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Reflections
on the 1996 Sierra Leone Peace Accord by
Yusuf Bangura Introduction This
paper was written in early January 1997, about one month after the signing
of the Sierra Leone peace accord. The legitimate government that signed
the agreement with the Revolutionary United Front (RUF) was overthrown
on 25 May 1997. The other key signatory to the agreement, the rebel leader
Foday Sankoh, had earlier been detained in Nigeria in March 1997. His
detention coincided with a major split in the RUF, which was to have grave
consequences for the peace agreement. Before his arrest, Sankoh had refused
to send representatives to the critical demobilization and disarmament
committee, thereby undermining the work of the Peace Commission and making
it difficult for the government to proceed with the disarmament process.
He also refused to meet with UN representatives in Côte d’Ivoire, and
opposed the decision to send a 720-member United Nations peacekeeping
force to help secure the peace. He called instead for a smaller force
of 50-60 members. The
Freetown-based RUF members on the Peace Commission, which was set up to
direct the work of the provisions of the peace accord, seemed keen to
end the war and declared their support for the new leader of the RUF,
Phillip Palmer. The accord could not be implemented however, as Palmer’s
leadership was contested by the bush commanders of the RUF who declared
their loyalty to Sankoh. There were renewed conflicts between the RUF
and the Kamajoi militia on one hand, and between the Kamajoi militia and
the Sierra Leone army on the other. The latter had become very unpopular
among rural people who accused it of collaborating with the RUF in destabilizing
the countryside. The military coup of 25 May confirmed the alliance between
the RUF and the military as both groups announced a new so-called joint
“people’s army.” Sankoh was invited to serve as the deputy leader, and
several members of the RUF bush fighters were given posts in the new junta,
the Armed Forces Revolutionary Council. The
rule of the AFRC was resolutely resisted by the vast majority of Sierra
Leoneans, the international community and the Economic Community of Western
States, which under Nigeria’s leadership extended the mandate of its peace
enforcement force in Liberia, ECOMOG (Economic Community of West African
States monitoring group), to Sierra Leone. A comprehensive embargo was
imposed on the regime by the United Nations, and ECOMOG was mandated in
collaboration with the ousted government to police it. After a series
of negotiations between ECOMOG and the junta, including a peace accord
in Conakry (Guinea), failed to yield positive results, ECOMOG spectacularly
ousted the junta from the seat of power on 12 February after only six
days of combat. The legitimate government was reinstated in office on
10 March 1998. The
issues raised in the Sierra Leone peace accord have relevance for wider
debates on war, peace, reconciliation and human rights. The article examines
the constraints to, and the opportunities associated with, implementation
of the peace accord within the context of a democratizing, war-torn society—the
type that was in place before the armed seizure of power by the military
and the RUF. Background The
signing of the peace accord in Abidjan (Côte d’Ivoire) on 30 November
1996 between the government of Sierra Leone and the Revolutionary United
Front (RUF) marked the official ending of Sierra Leone’s five and a half
years of war. The war, which ravaged much of the countryside, killed more
than 20,000 civilians and left hundreds of innocent bystanders maimed
and traumatized. It also displaced almost one and a half million people
from their homes and livelihoods, orphaned thousands of young children,
and imposed financial and social burdens on much of the relatively stable
population. One major consequence of the war, which post-war reconstruction
efforts will have to tackle very quickly and decisively, was the transformation
of the country from a predominantly rural society into pockets of dense
urban settlements. Medium-sized provincial towns such as Bo, Kenema, Makeni
and Koidu suddenly became large urban settlements as villagers sought
refuge in them. And the capital, Freetown, could well have grown from
a pre-war population of roughly half a million people to one million—if
not more. In
this article I will attempt to review the Abidjan Peace Accord. What did
the accord offer Sierra Leone? What were its strengths and limitations?
Who were the key actors likely to gain or lose from its implementation?
Is it likely to provide sustainable peace? Finally, what steps could be
taken to ensure that the basic commitments made by the combatants to consolidate
the peace are honoured and implemented without much friction and delay?
