Today , the global debate about the proliferation
and command of chemical biological and nuclear weapons
capability raises concerns and suspicions among member
states of the United Nations and sub-regional groups
- Africa being no exception.
For the sake of this expose, we will focus on the
threat of chemical and biological weapons and capability
in Africa.
Biological Weapons(BW) spread diseases among humans,
animals and plants. Opportunistic diseases may also
spread when the population is exposed to the micro-organisms
or chemical toxins which are manufactured by such
organisms. With micro-organisms, the symptoms of the
diseases are visible after an incubation period during
which time the organisms are multiplying. With toxins,
which are poisonous substances produced by living
organisms such as botulinum toxin plants(ricin) and
animals like snake venom, symptoms generally appear
more rapidly among people and animals and the effects
of diseases may range from physical incapacitation
to death.
In their publication in 2005, entitled, “CIVIL
SOCIETY AND THE NORM AGAINST THE WEAPONISATION OF
DISEASE: Meeting the Challenge,” Dr. Jean Pascal
Zanders, Director of BioWeapons Prevention Project
and Chandre Gould, the Network Coordinator of the
same organization maintain that “…biological
warfare is the intentional use of disease-causing
micro-organisms, or other entities, that can replicate
themselves – such as viruses, infectious nucleic
acids and prions – against humans, animals or
plants for hostile purposes…:”
Three international treaties including the 1972 Biological
Weapons Convention (BWC), which bans offensive biological
weapons development and possession; the 1993 Chemical
Weapons Convention (CWC), which outlaws chemical weapons
development, possession, and use; and the 1925 Geneva
Protocol, which forbids the use of chemical and biological
weapons in war were put in place to maintain effective
policing.
Research of publicly available intelligence information
shows that several African countries, to some degree,
were developing, maintaining or pursuing offensive
chemical and biological weapons programs at some point
in time. Namely, the African countries include South
Africa, Libya, Egypt and Sudan.
SOUTH AFRICA
In the 1960’s, although South Africa began experimenting
with the technical usage of a “peaceful nuclear
regime” for the purpose of mining and engineering,
its biological weapons program was considered large
and sophisticated in research and testing. The apartheid
government saw itself as a target of “attack”
by Soviet- Marxist supported guerrillas and nationalists
organizations at home and abroad. The purpose of maintaining
its chemical weapons capability then was more for
a military offensive and defensive posture and was
prepared to employ this capability in the face of
an attack.
In testimony before the Truth and Reconciliation Commission
(TRC) in South Africa, participants in a covert military
program during the apartheid era gave evidence of
the development of chemical and biological weapons
by South Africa. According to Mr. Dan Goosen, a scientist
involved in the apartheid-era government weapons program,
researchers “investigated the possibility of
developing drugs that would only work on blacks -
either killing, injuring or making them infertile.’
There was even a plan, later aborted, to employ hallucinogenic
drugs to poison Nelson Mandela and other black activists
before release from prison.
Later, the government of former President Nelson Mandela,
which came to power in 1994, declared in June 1998
that it had terminated this program earlier and had
destroyed the material for offensive purposes in government
storage. In response to a request from the TRC, the
South African government, through the relevant agency,
made documents from this program available to the
TRC, which placed them in the public domain.
LYBIA:
The Libyan government has a biological and chemical
weapons research and development program and may be
able to produce small amounts of agent. It is likely
in need of foreign assistance to advance this program
further.
Western intelligence reports indicate that potential
delivery vehicles include short-range, anti-ship cruise
missiles; air-launched tactical missiles; fighter
aircraft; bombers; artillery; helicopters; and rockets.
In a regional conflagration, the Libyan military attempted
to use chemical weapons against Chadian troops in
1987
The north African nation led by strongman Colonel
Muammar Abu Minyar al-QADHAFI reportedly produced
mustard and nerve agent before 1990.
