[Mb-civic] A beckoning in West Africa - Editorial - The Boston Globe
William Swiggard
swiggard at comcast.net
Thu Apr 6 03:59:10 PDT 2006
A beckoning in West Africa
April 6, 2006 | Editorial | The Boston Globe
WITH ITS PROSECUTION of the former Liberian leader Charles Taylor, the
United Nations will send a message to the strongmen of Africa that they
can no longer export terror and death to neighboring nations. The trial
needs to proceed fairly and quickly to convince Africans that the
international community is serious about enforcing norms of conduct on
this most vulnerable of continents.
The location of the trial shouldn't be Sierra Leone, where Taylor faced
charges this week for allegedly fomenting a revolt that resulted in the
deaths or mutilations of thousands of people. He is still a feared
figure in this section of West Africa, and Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf, his
successor as president of Liberia, wants him out of the region and tried
at The Hague, the traditional seat of international tribunals. The
United States supports the move, and Britain is circulating a resolution
to this effect at the United Nations.
Some people in Sierra Leone oppose the move, on the grounds that they
want the man they consider their tormentor tried at the scene of the
crimes. But the fragility of West Africa argues in favor of a more
stable location. Before the special UN court is moved, however, someone
must pay for the expense of witnesses and lawyers living in the
Netherlands, as well as the cost of transmitting video of the
proceedings back to Africa.
The Bush administration has already done much to bring Taylor to justice
by cajoling Nigeria, where he had sought refuge, into giving him up. The
United States, Britain, and the rest of the developed world need to
provide the money to make sure his trial is scrupulously conducted and
widely publicized.
Taylor's six-year rule of Liberia was brutal, but he's not being accused
of crimes there. Instead, the trial will focus on his attempts to
subvert the government of Sierra Leone by backing an insurgent army
loathed for its brutality. Meddling in the affairs of weaker neighbors
is hardly a behavior confined to Africa, but the continent became
unusually susceptible to outside interference after the breakup of the
colonial empires starting in the late 1950s.
A few of the interventions come quickly to mind: apartheid South
Africa's support for a rebel group in Mozambique, US backing of a
guerrilla army in Angola, Libyan leader Moammar Khadafy's meddling in
Chad and (in support of Taylor) in Liberia, and most recently, the
Ugandan and Rwandan invasion of the Democratic Republic of Congo. In
hindsight, with the possible exception of the Rwandan attack
(self-defense following the genocide), none was justified. When outside
interference descends to the brutality of the struggle for Sierra Leone,
it is time to establish a marker for international conduct that other
leaders, in Africa and elsewhere, will be expected to follow.
http://www.boston.com/news/globe/editorial_opinion/editorials/articles/2006/04/06/a_beckoning_in_west_africa/
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