Summary
of the Accord In
the accord, which contained 28 articles and a short annex, both sides
to the conflict agreed to end the war “with immediate effect” to ensure
that “a total cessation of hostilities is observed forthwith” and to give
“the establishment and consolidation of a just peace” priority (Articles
1 and 2). A National Commission for the Consolidation of Peace was to
have been established “within two weeks of the signing of [the] agreement”
to monitor implementation of the provisions. The
peace commission was to establish, coordinate and facilitate the work
of six new bodies: a Socio-Economic Forum, Citizens’ Consultative Conferences,
A Multi-Partisan Council, a Trust Fund for the Consolidation of Peace,
a Demobilization and Resettlement Committee, and a National Budget and
Debt Committee (Art. 3). The peace commission was to have tremendous powers
in the pursuit of its mandate. For example, it had the power to organize
its work “in the manner in which it deems most appropriate” and to make
its findings public. It was also to be provided with an office, “adequate
communication facilities and adequate secretariat support” to carry out
its duties; it could make recommendations on measures to help the implementation
and development of the provisions of the agreement; prepare “preliminary
legislative drafts” necessary for the implementation of the agreement;
and inspect “any activity or site” linked to the implementation of the
accord. In addition no action could be taken by the government or RUF
on any matter relating to the accord without consulting the commission.
Both the government and the RUF “undertake to comply with the conclusions
of the Commission” (Art. 3). The
proposed trust fund was to provide funding for the implementation of the
Accord (Art. 3). Yearly Citizens’ Consultative Conferences were to be
organized to ensure popular participation in the national political process
(Art. 4). Combatants were to be disarmed in designated assembly zones,
and their demobilization and reintegration into society were to be done
“as soon as practicable” after the disarmament (Art. 5). The government
and the commission, assisted by the international community, were entrusted
with the responsibility to look after the welfare of encamped combatants
(Art. 5). The Demobilization and Resettlement Committee was to “co-ordinate
the encampment, disarmament, demobilization and resettlement of the RUF/SL
combatants” (Art. 6). Combatants were to be in the assembly zones—to be
identified by the Demobilization Committee—not later than three months
from the signing of the accord (Art. 7). The
international community was asked “to help supervise and monitor the encampment,
disarmament, demobilization and reintegration processes.” A Joint Monitoring
Group (JMG), comprising representatives of the government and the RUF,
was to observe the work of these activities at all stages (Art. 8). In
addition, a Neutral Monitoring Group (NMG) from the international community,
which was to be deployed for an initial period of three months, was responsible
for monitoring breaches of the ceasefire (Art. 11). The peace commission
was, “as a priority,” to make recommendations on the restructuring of
the military. RUF combatants who wished to enlist in the national army
“can become part of the new unified armed forces within a framework to
be discussed and agreed upon by the Commission” (Art. 10). The South African
mercenary outfit Executive Outcomes (EO) was to be withdrawn “five weeks
after the deployment of the NMG,” confined to barracks and supervised
by the JMG and NMG (Art. 12). Other foreign troops were to be repatriated
not later than three months after the deployment of the NMG “or six months
after the signing of the Agreement, whichever is earlier” (Art. 12). The
RUF was to be allowed to register as a political movement within 30 days
of the signing of the accord (Art. 13), and the International Community
was to be approached to contribute resources to a trust fund to help the
RUF transform itself into a political party (Art. 17). No judicial action
was to be taken against “any member of the RUF/SL in respect of anything
done by them in pursuit of their objectives as members of that organization
up to the time of the signing of [the] Agreement.” Furthermore, legislative
and other measures were to be taken to ensure that RUF combatants and
political exiles would enjoy their full civil and political rights within
the framework of the law (Art. 14). The mandate of the existing National
Unity and Reconciliation Commission was to be expanded to help heal the
wounds of the war, and to promote civic education, national unity and
reconciliation (Art. 15). An Ombudsman was to be created to raise the
standards of accountability, probity and integrity in the public service
(Art. 16). There was to be a reform of the electoral system to ensure
full participation of citizens and their organizations in the political
process, and the independence and integrity of the National Electoral
Commission (NEC). The RUF, the government and other political parties
were to nominate people of “professionalism, integrity and objectivity”
to the NEC not later than three months after the signing of the accord.
No member of NEC was to be eligible to hold political office in “any government
formed as a result of an election they were mandated to conduct” (Art.
18). The
government and the RUF agreed to respect the basic civil and political
liberties of all individuals as enshrined in international declarations
of the UN and the Organization of African Unity (OAU) and the principles
and rules of international humanitarian law, and to release all political
prisoners and prisoners of war (Arts. 19 and 21). An independent National
Commission on Human Rights was to be established to promote human rights
education, monitor violations and institute legal proceedings where appropriate.
