UN: Combating Impunity Necessary for Reconciliation in Central African Republic

A U.N. investigator warns violence will increase and national reconciliation in the Central African Republic will remain elusive as long as the country has persistent corruption and impunity.

Yao Agbetse’s report was submitted to the U.N. Human Rights Council on Wednesday.

The independent expert on human rights in the C.A.R. presented his last report to the council in March. Since then, Agbetse says MINUSCA, the U.N. peacekeeping mission in the C.A.R., has documented 436 incidents of extremely grave human rights violations against more than 1,300 victims.

Those include conflict-related sexual violence and grave violations of the rights of children.

Agbetse says nearly half of the violations were committed by state agents and their allies, the other half by armed groups that had signed the 2018 peace agreement aimed at ending the civil war that broke out in 2013.

Unfortunately, he says, gross violations continue to be committed with impunity.

“If the current situation persists, the Central African Republic will see an increase in tension and social tension, which may lead to an even more fragile situation in the conflict areas,” Agbetse said through an interpreter. “And the instability will give a new impetus to the armed groups who will take up their belligerent activities in violation of human rights and international humanitarian law.”

That, he says, will prompt people to flee to other countries in the region and toward Europe.

Agbetse calls combating impunity a priority. He says the population wants the state to investigate allegations of human rights and start impartial investigations of human rights abuse with the support of the human rights division of MINUSCA.

“Moreover, it is important that the government follow up on the conclusions of the investigations conducted by its Special Commission of Inquiry established in May 2021 into the allegations of atrocities committed by FACA and their Russian allies,” he said. “The trials of the perpetrators of these violations and other serious violations must be started with no delay.”

FACA stands for the Central African Armed Forces.

The independent expert is referring to allegations of violations committed by Russian mercenaries associated with a private security company, the Wagner Group.

They reportedly have been abusing and killing civilians in the C.A.R. since 2019. The United Nations, several governments and human rights groups accuse the Russian mercenaries of war crimes and crimes against humanity.

Both Russia and the C.A.R. have repeatedly denied that the Wagner Group is in the country.

In his response to the report, the C.A.R.’s minister of justice, Arnaud Djoubay Abazene, made no reference to the Wagner Group. However, he told the council the promotion of human rights in combating impunity and sexual and gender-based violence is at the heart of his government’s priorities.

Source: Voice of America

UN: 828 Million More People Faced Hunger in 2021

The United Nations warned Wednesday that the world is failing in its efforts to eradicate hunger, as 828 million more people had too little to eat in 2021 — 150 million more than before the COVID-19 pandemic struck in 2019.

The State of Food Security and Nutrition report, released Wednesday, is the collaborative effort of five U.N. agencies, including the Food and Agriculture Organization and the World Food Program. Their data show that the major drivers of food insecurity and malnutrition are conflict, climate change and economic shocks, combined with growing inequalities.

“The ongoing war in Ukraine, together with other extended conflicts around the world, is further disrupting supply chains and pushing up the price of food, grain, fertilizer and energy, leading to shortages and high food price inflation,” FAO Director General Qu Dongyu told a briefing of U.N. member states.

Around 2.3 billion people lacked access to adequate food in 2021. Regionally, hunger continued to rise in Africa where 278 million people were affected, in Asia where 425 million experienced it, and in Latin America and the Caribbean where 56.5 million people were affected.

Nearly 3.1 billion people could not afford to eat healthy foods in 2020 — an increase of 112 million people over 2019. The U.N. agencies say that number reflects the rise in food prices due to the economic impact of the pandemic and measures put in place to contain it.

The report urges governments to reallocate their existing resources to the agriculture sector more efficiently, arguing that better results, like more abundant healthy foods, do not necessarily need more investment. Attention must also be paid to policies, including trade and market restrictions, which can inhibit access to quality foods at affordable prices.

“Governments must review their current support to food and agriculture to reduce hunger, food insecurity and malnutrition in all its forms,” U.N. Deputy Secretary-General Amina Mohammed told the meeting.

She said transformative change would be the only way to get back on track to meet the Sustainable Development Goal of eradicating global hunger by 2030 — a target that now appears far out of reach.

