By Victor Bwire,
NAIROBI, Kenya, Apr 26- The timing of criminal activities and emergence of illegal groups in some parts of Kenya whenever elections approach remains a permanent feature of our history, an ugly one for that matter.
Why it refuses to go away, even with evidence of the contributing factors, is what worries many.
Intelligence has abounded on the drivers of conflicts including the prevalence of illegal small arms and light weapons as campaign tools and protection groups, commonly called “men in black”.
The people who displace people during elections and arm these protection groups through elaborate plans including cross-border schemes are known, and this information should be used to deal.
Kenya like the rest of the region has a long history of contested unresolved/ongoing conflicts, presenting one of the most complex conflict systems in Africa where its borderlands have experienced centuries of marginalization and alienation from the centre.
Many times, these conflicts increase around election times like it’s happening in Marsabit, Laikipia, and Baringo Counties.
While making a presentation to the UN Security Council in 2021, Kenya’s Permanent Representative to the UN Dr. Martin Kimani, noted that most conflicts in the Great Horn of Africa are fuelled by easily available illicit weapons, despite various conventions and policies dealing with the same.
He urged the UN Security Council to scale up the issue of small arms to the same level it does for nuclear weapons, for ignoring the proliferation of illegal small arms and light weapons will frustrate any progress in the region. Such arms-led conflicts are a challenge to the realization of peace and such a democratic process as free and fair elections.
SDG 16 is on promoting peaceful and inclusive societies, ensuring public access to information, and protecting fundamental freedoms. The target of 16.10 is to “ensure public access to information and to protect fundamental freedoms, in accordance with national legislation and international agreements”.
The Nairobi declaration on small arms is signed by 2000 countries in the region creating structures and institutions to collaborate to curb the proliferation of the arms in the region as a complement to existing individual country mechanisms.
Signatories to the declaration to the Nairobi declaration are Djibouti, Eritrea, Rwanda, Sudan, Tanzania, Uganda, Seychelles, and Somalia.
Member states of the Regional Centre on Small and Light Weapons (RESCA) met in Nairobi in March 2021 to assess the milestones achieved since its formation and noted that the proliferation of illegal arms and light weapons is a major player in increasing cases of military coups, armed conflicts, violent crime and violent extremism, ethnic violence, cross border crime and political instability in the two regions.
The verdict during the meeting was that the sale of illicit weapons continues despite such commitments and plays a big role in fuelling violence, conflicts, communal displacements, refugee population, lack of participation in elections, diseases, food insecurity among others in several the countries, including Kenya, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Ethiopia, South Sudan, Uganda and Somalia.
Studies indicate that the Great Horn and Lakes region has seen increased inflows of small arms as a result of the conflict in Yemen through Somalia and Ethiopia borders and the war in Libya through Sudan to South Sudan and by extension Kenya and Uganda.
As part of its Agenda 2063 framework, the Africa Union Heads of States and Governments adopted an initiative to silence the guns and end all conflicts in Africa by 2020.
This marked a turning point in the history of the continent by way of creating the necessary environment, to move forward Africa’s development agenda- for development cannot happen especially where there are resource-based conflicts/tensions. SDG 16 –recognizes that development cannot happen within an environment of conflicts
The African Union 2014 ratified the Niamey Convention (Cross Border Collaboration), which calls for peace through greater cross-border cooperation thus acknowledging the importance of an integrated approach to dealing with such issues.
Studies have shown that addressing peace-and security challenges related to borders requires both ‘hard and soft’ approaches and only investing in securitized and state-centric responses will not be sustainable in the long-term if the buy-in of borderland communities for border policies is not in place.
A change in tact, as provided for under the Niamey Convention is inevitable for solving such cross-border conflicts and tensions in the Great Horn of Africa.
Already the AU has set aside funds for such initiatives and given the poverty levels around the region, countries need to use the more recent and tested integrated approaches to solve such problems, prioritizing the involvement of local communities and their leadership structures.
Countries in the region need to sign and domesticate the AU Convention as it has elaborate mechanisms including the creation of a local cross-border community leadership structure that will be very instrumental in conflict resolution within the countries and minimize harm to the local communities.
The threat to border peace within the region by banning cross-border trade by any of the countries in the Great Horn of Africa is always a big blow to development efforts in the region, which already is facing other challenges including poverty, climate change, locust invasion among others.
While the convention was adopted in the twenty-third ordinary session of the Assembly of AU Heads of States in 2014, to date it has not achieved the numbers required to make it functional, significantly undermining the legal bearing of the Convention as it will enter into full force upon fifteen-member state ratifications.
It will be interesting to note for example even with evidence on the role of small arms and light weapons in frustrating development initiatives including participation in elections, how much resources and commitments are given by our governments to such RESCA so that the fight against the proliferation of small arms in the region is enhanced.
Given the need for evidence-based decision making and resource allocation in such matters as cross-border security, what’s the latest data or research has RESCA done on the same, what is the visibility of the work of RESCA in the region, and the impact of its work?
By the way, there was the small matter of DRC handing over the chairperson of the Council of Ministers as provided over by the Nairobi Declaration, what’s the latest on the matter?
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