It was to seek technical and material assistance from the UN Special Commission
on Human Rights, the UN Centre for Human Rights (now the Office of the
United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights), and the African Commission
on Human and People’s Rights (Art. 20). The independence of the judiciary
was to be strengthened, and the existing Judicial and Legal Service Commission
was to be reconstituted to help defend the independence of the judiciary
from both the state and political parties. Representatives from the lay
public were to be appointed to join judges, other legal officers and civil
servants who already constituted the Legal Commission (Art. 24). There
was to be a review and re-orientation of the police force in order to
deepen its professionalism and respect for the rule of law and to protect
it from political, ideological and social pressures. Furthermore, the
police council was to draw its membership from a broad section of society
to ensure that it upheld its “truly civilian and non-partisan character”
(Art. 25). In
the pursuit of the goals of reconstruction, rehabilitation and development,
special attention was to be given to “rural and urban poor areas, war
victims, disabled persons and other vulnerable groups” (Art. 22). The
values of grassroots participation, the empowerment of rural communities
and the urban poor in productive activities and decision-making processes,
and the equitable distribution of national resources would inform the
socio-economic policy of the country. A broad-based Socio-Economic Forum
was to be responsible for the elaboration and pursuit of improving the
quality of life of the population (Art. 26 and 27). The government of
Côte d’Ivoire, the UN, the OAU and the Commonwealth were to act as “moral
guarantors” to the accord (Art. 28). The annex of the accord called for
a nationwide sensitization programme, which would inform the public about
the reality of the end of hostilities, the reasons for demobilization,
the opportunities for reintegration of combatants, and the need for reconciliation.
This programme was to be pursued by both the government and the RUF. A
Power-Sharing Model? In
many ways the accord represented a variant of the power-sharing model,
which has emerged as a standard mechanism for rebuilding societies that
are sharply polarized and torn apart by unwinnable wars. The power sharing
model is informed by two important characteristics: the main parties to
armed conflicts operate from a position of relative weakness, which demands
an active role for external facilitators, financiers and guarantors. These
should be neutral, firm and effective in helping the actors to convert
their “weak-weak” situations into “win-win” outcomes. The Abidjan Accord
embodied these two characteristics. As
we have seen, the accord also made very liberal references to the role
of the international community, which was expected to help with funding
and monitoring of the agreement and the ceasefire. Given the destructive
effects of the war on the country’s productive structures and revenue
base, and the weakening of its national institutions, the combatants had
no alternative but to turn to the international community for assistance
to end the war and rebuild the country. The United Nations Development
Programme (UNDP) and other UN organizations, the OAU, the Commonwealth
secretariat, key Western countries, the Red Cross, Nigeria and Côte d’Ivoire
played active, supportive roles. The
accord differed from other well known power-sharing agreements since the
RUF was not given any post in the government, did not enjoy any representation
in parliament, and was not in charge of any local government, district
or province. The main reason for this difference is the unique character
of Sierra Leone’s road to peace. Unlike many previously authoritarian
war-torn countries that were forced to establish extensive power sharing
arrangements, Sierra Leone had successfully organized multi-party elections
in February 1996 without the participation of the RUF. Those elections
brought in a new government, which was not associated with the causes
of the war. The
Abidjan accord had to take into account the existence of a functioning
constitution, and a pluralistic parliament and government, all of which
enjoyed wide popular legitimacy. Thus the accord gave equal authority
and treatment to the RUF and the government on matters relating to war
and peace, but not to wider issues of politics and governance, where the
government is expected to have much leverage. Gains
of the Revolutionary United Front Perhaps
the biggest winner in the accord was the RUF. It is a movement that waged
brutal war on Sierra Leoneans for more than five years without ever administering
a key territory (apart from the brief takeover of Koidu and Pujehun),
and whose leaders should (under normal circumstances) be facing a war
crimes tribunal. Instead they were given enormous opportunities by a democratically-elected
government and the international community to redeem themselves as civilized
people with a genuine cause to pursue. In fact, the accord sought to rescue
the RUF from its position of weakness and isolation. As we have seen,
the RUF was to not only play major roles in the newly created institutions,
the NEC and the proposed new army, it was to be immune from all legal
charges for its brutalization of rural people and other obnoxious acts
of war. It was also to be given funds to set itself up as an effective
political party. It
was the responsibility of the government, political parties and civic
and community groups to ensure that the RUF did not maximize its potential
gains in the accord. This could be achieved by playing the democratic
game fairly, checking state and opposition party excesses, and ensuring
that the basic economic and social problems of the poor, especially those
of the youth, are concretely addressed. Gains
of the Government Government
also stood to gain a lot from the accord. The net effect of the war was
a sharp drop in government revenues and the collapse of social services
and basic infrastructure. The war also sucked away much of the limited
revenue that was still accruing to government as the size of the army
and its various needs and demands expanded. The accord gave the government
the opportunity to focus on its very ambitious programme of reconstruction
and development, which it unveiled to the public in June 1996 and which
fed into the medium-term reconstruction plan that formed the basis for
the pledge of US$212 million by donors in the Geneva donors’ meeting in
September 1996. The accord was also likely to boost the government’s chances
of raising funds from the international community for its reconstruction
and development programme. Compared
to the RUF, which was given legitimate access to public institutions by
the provisions of the accord, the government as government did not gain
anything new on the issue of participation in political institutions.
