The UN Security Council made absolutely sure that it ignored the continent’s
views on what had to be done to help Libya, writes Thabo Mbeki The Star
TUESDAY APRIL 5 2011
 THE POPULAR uprisings in North Africa affecting Tunisia, Egypt and Libya
took Africa by surprise. Stunned by the events we watched unfolding on TV,
and unable to quickly decide how we should respond, we, as Africans,
instinctively resolved that we had no choice but to stand back and wait. We
hoped that the events in this part of our continent would evolve in a manner
that would give us the chance to publicly pronounce ourselves correctly. The
stark choice we faced was whether we should side with the demonstrators or
with the governments that the protesters demanded resign. Our challenge was
not made any easier by the political interventions of various Western
countries, which offered unsolicited opinions and made unilateral
interventions to influence the outcome of the uprisings. Because of our
history as Africans, we could not but ask ourselves the question: is it
possible for Africa to share the same interests with the West in terms of
the out- comes of the popular uprisings? When has the West ever been truly
concerned about encouraging genuine democracy in Africa, without being
driven by self-interest? These considerations suggested to us that there was
something suspect about the attempts of the West to identify itself as an
ally of the popular uprisings in North Africa, to the extent that these
represented real democratic revolutions. These considerations reinforced our
feeling that we should tread carefully instead of rushing to intervene. This
attitude did not cause Africa any significant embarrassment with regard to
Tunisia and Egypt. In the end, all we needed to do was merely endorse the
outcomes determined by the people of these two African countries. However,
what has happened and is happening in Libya has exposed many fault lines in
the African project to determine its destiny. The Libyan uprising began in
Benghazi on February 15. Almost immediately, unlike in Tunisia and Egypt,
this uprising also took the form of an armed insurrection, while the Gaddafi
regime resorted to brute force to suppress the uprising and insurrection,
claiming that it was inspired and led by al-Qaeda. Eight days after the
beginning of the uprising, on February 23, the intergovernmental African
Union Peace and Security Council (AU PSC) spoke for all Africa when it
condemned “the indiscriminate and excessive use of force and lethal weapons
against peaceful protesters, in violation of human rights and international
humanitarian law”, and affirmed that “the aspirations of the people of Libya
for
democracy, political reform, justice and socio-economic development are
legitimate”. It urged that they be respected. At the same meeting, the AU
PSC resolved to send “a mission of (the) council to Libya to assess the
situation on the ground”. Unfortunately, the AU failed to make even this
limited intervention. Because of Africa’s weak capacity to communicate even
with itself, many of us in Africa did not even hear of the February 23
decisions of the AU PSC until many days later. In reality, the international
media practically ignored the AU PSC’s decisions. Rather, the world was
exposed to the dramatic TV images of what was happening in Libya and the
public communications of the actors in this drama, including those of
Muammar Gaddafi and his son Saif al- Islam. In other words, the AU and
therefore African message withered on the vine, making no impact on African
and world opinion of what might be done to resolve the conflict in Libya.
This is but one of the manifestations of the fault lines I have mentioned
relating to Africa’s determination to define its future. Three weeks after
its February 23 meet- ing, on March 10, the AU PSC decided to constitute a
five-nation AU ad hoc high- level committee on Libya, made up of African
heads of state and government mandated to intervene to resolve the Libyan
conflict. The committee was directed to “facilitate an inclusive dialogue
among the Libyan parties on the appropriate reforms” that would lead to the
peaceful resolution of the Libyan crisis. The AU PSC also expressed its
“rejection of any foreign military intervention, whatever its form”. But a
week later, the UN Security Council adopted its Resolution 1973, which
prescribed exactly the “foreign military intervention” that Africa had
rejected. The historical fact is that as should have been the case, the AU
moved ahead of the UN in terms of prescribing what should be done to address
the Libyan, and therefore African, crisis. The reality, however, is that the
UN Security Council made absolutely certain that it ignored Africa’s views
on what needed to be done to resolve a crisis in a member state of the AU.
This was later emphasised by the refusal of the UN to allow the AU ad hoc
committee to visit Tripoli and Benghazi on March 18 and 19, to promote a
peaceful resolution of the Libyan crisis, precisely to reduce the loss of
human lives while promoting democratic rule in Libya. This meant that the
African peacemakers flying to Libya to carry out their mission were in
danger of having their planes shot down! The African leaders sought to visit
Libya because the Gaddafi regime had accepted that it should engage its
opposition, under the auspices of the AU, to achieve the immediate cessation
of all hostilities; delivery of humanitarian assistance to the affected
populations; the protection of foreign nationals; and the adoption and
implementation of the necessary political reforms to eliminate the causes of
the crisis.
This was based on the legitimate aspirations of the Libyan people for
democracy, political reform, justice, peace and security, and socio-economic
development. The marginalisation of Africa, in terms of helping to determine
the future of Libya, paid no regard to the fact that failure to end the
Libyan crisis correctly will have a long-term impact on the continent, and
especially the countries of North Africa and the Sahel, such as Sudan, Chad,
Niger and Mali, with little effect on the Western countries. The Western
countries have also under- lined this marginalisation of Africa by
insisting, to this day, that what is important for them is the support of
the League of Arab States, with absolutely no mention of the AU. Nobody
knows how many Libyans will be killed and injured as a result of the ongoing
civil war in that country and the evolving military intervention of the
West, which has unquestionably evolved into support for the armed
insurrection in Libya to achieve the objective of regime change. The reality
is that the Libyan conflict will claim many casualties. Because the space
has been closed for the Libyans to sit together to decide their future, it
is almost guaranteed that for many years Libya will experience sustained and
debilitating instability, whoever emerges ‘‘victorious’’ from the armed
conflict. Tragically, one of the other casualties will be Africa’s efforts,
sustained since the 1990s, independently to determine its future as a
continent of democracy, peace, stability and shared development and
prosperity. The countries of the West, acting through the UN Security
Council, have used their preponderant power to communicate the message to
Africa that they are as determined as ever to decide the future of Africa,
regardless of the views of the Africans, much like what they did during the
years of the colonial domination of our continent. It should not come as a
surprise if, over the years, the people of Africa lose confidence in the
will of multilateral institutions, such as the UN, to help them change their
condition for the better. This will happen because we will have come to
understand that powerful countries beyond the oceans reserve the right and
have the capacity ultimately to decide the future of Africa, with no regard
for our views and aspirations as Africans. History will record that the
moment of the reassertion of this deadly malaise was when the West, acting
through the UN Security Council, dismissed the notion and practice of
finding African solutions to African problems. Denied the right to solve its
own problems, Africa will inevitably fall victim to ever-continuing conflict
and instability. Will it be that, paradoxically, the occasion of the Libyan
popular uprising, which portended welcome democratic transformation, will
also mark the moment of the asphyxiation of the dream of an African
renaissance?
On Wed, Apr 6, 2011 at 9:58 AM, Mduduzi Herman Vilakazi <[email protected]>wrote:

> Comrades,
>
> Please find attach read outlining the frustrations of AU - High Panel on
> Libya in entering that country. There is clear evidence of arrogance of the
> West pertaining to the Libyans>>>>
>
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