“Our updated projections indicate that more than 670 million people may still be hungry in 2030, far from the zero hunger target and the level that was in 2015 — the year when the SDGs were agreed,” FAO chief economist Maximo Torero said.

Ukraine impact

Ukraine is one of the top five global grain exporters. The FAO says it supplies more than 45 million tons annually to the global market. Russia is blockading several million tons of Ukrainian grain in the Black Sea port of Odesa, while FAO estimates that 18 million tons of cereals and oilseeds are in storage awaiting export.

The organization says Ukraine is expected to harvest 60 million tons of grain this year, but since there is a backlog, there is a lack of storage in the country.

Torero said FAO simulations show the impact of the war could increase the world’s chronically hungry by 13 million people this year and 17 million next year, in part due to the rise in fertilizer prices and an expected global slowdown in wheat yields.

World Food Program Executive Director David Beasley warns that chronic and growing food insecurity is threatening to push 50 million people in 45 countries closer to famine.

“The global price spikes in food, fuel and fertilizers that we are seeing as a result of the crisis in Ukraine threaten to push countries around the world into famine,” he said. “The result will be global destabilization, starvation and mass migration on an unprecedented scale. We have to act today to avert this looming catastrophe.”

Source: Voice of America

Africa Democracy Summit Calls On Leaders to Respect Term Limits

Botswana is hosting an international meeting aimed at strengthening democracy and adherence to constitutions in Africa. Participants are calling on African militaries and leaders to respect term limits after several recent coups and efforts to extend time in power.

The three-day summit, organized by Botswana and the U.S.-based National Democratic Institute (NDI), has attracted former heads of state and civil society activists from across Africa.

Niger’s former president, Mahamadou Issoufou, speaking via videolink, said there is concern over the state of democracy in Africa.

“We have some … results from certain countries, but democracy is regressing in certain countries, and especially through military coups,” he said. “I am happy Botswana and Niger are speaking with one voice.” Countries have to respect the two-term limit, he added.

Issoufou left office after two terms in 2021 and was awarded the five-million dollar Ibrahim prize for good governance.

Botswana’s president, Mokgweetsi Masisi, said his country, Africa’s longest-running democracy, was the ideal location for the meeting.

He said Africa requires strong institutions to promote constitutionalism and to ensure democracy flourishes.

“We remain resolute in the belief that we are better served by strong institutions rather than strongmen or women or anything in between,” he said. “My firm belief is that this summit represents our strong partnerships to renew and strengthen efforts to respect constitutional term limits as a pillar of democratic governance and peaceful political transitions across our continent.”

Peaceful political transitions remain elusive in some African countries. In the last 16 months alone, leaders have been ousted by coups in Mali, Guinea, Burkina Faso and Sudan.

U.S. Under Secretary for Civilian Security, Democracy and Human Rights Uzra Zeya, in a recorded statement, said her country will continue to support Africa’s efforts to uphold democratic principles.

“The United States is proud to support today’s convening and we will continue to back our partner’s efforts to bring attention to the efforts of constitutional term limits as they are key to democratic governance,” she said. “We all know from public opinion research that constitutional term limits have widespread popular support across Africa.”

National Democratic Institute President Derek Mitchell said the Gaborone summit comes at an opportune time.

“There is no more important moment to reaffirm and embrace the eternal truth than today when democracy is under attack in so many corners of the world,” he said. Democracy must be protected, defended, cultivated through regular civic practice and education. Respect for constitutionalism promotes rule of law and political accountability.”

The Gaborone meeting is a follow-up to a 2019 summit held in Niger to promote the respect of constitutional limits.

Source: Voice of America

Somalis Hopeful of Better Times Following Election of New President

Somali security agents detained 32-year-old online journalist Nur Ismail Sheikh in November 2018. He was released after 12 days but was subjected to continued harassment including phone calls, telling him to stop writing.

The following year, he escaped the country using a fake name.

“They accused me of criticizing the presidency,” he said.

He lived for more than two years in Nairobi and was not planning to return to Somalia until May 15 when a power shift took place in Mogadishu, and the government that detained him was voted out.

Two weeks ago, he returned to Mogadishu amid the optimism and enthusiasm surrounding the election of President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud.

