by Jeremy I. Levitt and J. Peter Pham
December 8, 2005 - (Baltimore sun) Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf,
chosen president of Liberia last month in the country's first
free polling in its 183-year history, is the first woman elected
to a presidency in Africa.
The choice of Ms. Johnson-Sirleaf is a remarkable
breakthrough in a historically patriarchal society where women
largely have been kept at the periphery in politics. She explicitly
campaigned on her gender, and many of her supporters wore T-shirts
that proclaimed, "All the men have failed Liberia; let's
try a woman this time." It was a none-too-subtle reminder
of the failure of men who have led the country into nearly two
decades of authoritarian rule and civil strife from which it
is only now emerging.
During her campaign, Ms. Johnson-Sirleaf made
it clear that she would not support prosecuting those who committed
unspeakable atrocities during the 1989-2003 civil wars. The
conflicts took the lives of up to 250,000 Liberians and displaced
over 1 million others, igniting a regional conflagration that
continues to smolder in the West African country's neighbors.
She stated unambiguously: "Let me just say, I have said
consistently, and I reiterate, that I do not support any war
crime tribunal in Liberia."
No wonder she drew support, not only from civil
society organizations, the educated classes and women but also
from less- savory characters.
Among them were Senator-elect Yormie Johnson,
the former confidant of exiled former President Charles Taylor
and a warlord best known for butchering President Samuel K.
Doe at the start of the Liberian civil war.
Another supporter was Senator-elect Jewel Taylor,
wife of Mr. Taylor. The former president has been indicted by
the U.N.-backed Special Court for Sierra Leone on 17 counts
of crimes against humanity and other serious violations of international
humanitarian law.
So egregious were the crimes for which Mr. Taylor
has been indicted that the U.N. Security Council, lately so
divided, unanimously voted recently to authorize U.N. peacekeepers
in Liberia to detain him and turn him over to the special court
should he attempt a return from his asylum in Nigeria. But the
charges relate to Mr. Taylor's role in Sierra Leone's civil
war, not to atrocities committed or directed by him during the
Liberian civil wars.
Ms. Johnson-Sirleaf has defended her stand by
asserting that Liberia needs to look forward. "We cannot
spend our time looking backward, looking for skeletons in closets,
trying to witch hunt people because of the wrong they have done,
because we all sin," she said. "None of us is perfect.
All of us have contributed by omission and commission to the
state in which our country finds itself today."
But it is not clear that her position on impunity
is fully understood or shared by her followers, many of whom
are women who were brutalized during the war.
After more than two decades of strife, Liberia
desperately needs the rule of law if it is to avoid a return
to armed conflict. In order for that to happen, those responsible
for committing war crimes and crimes against humanity must be
held accountable.
Not only do the applicable norms of human rights
and humanitarian law demand prosecution of perpetrators of those
crimes, but it is a fundamental obligation of justice owed to
the war victims and a precondition for Liberia to develop as
a rule-based and democratic nation. Failure to punish those
responsible for the most horrific crimes hardly sends the right
signals to those who will inherit the state, to say nothing
of any would-be rebels who might seek to violently unseat Ms.
Johnson-Sirleaf.
While poverty, illiteracy, unemployment, lack
of private sector infrastructure, illicit foreign competition
for natural resources and international indifference are major
factors hampering Liberia's development, the lack of accountability
is the common thread running through its tragic history. So
long as warlords, elected or otherwise, are allowed to benefit
from the havoc they cause without having to answer to anyone,
the lives and resources of the Liberian people will be up for
grabs. Far from stabilizing the situation, impunity undermines
the very foundation of a free society based on the rule of law.
Ms. Johnson-Sirleaf has won applause for breaking
down a significant barrier as Africa's first elected woman president.
But she will really earn an ovation if she can tear down an
even more powerful barrier to development on the continent:
its culture of impunity.
From: http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/opinion/oped/bal-op.liberia08dec08,1,3252929.story?coll=bal-oped-headlines