Indeed, many of the articles of the agreement acted as a constraint on
the power of government to act unilaterally. However, RUF participation
in the institutions that were to govern the peace process allowed the
government to monitor and regulate the behaviour of RUF members much more
than it was able to do before the agreement was signed. New
Opportunities for the Public? If
the accord would have been implemented to the letter, the public would
have reaped a lot of benefits from the peace process: it offered the public
the opportunity to focus on rebuilding their lives and homes and recreating
disarticulated or deformed markets and productive systems. There
were also concrete provisions in the agreement that were promising for
the Sierra Leone public. The first was the commitment of government, through
the accord, to reform the country’s electoral system and to strengthen
the autonomy and integrity of the National Electoral Commission. In a
society with deep social cleavages, pluralism in both legislative and
executive branches of government is important as a mechanism for minimizing
violent conflicts. Under this arrangement, all major groups and sections
of society would be represented, through the dominant political parties,
in both parliament and government by right rather than as a result of
the goodwill of the government in power. Also,
I suggest that the idea of a run-off election to choose a single leader
be changed to allow parties that score a certain percentage of the popular
vote in the first and only round of the presidential elections the opportunity
to be represented in government. Under this model, the president would
be given the authority to discuss appointments with the parties concerned
and to dismiss ministers who, in his or her judgment, have failed to perform
satisfactorily. President Kabbah, as a great conciliator, already practiced
this model in an informal way with the parliamentary parties that decided
to work with the government. The procedure needs to be institutionalized
to give it much broader scope. A
plural executive system has the advantage of protecting ordinary people
from the excesses of politicians. Our post-independence history—African
history generally—is littered with politicians without a vision of the
national interest or lacking commitment to the causes of the poor. Politicians
have always used the poor to get into power and to turn that power against
the poor when they are in office. Political parties have shown a limited
imagination when devising programmes of governance and development. Also,
given the unquestioned hegemony that international institutions currently
enjoy in the policy spaces of these countries, it is better to minimize
the violence that political parties are likely to inflict on the poor
in the competition for power. This is preferable to banking on the possibility
that these parties will pursue innovative pro-poor policies that will
be different from the reigning development orthodoxy and what ruling parties
in government are already pursuing. The
truth of the matter is that none of the parties outside of government
have the capacity to develop coherent and effective policies that would
address the key challenges that confront us today as a nation. The parties
in government have been able to work out reasonably coherent development
programmes because they are in government, and not because of any superiority
they enjoy in the realm of ideas over opposition parties. Minimizing the
propensity for violence that is embedded in winner-takes-all elections
will allow the poor, disadvantaged and other deprived social groups the
space they require to exert pressure on public institutions and to develop
themselves “autonomously” vis-à-vis entrenched vested interests. Poor
or rural people should not shed an additional ounce of blood for the privileges
of politicians and so-called “revolutionaries.” The
National Electoral Commission was at the centre of the debate on the promised
electoral reforms. The accord’s affirmation of the need to strengthen
the professional integrity and competence of the NEC should be applauded.
