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15 May 2011 Last updated at 23:45 GMT

Why UN acted over Libya and Ivory Coast - but not Syria

In the space of two weeks in March, the United Nations authorised unprecedented 
interventions to protect civilians in Libya and Ivory Coast with dramatic 
results in both countries. For the BBC World Service, Claire Bolderson looks at 
how the UN came up with the resolutions and asks whether it is likely to do the 
same elsewhere.
Swedish airforce jet takes off from base in Sweden to join the Nato-led 
operation in Libya UN resolution 1973 authorised the implementation of a no-fly 
zone over Libya

The United Nations resolution authorising a no-fly zone over Libya and all 
necessary means to protect civilians was drafted as Col Muammar Gaddafi's 
troops advanced on the opposition stronghold of Benghazi.

A month into the rebellion, town after town had fallen back under the Libyan 
leader's control and Col Gaddafi was threatening to wipe out the opposition.

At the UN there were fears of a massacre.

Formal request

While Egypt and Tunisia had been through what the French ambassador at the 
United Nations, Gerard Araud, calls "civilised transitions", in the case of 
Libya he says "at our borders, across the street from Europe, we could have had 
an incredible bloodbath".


But while France and the UK, two permanent members of the Security Council, 
pushed for military intervention, there was resistance from fellow permanent 
members China and Russia - both opposed in principle to getting involved in the 
internal affairs of another sovereign nation.

And the United States - already embroiled in conflicts in two Muslim countries- 
had little appetite for another such engagement.

Then came a formal request for UN intervention from the Arab League.

"The dynamic was changed by the Arab League statement," the British Ambassador 
at the UN, Sir Mark Lyall Grant, told BBC World Service.

"If you get a regional organisation pressing for a particular course of action 
in the council, then that has a disproportionate influence."

It was enough to persuade Russia and China to abstain rather than veto a 
resolution on the use of force.

It helped bring the United States on board. The resolution passed and two days 
later the US and European coalition started bombing government targets in Libya.

Then came questions for the West about why they had not acted to save civilians 
in another dispute which had been raging for nearly four months.

Speedy end

In West Africa, Ivory Coast's leader, Laurent Gbagbo had refused to give up the 
presidency even though UN and regional observers confirmed he had lost the 
November presidential election to long-time rival Alassane Ouattara.
Civilians raise their hands as they walk past a pro-Gbagbo soldier, Abidjan 
Ivory Coast (April 3, 2011) Fighting between pro-Gbagbo and pro-Ouattarra 
forces in Ivory Coast raged for several weeks

The political stand-off was fast turning into another civil war in a country 
already divided between north and south.

The West African regional organisation, Ecowas, had threatened Mr Gbagbo with 
force if he did not step down.

But the larger, continent-wide organisation, the African Union, was not happy 
about that.

It refused to back Mr Ouattara outright and asked Ecowas to re-think.

The smaller grouping agreed to stay quiet while the African Union tried to 
negotiate a peaceful outcome.

It was not until early March that it gave up and Ecowas could ask the UN to 
beef up the mandate of the UN troops already in Ivory Coast.
Continue reading the main story

The UN responded immediately with a resolution that meant troops could attack 
Mr Gbagbo's heavy weapons.

This brought the conflict to a speedy end.

The President of the Ecowas Commission, Victor Gbeho, says Ivorians suffered as 
a result of the delay.

"We cannot hide our disappointment that owing to the doubting Thomases on the 
continent we had to take a longer route and therefore lose many lives 
needlessly," Mr Gbeho says.

As in the case of Libya, the role of the regional organisations was crucial.

France was heavily involved in drafting both resolutions but Mr Araud says it 
wasn't a case of the West getting its own way.

"The West was supporting regional organisations - this is one of the lessons we 
should draw from the two crises."

Conspicuously silent

Does that mean that when a regional organisation asks for help from the UN they 
will immediately get it?

Not necessarily.

The next obvious candidate for intervention is Syria.

But the Arab League has shown no sign of asking for UN force to be used against 
a nation with a far more complex regional role than Libya's.

On the contrary, it has remained conspicuously silent on the subject of Syria's 
uprising.

And if it did ask the UN to intervene, there is no guarantee the world body 
would respond.

According to Carne Ross, head of the consultancy Independent Diplomat, much 
will depend on how intervention in Libya goes.

"If Libya turns into a quagmire - a protracted civil war - then there'll be a 
lot more hesitation about these kind of interventions in future," he says.




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