Former President Olusegun Obasanjo says the financing and arming of proxy groups by external actors is one of the “greatest obstacles” to sustainable peace in Africa.
Obasanjo spoke on Thursday during the third Mashariki
cooperation conference held in Diani, Kwale County, Kenya.
The conference’s theme was “Emerging geopolitical dynamics
and Africa’s security architecture.”
Drawing lessons from his four decades of direct involvement
in African security and conflict resolution, the former president said military
intervention in conflict on the continent “without a credible political process
is at best a pause in fighting and at worst a prolongation of it.”
Citing the trend of coups in the Sahel region, Obasanjo said
African institutions have a responsibility to speak the truth when a leader
uses the “language of anti-colonialism and sovereignty as a shield for the
systematic destruction of his own people’s livelihoods and rights.”
The former president said he would not deny the legitimate
grievances of citizens that led to support for military takeovers.
He, however, said military regimes are yet to deliver
sustained development or genuine security in Africa.
Obasanjo said intelligence is indispensable in conflict
prevention in Africa, adding that warning signs were always visible before the
first shot was fired.
“In nearly every conflict I have helped to mediate, the
warning signs were visible months or years before the first shot was fired,” he
said.
“Ethnic tensions were being deliberately inflamed. Electoral
processes were being manipulated. Youth were being recruited into militias.
Economic marginalisation was deepening.
“Regional neighbours were beginning to take sides. The
information existed. What was missing was the institutional will to act on it,
to share it across borders and to take the political risks that early
intervention requires.
“The intelligence community in Africa must become more
explicitly and systematically focused on early warning and early action by
regional leaders.
“The continental early warning system of the African Union
exists for precisely this purpose. It must be better resourced, better staffed
and, above all, better connected to decision-makers who are prepared to act on
what it tells them.
“The third conclusion is that the financing and arming of
proxy forces by external actors is one of the greatest obstacles to durable
peace in Africa, and that intelligence services have a particular
responsibility to expose it.
“In the DRC, Rwandan and Ugandan support for armed groups
was documented over the years by UN panel of experts reports.
“In Sudan, external actors provided material and political
support to parties that had no incentive to reach a settlement as long as that
support continued.
“In Libya, since the fall of Muammar Gaddafi in 2011, a
bewildering array of external states, including the UAE, Turkey, Egypt, Russia
and several European governments, have poured weapons and fighters into a
conflict that they have simultaneously claimed to want to resolve. The
hypocrisy is breathtaking.
“African intelligence services that can accurately map these
external interventions and bring that mapping to the attention of the African
Union and the UN security council perform a service not only to the countries
directly concerned but to the entire project of African peace.”
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