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The UN standard to prevent genocide, 10 years later

Ten years after the UN created the 'Responsibility to Protect,' standard still stymied by politics and competing interests.

By Laura Heaton , Guest blogger

It was 10 years ago last month that the concept of a 鈥榬esponsibility to protect鈥 (R2P) first emerged. 2011 alone saw the principle cited in some of the most defining moments of the year鈥攁 testament to growing acceptance of the international norm.

At an event last week hosted by the Stanley Foundation in New York to recognize the anniversary, U.N. Secretary General Ban Ki-moon offered complimentary remarks about the use of R2P to justify action in C么te d鈥橧voire and Libya. He highlighted partnerships with the African Union and the Economic Community of West African States in the case of C么te d鈥橧voire and in Libya with the Arab League and the Organization for Islamic Cooperation that paved the way for action from the UN Security Council.

But it was the UN secretary general鈥檚 unusually candid insights about the limitations of implementing the Responsibility to Protect in South Sudan recently that stood out. Ban was speaking about the overtly ethnic clashes between the Lou Nuer and Murle people of South Sudan鈥檚 Jonglei state.

The UN鈥檚 strategy for protecting civilians in the case of Jonglei consisted primarily of instructing civilians to flee. The UN mission sent 500 combat-ready peacekeepers and around 300 supporting peacekeepers to the area, under the mission鈥檚 Chapter VII mandate that enables them to fire on would-be aggressors in defense of civilians. But up against approximately 6,000 Lou Nuer militia men with the stated aim 鈥渢o wipe Murle out,鈥** and without the adequate equipment for transportation, urging people to flee鈥攅ffectively encouraging a humanitarian emergency that has now left an estimated 120,000 people in need of assistance鈥攂ecame the least bad option. In the end, because of the UN鈥檚 action, the Lou Nuer offensive proved far less deadly than initially anticipated. But urging civilians to hide in the bush, where they become vulnerable to other threats, hardly seems like a sustainable long-term approach to protection.

In hindsight, far more needed to be done in Jonglei to mediate between the rival Lou Nuer and Murle, such as engaging the young men who would become implicated in the violence in reconciliation efforts. The South Sudan government should have gotten more deeply involved in addressing past grievances between the communities. In other words, key preventative efforts could have been attempted to potentially avert the explosive attacks and counter-attacks that are still ongoing.

Importantly, in his remarks at the Stanley Foundation, Ban Ki-moon highlighted the role prevention plays in the responsibility to protect in the face of brewing conflict. He called for 2012 to be the year of prevention, urging member states to be willing to take 鈥減roactive, decisive, and early action鈥 before violence breaks out, to not look away when crisis is intensifying. 鈥淲e have done that too often,鈥 he said, adding:

The secretary general pointed to Syria as a crisis that is presently putting this point to test. But Ban Ki-moon need not have looked even beyond South Sudan and Sudan to highlight a glaring example of a 鈥榬esponsibility to protect鈥 failing to mobilize meaningful action. After months of bombardment and attacks on civilian populations by the Sudanese army and its allied militias, which provoked a shockingly feeble rhetorical response from the international community, the states of Southern Kordofan and Blue Nile now teeter on the verge of famine.

"It is clear that the Government of Sudan has instituted a deliberate policy to prevent humanitarian agencies from reaching vulnerable civilians impacted by the conflict,鈥 wrote U.S. Special Representative to the United Nations Susan Rice in a letter to the Security Council just two days before the secretary general鈥檚 remarks. 鈥淸I]f the government of Sudan does not allow immediate meaningful humanitarian access to the conflict zones in Southern Kordofan and Blue Nile so life saving humanitarian assistance can be provided to civilians in need, we will likely see famine conditions in parts of Sudan,鈥 Rice said.

An eight-month long government offensive, 鈥渋ndiscriminately bombing鈥 of its own civilians, followed by acute food insecurity exacerbated by the government鈥檚 blockage of aid鈥攊t鈥檚 a scenario that exemplifies the need for the Responsibility to Protect. And yet in its conspicuous absence from Ban Ki-moon鈥檚 remarks, Sudan鈥檚 latest crisis zone also epitomizes the unequal nature by which R2P is acted upon, when the call for a meaningful international response gets stymied by what Ban himself called, 鈥渁 minefield of nuance, political calculation, and competing national interests.鈥

**This explicit goal was cited in a letter seen by Enough.

Laura Heaton blogs for the Enough Project at Enough Said.