WHILE the situations in South Sudan, Somalia and the Lake Chad Basin dominate the agenda of the African Union (AU), other crises seem to have been forgotten by the AU. In fact, no one seems willing to label them as such.
Except perhaps the refugee agencies and
locals who experience the insecurity and instability. Two examples of
unacknowledged crises are Mozambique and the Republic of the Congo.
Both countries are facing political
problems that involve armed violence from groups contesting the
authority of sitting governments. And yet they have never made it on to
the agenda of the AU’s Peace and Security Council and will certainly not
be discussed during this week’s 29th AU summit.
There are various reasons for some
countries being left off the AU agenda. Firstly, sometimes the AU
believes regional bodies are taking the lead in trying to stop an
emerging crisis from escalating.
It prefers to leave it up to the
regional economic communities (RECs) to handle. Secondly, some leaders
are popular among their peers and manage to convince other AU member
states not to consider what is happening in their countries as a crisis
that merits discussion.
A third factor is the scope of the
crisis and its regional implications. If neighbours don’t see the crisis
spilling over into their territory, they sometimes don’t see a need to
address it.
Lastly, AU action sometimes depends on
whether its partners and donors consider these situations grave enough
to raise alarm. This is largely the case in Mozambique, which was deemed
a success story of post-conflict stability, but the situation has
deteriorated.
After the presidential poll of 2014 won
by President Filipe Nyusi from the ruling Frente de Libertação de
Moçambique (FRELIMO), Afonso Dhlakama from Resistência Nacional Moçam
bicana (RENAMO), who got 36.61 per cent, contested the results.
Dhlakama claimed that leadership
positions should be given to RENAMO in the six provinces where it had
led the polls. Following the refusal of the government, RENAMO launched
an armed insurrection in the centre of the country, attacking security
forces and public institutions.
The government responded with military
operations that led to the displacement of 12 000 refugees to
neighbouring Malawi and Zimbabwe and thousands of internally displaced
people.
In December 2016, Dhlakama announced a
twomonth ceasefire, which was extended until May, and then indefinitely.
An international contact group was set up to support the talks between
RENAMO and the government, security sector reform and a decentralisation
process, but the AU is not officially part of this.
Meanwhile in Central Africa, while most
of the international community is focused on neighbouring Democratic
Republic of the Congo, the Republic of the Congo (or Congo-Brazzaville)
entered into a political and military crisis in October 2015.
A highly contested referendum removed
the term and age limits from the constitution, allowing the incumbent
Denis Sassou Nguesso to contest for another term. The latter was
re-elected in March 2016, with various observers questioning the
regularity of the poll.
In the aftermath of the elections,
‘Ninja’ militants associated with the opposition leader Frédéric
Bintsamou – Pastor Ntumi – sporadically attacked Brazzaville’s southern
districts.
In response, security forces launched
military operations in the Pool region in April 2016. Reports describe
it as a humanitarian crisis with approximately 80 000 internally
displaced people.
The common feature of these two
situations is the fact that they do not have wide regional humanitarian
consequences compared to other crises in Africa. This tends to reduce
the coverage by international media, thus the reaction by the
international community.
In both crises, the role of the regional
communities has also been minimal. The Southern African Development
Community (SADC) hasn’t taken a clear position on Mozambique.
RENAMO remains deeply unpopular in a
region where member states are ruled by former liberation movements.
While neighbouring countries might have concerns about the spill-over
effect of the crisis in Mozambique, no collective response has yet been
designed.
Likewise, the Economic Community of
Central African States (ECCAS) has been largely silent on the Congo.
With the exception of the Central African Republic (CAR), all leaders
have either changed the constitution to extend their stay in power, or
have ruled for years in a similar situation.
Therefore nobody in the region has the
moral authority to be involved in CongoBrazzaville. Moreover, the
critical role played by Sassou Nguesso in Libya and in the CAR tends to
shield him from outside criticism.
But even if the AU put these two crises
on the agenda, does it have the adequate instruments to address them?
Mozambique and the Republic of the Congo share similarities in the root
causes of crises: the supremacy of the ruling party in various sectors
of the public life – the security sector, election management and the
economy.
In both countries, there is a shared
perception that the economic growth of the previous years has only
benefited a few, mainly connected to the ruling party.
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