The decision to bar NEC members from holding political office in a government
“formed as a result of an election they were mandated to conduct” was
also very much in order. It
is also important to point out potential dangers that would have affected
the professionalism of the NEC if all political parties would have been
asked to nominate members to that body (Art. 18). While there was value
in having a broad-based professional membership in the NEC to check for
possible governmental biases, it would have been important to give NEC
officials absolute autonomy in running the organization. In addition,
political parties, the press and civic and community groups should have
had the right to inspect at any time the records and activities of the
NEC, and to appoint individuals of their choice to NEC offices to monitor
the activities of the organization on a full-time basis. A
second area in which the accord was likely to provide opportunities to
the public is in the commitments made in Article 26, which dealt with
socio-economic development. Indeed, full implementation of the provisions
in this article would have constituted a solid guarantee against future
wars. Most of the issues reflected existing commitments at the international
level. The government upheld these when it participated in the 1995 World
Summit for Social Development. It is useful and refreshing to note that
a renewed commitment was made at the national level by the government
to pursue these vital objectives, which likely would have changed the
quality of life for the poor. Civic groups, the press and the interested
public could have ensured that the proposed Socio-Economic Forum “had
teeth” and was not just a “talking shop.” Work could have proceeded immediately
to flesh out the details of the ten-point plan of social development in
Article 26 to provide quantitative and qualitative data on the problems
to be combated, and to set time frames for implementation of agreed policies.
Third,
the commitment to restructure the army opened up possibilities to address
in very serious ways the security needs and defence structure of the country.
The war demonstrated that our modern standing army was incapable of providing
the necessary security to the people when it was most essential for it
to do so. Indeed, there were many reports that implicated some soldiers
in the brutalization of people in the countryside and in the looting of
private property. Some of them also tried to violently disrupt the February
1996 elections. The greatest indictment of our military was when a mercenary
force, Executive Outcomes, was brought in by an army leader himself to
boost security! The government and the public should seize the initiative
to organize debates, workshops and conferences on the future of Sierra
Leone’s security system. The ideas of those calling for a national security
system that respects the local needs of communities need to be seriously
taken up in debates about the restructuring of the army. I think that
it is quite possible to think of a security system without a large standing
army. Our traditional defence systems, in which able-bodied men and women
are taught basic methods of defence, the secrets of the forest, community
traditions and values, and who could be mobilized at short notice in periods
of external attack, is worth thinking through to see how they could be
adapted to modern conditions. Also, a properly functioning security system
that enjoys some degree of local accountability will make it extremely
difficult to plan or carry out coups, and it will deter small pockets
of invaders before a bigger force is mobilized to support them. The
fourth potential gain for the public was the accord’s attempt to check
unlimited governmental or state power. Even though the blunting of governmental
power is restricted only to a few set of institutions, the accord introduced
an innovation in Sierra Leone politics. It explicitly stated that the
government cannot act independently of the peace commission; and the government
is obligated to accept the conclusions of the commission—in other words,
it would not have had the freedom to issue a White Paper in which it could
accept or reject some of the conclusions. Furthermore, it would have had
to negotiate with other parties the nomination of individuals to the National
Electoral Commission; it would have had to respect the autonomy of the
NEC; it would have had to uphold the independence of the judiciary and
broaden the membership of the Judicial and Legal Service Commission; it
would have had to review the character of the police force to make it
truly non-partisan; and it would have had to grant the various parties
free access to government-owned media. In addition, there were a number
of provisions, such as the proposed Socio-Economic Forum, the Multi-Partisan
Council, the National Budget and Debt Committee, and the Citizens’ Consultative
Conferences, that would have had the potential to deepen the process of
power-sharing and open up governmental activities to public scrutiny and
accountability. This potential limitation of governmental or state power
may have constituted a positive force for democracy, if the civic public
could have capitalized on the changes and ensure that they were replicated
in other vital areas of public policy and institutions. Some
Vital Omissions in the Accord Even
though, on balance, the accord had great potential for fostering a durable
peace, there were some vital omissions that are worth considering. First,
the failure to provide a time frame for various aspects of the work of
the Peace Commission was likely to create problems in the future. Second,
the accord said nothing about the absolutely essential problem of atrocities.
