海角大神

海角大神 / Text

Is Liberia turning into a haven for militant groups - again?

Human Rights Watch issues report saying Liberia is failing to control rebel groups launching raids into neighboring Cote D'Ivoire. Liberia rejects the charges.

By Clair MacDougall , Correspondent
Monrovia, Liberia

The Liberian government has lashed out at a human rights group for a new report that accuses it of ignoring war criminals from the Ivory Coast who are continuing to recruit mercenaries for deadly cross-border attacks.

The Human Rights Watch Report accused the government of 鈥渂urying its head in the sand鈥 and failing to detain, prosecute, and extradite those who committed some of the worst atrocities during the Ivory Coast's 2011 post-election crisis and then fled to Liberia.聽

The Ivorian crisis officially ended with the April 10, 2011 capture of former Ivorian President Laurent Gbagbo, who had refused to step down when opposition candidate Alassane Outtara won a Nov. 28, 2010 presidential runoff election that was deemed free and fair by the international community. An estimated 3,000 people were killed during the fighting between forces loyal to Gbagbo and Ouattara.

Since last July, Liberian mercenaries and Ivorian fighters recruited by loyalists to President Gbagbo have engaged in cross-border raids in Western Cote d鈥橧voire that have killed an estimated 40 people and displaced thousands. The most recent cross-border attack on April 25 occurred in the Ivorian village of Sakr茅, near the Ta茂 border, and left 8 dead. Human Rights Watch claims that the majority of those killed in the attacks have been civilians from ethnic groups who largely support President Alassane Ouattara. The human rights group also estimates there are between 100 and 150 people 鈥渨ho have either participated in past cross-border attacks or are organizing for future attacks.鈥 But the report adds, 鈥渢he number could be larger.鈥

The scale of child recruitment

The report also says training camps are operating in the Liberian county of Grand Gedeh and recruiting children to fight in these attacks, but noted 鈥渢he scale of child recruitment was unclear.鈥

The United Nations Panel of Experts on Liberia noted the presence of mercenaries in a December 2011 report and the UN Secretary-General鈥檚 special report of April 2012 said that potential cross-border instability continues to be of concern. Liberia and C么te D鈥橧voire share a porous 700-kilometer frontier of thick jungle that is difficult to patrol.

Human Rights Watch claims the Liberian authorities and judicial system are failing to effectively address the issue through detaining, extraditing, or prosecuting suspects who have being implicated in war crimes in C么te D鈥橧voire. Among the suspects is Isaac Chegbo, whose nom de guerre is 鈥淏ob Marley.鈥 聽

Human Rights Watch implicated Mr. Chegbo in overseeing two massacres in C么te D鈥橧voire in which more than 100 people were killed. He was released on bail in February and his whereabouts are unknown to Liberian authorities. Chegbo鈥檚 deputy A. Vleyee, better known as 鈥淏ush Dog,鈥 was accused of overseeing human rights violations by HRW and is also suspected of being in Liberia.

鈥淔or well over a year, the Liberian government has had its head in the sand in responding to the flood of war criminals who crossed into the country at the end of the Ivorian crisis,鈥 stated Matt Wells, West Africa researcher at Human Rights Watch, in the report. 鈥淩ather than uphold its responsibility to prosecute or extradite those involved in international crimes, Liberian authorities have stood by as many of these same people recruit child soldiers and carry out deadly cross-border attacks.鈥

Not only Liberia

The rights group also criticized Ghanaian authorities of failing to act on arrest warrants and extradition requests issued by the Ivorian government for members of Gbagbo鈥檚 political and military elite, many of whom are allegedly funding the attacks from Ghana. Among those believed to be in Ghana is former President Laurent Gbagbo's youth militia leader, Charles Bl茅 Goud茅.聽

The Liberian government, for its part, says that while Liberia does have problem with 鈥渘on-state actors鈥 along the border, it is doing everything possible to address the issue. At a press conference, Lewis Brown, the Minister of Information, claimed the report was inaccurate and based on hearsay and ignored the efforts the government was making.

鈥淲e are not saying that along the vast border areas between La Cote D鈥橧voire and Liberia that we do not have on either side of the border the presence of non-state actors,鈥 Mr. Brown said at a press conference at the Ministry of Information in Monrovia. 鈥淲e are saying that the report makes what we believe is an outlandish claim that the government of Liberia is doing nothing.鈥

Brown also said the report suggested Liberia was helping fuel conflict in the region, a sensitive topic given Liberia鈥檚 recent history and the recent guilty verdict and sentencing of Charles Taylor in the Hague last month, for aiding and abetting the civil war in neighboring Sierra Leone.聽

鈥淟iberia is not in the business of fanning the flames of insurrection of a neighboring country, we are not and this report tries to suggest that we are doing that,鈥 said Brown. 鈥淚t is unfair to Liberia and unfair to Liberians.鈥

Lashing out at rights groups

He also hit out at the rights groups for failing to underline the security threat the presence of 鈥渘on-state actors鈥 on the border between the nations poses to Liberia.

The United Nations Mission in Liberia, which maintains the peace in the small West African nation with a force of 8,000 peacekeepers, responded to a request for comment from 海角大神 by e-mail.

鈥淯NMIL takes the points and concerns raised by the HRW report very seriously. The movement of suspected fighters from C么te D鈥橧voire, both Liberian and Ivorian, is a major concern for Liberia, and the mission is working closely with the Liberian authorities to monitor border areas, to ensure that the security of Liberia and its citizens is not at risk.鈥

President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf was in the United States when the report was released. No one at the executive mansion was available for comment.聽