That country still had some elements of its chemical
weapons program and was working to re-establish its
chemical weapons capabilities, which had been limited
by UN sanctions from 1992 to 1999. Accused of actively
training and supporting insurgencies and terrorists
worldwide in its effort to counter western influence,
Libya had been pursuing an indigenous production capability
but had been highly dependent on foreign suppliers.
.
The US Arms Control and Disarmament Agency reported
in July 1998 that “…Evidence indicates
that Libya has the expertise to produce small quantities
of biological equipment for its Biological Weapons(BW)
program and that the Libyan Government is seeking
to move its research program into a program of weaponized
BW agents.”
In a stunning and surprise about-face on December
20, 2003, Libya said it would give up its Biological
and Chemical Weapons programs for developing weapons
of mass destruction and allow unconditional inspection
and verification. The official reason given by Colonel
al-QADHAFI was that “his country was ready to
play its role in building a world free from all forms
of terrorism.”. The favored speculation is that
he was fearful of “regime change” as was
done in Iraq against Saddam Hussein by the West. Libya
has not signed the1993 Chemical Weapons Convention
Treaty.
EGYPT:
The north east African nation is reported to have
developed biological weapons agents by 1972. Considering
itself as strategic, a broker in Middle Eastern geo-politics
and faced with an unstable Middle East, Egypt sought
to maintain a dominance of the Nile Basin. This meant
maintaining a military posture backed by a chemical
weapons component. On the other hand, there is no
evidence to suggest that Egypt employed or used this
component in its military confrontation with Israel
mainly because its own intelligence confirmed that
the Israelis were capable and prepared to strike at
Egypt decisively and disastrously with their own chemical
weapons were their military conflict ever to deteriorate
to that level..
There is no evidence suggesting Egypt has eliminated
this chemical weapons capability. Given the fragile
Middle East political climate and it is quite possible
that Egypt probably maintains a chemical weapons stockpile.
That country, to date, has not signed the 1993 Chemical
Weapons Convention Treaty.
SUDAN:
The United States Central Intelligence Agency (CIA)
reports that Sudanese military regimes favoring Islamic-oriented
governments have dominated national politics since
independence from the United Kingdom in 1956.
Additionally, Western intelligence sources have also
long suspected and maintained that Sudan may be interested
in developing a Chemical and Biological weapons program
and is developing the ability to produce chemical
weapons, possibly including VX. Sudan, in this regard,
is reported to have received assistance from sympathetic
and friendly governments. It is believed that chronic
political and social economic instability have crippled
any sustained development of its biological and chemical
weapons program but Sudan remains interested in pursuing
this effort. The northeast Africa nation continues
to develop close ties with Iran to the annoyance of
the West who has accused that country of pursing the
development of nuclear arsenal and a hostile posture
in the region. Iran has been threatening to pursue
its nuclear development program regardless of the
threat of international sanctions claming it is mainly
for “peaceful and economic purposes ”
Sudan acceded to the 1993 Chemical Weapons Convention
Treaty on May 24, 1999.
The PELINDABA Treaty of the pan African grouping the
African Union (AU) which aims to maintain the continent
as a “nuclear weapon free zone” purposely
obligates each member state to, among other things,
renounce, prohibit and prevent the usage and
proliferation of nuclear weapons except for peaceful
means. The AU treaty, for some odd reason, is silent
on the proliferation of chemical or biological weapons,
instead, for which an explanation is needed.
And so, interestingly, Africa, too, has been and remains
a active player in the interest, acquisition and potential
usage of chemical and biological weapons. The challenge
is to ensure that the democratic alternative take
root on the continent which will in turn deny would
be dictators, mad-men and hostile countries the deadly
chemical and biological weapons they could pursue
and employ to threaten and harm their people and neighbors
for the sake of state of power and regional dominance.
Emmanuel Abalo is an exiled Liberian journalist, media
and human rights activist. He is the former Acting
President of the Press Union of Liberia (PUL). Mr.
Abalo presently resides in Pennsylvania, USA and works
as an analyst with CITIGROUP, North America