, and Paul Kagame,
President of Rwanda. It is supposed to bring about the withdrawal
of more than 20,000 Rwandan troops from the Congo within three
months. In return the DRC will disarm and repatriate thousands
of former Rwandan armed forces (FAR) and Interahamwe militias,
many of whom are Hutus said to have taken part in the 1994 genocide
of the Tutsi minority in Rwanda.
Fighting continues in the eastern Kivu region of the DRC and
the agreement would appear to have little chance of success in
the time frame agreed. Whilst Rwandan forces in the Congo and
the rebel group they back, the Congolese Rally for Democracy (RCD),
undoubtedly want to deal with threats from Hutu militia, the exploitation
of the regions resources has become a priority. As well as gold
and diamonds, the region is a source of the rare mineral coltan
used in mobile phones. The region is also home to various warring
militias, some of which have been backed by the local population
which is increasingly angered at their effective colonisation
by Rwanda.
Despite the fact that the US has promised a $5 million reward
for information leading to the capture of the eight leading genocide
suspects believed to be in the DRC, it seems unlikely that the
Hutu militia as a whole will agree to be disarmed and that the
DRC will send them back to Rwanda. According to the BBC, out of
tens of thousands of FAR soldiers so far only 21 have given themselves
up to the UN. They are reputed to have formed the core of Kabilas
armed forces.
South Africa, with US backing, is already preparing to send
at least 1,500 troops to the DRC to supplement the existing 4,200
UN force. Such a small force, despite superior equipment, is unlikely
to have much impact in a country four times the size of France.
South African newspapers have expressed concern at troops going
up against experienced fighters. Nevertheless South African President
Mbeki is strongly backing the deal. South African businessmen
are already discussing a range of investment projects in the Congo.
The current agreement follows that made at Sun City, South
Africa in April 2002 after weeks of negotiations. Unable to reach
an agreement with Rwanda and the RCD, Kabila made a power-sharing
arrangement with Jean-Pierre Bembas Congolese Liberation
Movement (MLC). The MLC is backed by Uganda and the arrangement
potentially gave the DRC government control over two thirds of
the country. Whilst Uganda and Rwanda entered the war in the Congo
together in 1997, their interests have diverged leading to sporadic
fighting between their armies and proxy forces.
The US has been central to both Sun City and the current agreement.
Kabila is heavily dependent on Angolan support and the Angolan-DRC-Ugandan
axis behind the peace initiative is clearly backed by the US.
Angola agreed to accept Bemba, provided his connections with businessmen
from the former Mobutu period were kept in the background. (UNITA,
the rebel force that has now concluded a peace agreement with
the Angolan regime was backed by the US via the military dictator
Mobutu). In return Uganda insisted that some of the hardline
personnel around Kabila who are close to Zimbabwe be removed.
Since he took over after the assassination of his father last
year, Joseph Kabila has worked closely with his Western backers.
Agreeing to accept IMF economic measures, the DRC government has
now received loans from the World Bank of $410 million and $750
million from the IMF. The IMF is also holding out the promise
of relief on the countrys $13 billion debt. Such unusually
favourable conditions for an underdeveloped country are a reflection
of its importance in terms of mineral wealth.
As well as putting pressure on Rwandaa country heavily
dependent on Western aidthe present peace initiative is
likely to undermine Zimbabwes interests in the DRC. In exchange
for the military support he gained from Zimbabwe along with Angola,
Kabila gave concessions in diamond mining and logging to the Zimbabwean
military. It now seems he has followed Western advice and told
Zimbabwe to remove its troops. No doubt South African and US business
interests will be keen to step in.
In terms of the humanitarian concern for the millions of African
people caught up in the wars, the current round of peace agreements
will mean very little. In Sudan the government has repeatedly
used famine to drive people out of the oil rich regions. Four
million people are internally displaced, with many dependent on
outside aid. The DRC is one of the poorest countries in the world
with a per capita income of 23 US cents a day. A staggering 2.5
million are estimated to have been killed during the five-year
war, the majority of them from starvation or disease rather than
the direct result of fighting.
See Also:
The unquiet death of Patrice
Lumumba
[16 January 2002]
Sudanese government continues
bombing of south
[5 March 2002]
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