Liberia: Lifting sanctions will fuel instability
and jeopardise peace
press Release Issued by Global Witness
The Perspective
Atlanta, Georgia
September 4, 2003
'Against the People, For the Resources', a new briefing document released today by Global Witness, the Nobel Peace Prize-nominated investigative group, details the risks of lifting UN Security Council sanctions on Liberia, as to do so would fuel regional instability and imperil Liberia's nascent peace process.
While welcoming the Security Council decision to maintain the timber embargo
'for the time being' [1], Global Witness provides a check-list of changes
that the Liberian government and extractive industries must undertake before
considering the lifting of sanctions, and calls upon the Security Council
to enforce the current timber embargo and reject the proposed 'wood-for-food'
programme [2], as this will undermine the UN's attempts to bring peace and
security to the region. Global Witness also responds to recent UN reports
on the Liberian logging industry, and makes the legal case for including the
plunder of natural resources as a war crime.
The document also highlights international concern at the recently appointed
UN Special Representative for Liberia's apparent rush to lift sanctions 'as
quickly as possible', on the basis that the sanctions were put in place against
'the now defunct Taylor administration' [3]. Ongoing Global Witness investigations
have exposed the Liberian logging industry's links to the
arms dealers and rebel groups that have fuelled conflicts in Liberia, Sierra
Leone and Cote d'Ivoire [4], and how those links have remained strong regardless
of who is in power.
"Restarting logging now would be the worst possible decision for Liberia
and its war-weary people," says Alice Blondel, Global Witness Lead Campaigner.
"The forests are largely in the hands of rebel groups, beyond the reach
of any regulatory or other controls. Restarting logging operations will reopen
the door to those companies with a history of illegal arms imports, corruption
and serious human rights abuses that helped Charles Taylor maintain his grip
on power. It would send the wrong message that Liberia is open for business
as usual."
Despite the deployment of an intervention force, resignation of former President
and indicted-war criminal Charles Taylor [5], and creation of an interim government,
the political and humanitarian situation in Liberia remains precarious. To
solidify peace in Liberia and move the country forward, Global Witness is
calling for:
* A moratorium on extractive industries until peace is restored and Liberia
has a government that can both enforce proper business practices by extractive
industries and ensure revenue properly enters the nation's treasury and is
not siphoned off by armed factions.
* The international community to proactively enforce the UN sanctions regime
on Liberia, in particular to better police the borders with Cote d'Ivoire,
Guinea and Sierra Leone.
* The international community to recognise the plunder of timber, diamonds
and other natural resources as a specific war crime.
* All states to respect the indictment of former Liberian President Charles
Taylor for war crimes and crimes against humanity, as issued by the Special
Court for Sierra Leone for crimes committed during Sierra Leone's civil war
[6].