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News Stories
July 6 2000 Civilians continue to be deliberately and arbitrarily
killed, mutilated, raped and abducted in Sierra Leone, Amnesty International
said today, a year after the peace agreement between the government of
Sierra Leone and the Revolutionary United Front (RUF) was signed in Lomé,
Togo. With the resumption of hostilities between government and
rebel forces in May, human rights abuses against civilians have increased. A
year on from the Lomé peace agreement, Sierra Leoneans still constitute the
largest refugee and internally displaced population in Africa. Estimates of
the number of those newly displaced since May have risen to at least
200,000, many of whom were already uprooted from their homes. "The peace agreement signed on 7 July 1999 has brought
neither peace nor an end to atrocities in Sierra Leone," Amnesty
International said. "The international community has an urgent duty and
obligation to the people of Sierra Leone to take decisive action to ensure
that they are no longer forced to endure the atrocities of the past nine
years." Amnesty International is calling on those countries
represented at key meetings this week of the UN Security Council, the
Organization of African Unity (OAU) and the European Union (EU) to focus
their attention on the continuing human rights crisis and to resolve to take
measures which will have a real and immediate impact on the protection of
civilians from human rights abuses. "The success of the 1999 peace agreement was severely
compromised from the start because it failed to end impunity for the gross
human rights abuses, including war crimes and crimes against humanity,
committed during the internal armed conflict," Amnesty International
said. "By including a blanket amnesty for all activities
undertaken in pursuit of the conflict, the peace agreement not only failed
to provide justice but also gave a signal that human rights abuses would be
tolerated and that their perpetrators would not be held accountable." Although the UN added a disclaimer to the agreement that
the amnesty would not apply to crimes against humanity, war crimes and other
serious violations of international law, the UN Security Council has failed
consistently, so far, to give any substance to that disclaimer. A
recommendation by the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights shortly after
the signing of the agreement for an international commission of inquiry has
also not been implemented. "As the UN Security Council considers and votes this
week on three resolutions on Sierra Leone, attention should be sharply
focused on the continuing toll of the conflict on the people of Sierra
Leone," Amnesty International said. The lives and safety of civilians can be protected if
effective action is taken by the UN Security Council in three crucial areas: -- by giving a clear direction to the UNAMSIL peace-keeping
force to adopt a determined and active approach to fulfilling their mandate
to protect civilians, when agreeing an increase in the number of UNAMSIL
troops; -- by establishing an effective mechanism to bring all
those responsible for human rights abuses to justice, in accordance with
international standards; -- by preventing military assistance from reaching rebel
forces in Sierra Leone, including by ending the trade in diamonds from
rebel-controlled areas which is used to fund the purchase of arms and
ammunition; this should include diamonds leaving Sierra Leone through
neighbouring countries, including Liberia. Amnesty International has also made specific
recommendations to governments represented at the OAU and EU meetings to
give priority to resolving the continuing human rights crisis in Sierra
Leone, including by: -- exerting whatever influence they may have over rebel
forces, or those supporting or assisting them, to end human rights abuses; -- making all possible efforts to prevent military
assistance reaching rebel forces in Sierra Leone, including by taking
effective measures to end the trade in diamonds which funds that assistance; -- insisting on an end to impunity for those responsible
for human rights abuses; -- providing adequate support and protection to the very
large number of Sierra Leonean refugees and internally displaced people. Background: The OAU Committee of Ambassadors meets in Lomé from 3 to 5 July, followed by a meeting of the OAU Council of Ministers on 6 to 7 July. From 3 to 7 July the plenary session of the European Parliament is taking place in Strasbourg, France.
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(c) 1999- The Children and Armed Conflict Unit |
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