“I have returned because of the change in the country,” he said. “Now no one is busy at pressuring me because of my reporting.”

Sheikh is among many optimistic Somalis who welcomed the outcome of May’s election. Hotels in the capital have seen a jump in bookings from people returning to the country, looking for new opportunities and a fresh start with the new government.

Meanwhile, the office of the president has opened its doors to the media, and President Mohamud has given a number of interviews to both local and foreign media. The presidential palace is also holding regular press briefings.

Members of the widespread Somali diaspora hope these are signs that Mohamud’s government will be more stable, able and inclusive than its predecessors.

Kassim Busuri is a former council member of the U.S. city of St. Paul, home to thousands of Somali immigrants. Busuri fled Mogadishu when Somalia’s civil war began in 1991 and has never been back. He told VOA he is planning to go back within a year.

“I am very optimistic about where our country is headed after this election. I believe we can overcome any obstacles that are put in front of our government and people,” he said. “The Somali people are very resilient, the proof of that is shown with the recent election and transition of power from the previous government to the new government, [which] was very peaceful.”

Busuri said he is interested in making the Somali government more representative of its people and “fixing” errors in the Somali constitution. He says the 4.5 power-sharing system — where four major clans take the lion’s share of the power — is not equitable.

US reiterates support

U.S. Ambassador to Somalia Larry André, who joined Somali-Americans in Minnesota in celebrating Somalia’s Independence Day on July 1, said the U.S. shares the “cautious optimism” about the new government expressed by the Somalis he met.

“They’re emphasizing reconciliation, they’re emphasizing national consensus and action that would promote security, protecting the Somali people from extremist violence,” he said. “These are all priorities for the Somali government and they are also priorities for the United States government as a partner of Somalia.”

The U.S. is the largest provider of humanitarian support to Somalia. Last year, the U.S. provided approximately $430 million for humanitarian assistance and $210 million specifically for food assistance to the Horn of Africa country, which is in the grip of a severe, multi-year drought.

The U.S. has also supported Somalia by training the elite Danab military unit and targeting Islamist militant group al-Shabab. The day after Mohamud’s election, President Biden announced the redeployment of U.S. forces to Somalia. Former president Donald Trump had removed the troops near the end of his term.

Mohamud this week ruled out immediate negotiations with the militants.

“We are not right now in a position to negotiate with al-Shabab,” he said speaking at SETA, a think tank in Ankara, Turkey, where he is visiting. “We will at the right time, we will negotiate with them and we will finish peacefully.”

In the meantime, he said, his government will pursue strategies aimed at “eliminating” the al-Qaida-linked group. He said his policy will be based not only on military action, but also on “taking back” the narrative of Islam from al-Shabab and shutting down their sources of revenue.

Al-Shabab has carried out attacks against Somali governments and African Union forces for more than a decade, including the time of Mohamud’s first term as president, from September 2012 to February 2017.

Despite this, the U.S.-Somali partnership is “flawed” and “midwifed by third parties,” according to Hassan Keynan, a retired senior United Nations official who is currently a writer and commentator on politics, governance and developmental challenges in the Horn of Africa.

Since the time of President Dwight Eisenhower in the 1950s, he said, U.S. relations with Somalia have been guided by outside actors and other factors, like “Ethiopia’s geopolitical ambitions, efforts to limit communist influence in the Horn, war on terror and piracy, and issues related to state failure and its implications for regional and global security,” Keynan says.

“The U.S. saw Somalia as a potential trouble to be defused or contained, or a peculiar and stubborn nation that cannot be easily tamed and was/is quite capable of unleashing enormous mischief and chaos.”

André rejects the notion that U.S.-Somalia relations are determined by external factors, adding he is “frustrated with a few commentators who are not looking at what is currently going on there.”

“It’s as if their minds are stuck in previous situations or dynamics in other countries, not Somalia,” he said.

“We are engaging as reliable partners [of] the Somali authorities and in support of the Somali people because we have shared goals,” he said. “These are American goals and Somali goals. We have overlapping interests, overlapping goals. That’s what this is about on each of those sectors I mentioned — security, prosperity, governance.”

Source: Voice of America