Given the high levels of atrocities that this war produced, this should
be seen as a serious omission. Given the fact that Article 14 gave the
RUF absolute immunity from any prosecution for its war activities, the
accord should at least have made the effort to balance this provision
with the need for a “truth commission.” Our society cannot make progress
in the area of human rights if we do not squarely face these atrocities
and try to understand why people who claim to be liberating or defending
society from oppression and exploitation had to slit the throats of innocent
villagers, sever their heads, cut their hands, pluck their eyes out, disembowel
pregnant women, abduct and rape women, burn down whole villages, and enlist
children as young as ten years of age in war. Third,
despite the high costs of the war on the bodies, personal security, livelihoods
and assets of women, the accord, like most other power-sharing agreements
around the world, was silent on the rights and interests of women. It
is amazing to note that the word “women” failed to occur in any of the
28 articles and annex of the accord—it was completely gender-blind. The
potentially powerful Peace Commission did not even have a single woman.
Yet, evidence from social psychology and peace research suggests that
women have a comparative advantage over men in matters related to peace.
As guardians of the care economy and as people who are adept at dealing
with centuries-old structures of male domination in various social contexts,
women often have much better insights and values to promote the cause
of peace. Women, to paraphrase the eminent peace researcher Johan Galtung,
are not “naturally” disposed or socially conditioned to play with metals.
The women’s movement, which played a major role in sending soldiers from
the State House to the barracks and in the tireless campaign for peace,
should seize the initiative to make their presence felt in peace-building
institutions and to influence the allocation of the resources available
for reconstruction, resettlement and development. Fourth,
it is surprising to note that the accord made no reference to the Kamajors
or civil defence forces, who are made up of traditional rural people,
in any of its provisions including the ones dealing with encampment, disarmament,
demobilization and reintegration. Those who played invaluable roles in
defending and reclaiming villages are obviously entitled to compensation
as part of the peace package. With proper training and organization, they
could indeed form a nucleus of the proposed programme for nationally coordinated
local defence systems. Fifth,
despite the laudable goals of equity, grassroots participation and the
anti-poverty thrust of the accord, no attempt was made to address the
problem that the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund (IMF)
were likely to have on implementation of specific provisions, especially
the socio-economic plan of Article 26. Redressing the wrongs of the war
would require massive levels of state and community level intervention,
reform of public sector institutions and pragmatic use of market and other
value-allocating mechanisms. This is likely to question the neoliberal
dogma of unfettered markets, with which the international financial institutions
have been associated in their structural adjustment programmes in Africa
and elsewhere. In war-torn Mozambique sympathetic and influential donor
countries, the UN and to some extent the World Bank had to prevail on
the IMF in 1996 to relax its very tight targets on monetary and fiscal
aggregates or levels of budget deficits, which would have had very negative
effects on the fragile programme of post-war reconstruction and the development
of competent and motivated individuals in the public bureaucracy. An independent
policy advisory group on the Sierra Leone economy could have helped to
provide civic groups, government and other political parties with the
technical knowledge required to stand up to the IMF and the World Bank
in the implementation of Article 26. The
sixth and final point of omission concerns the problems that were likely
to arise if there was a deadlock in the peace commission. The eight-person
team that was to have run the commission was equally divided between the
government and the RUF. There was no provision that spelt out how to resolve
major differences of interpretation of the articles in the accord if they
occurred, nor how to replace members who may have been found to be unsuitable
for the tasks of the commission. Indeed, as we have already noted, the
commission enjoyed much autonomy in the discharge of its duties. It could
have been assumed that government or the RUF may have changed their own
nominees in the commission if they so wished, but it seems that neither
party had the power to change the nominees of the others. Also, there
was no reference to the judicial system as an institution of last resort
for resolving acts of misdemeanours or differences that were likely to
affect the performance of the commission. The commission was expected
to consult with both the RUF and the government at the highest levels
of decision making in carrying out its activities, but there was no guarantee
that potentially intractable quarrels in the commission could have been
resolved at these political levels. A recalcitrant set of RUF representatives
could have made life extremely difficult for the commission if they chose
to do so. The government and the public would have benefited from efforts
that would have linked issues of adjudication of differences in the implementation
of the accord to the proposed strategies of strengthening the independence
of our judicial system, as articulated in Article 24. A
longer version of this article previously appeared in “Reflections on
the Abidjan Peace Accord” in Africa Development, Vol. xxii, Numbers 3
and 4, published in 1997 by the Council for the Development of Social
Science Research in Africa, based in Senegal.
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