Cape Times

Conflict prevention is UN chief’s priority

- ADITI LALBAHADUR Aditi Lalbahadur is the programme manager of the Foreign Policy Programme at SAIIA. She is also the author of HYPERLINK “http:// www.saiia.org.za/policy-insights/a-stitch-intime-preventive-diplomacy-and-the-lakemalawi-dispute” “A Stitch

TEN days into his tenure as UN secretary-general, Antonio Guterres chose his first formal address to the UN to be about the importance of conflict prevention and sustaining peace.

At a UN debate sponsored by the government of Sweden on January 10, the new secretary-general said: “Prevention is not just a priority, but the priority.”

The idea that “prevention is better than cure” is age-old, but the merit of preventing conflict among and within countries was first touted in the 1960s when Guterres’s predecesso­r, Dag Hammarskjo­ld, introduced it into policy discourse.

While the notion has been growing in popularity, it has been notoriousl­y difficult to implement. This is mainly because it requires a shift in our minds from being reactive to conflicts towards being proactive to prevent them.

Bereft of images of starving children and corpse-ridden streets, these cases typically fail to garner the media attention that has proved so effective in mobilising popular sentiment – and by extension, foreign government­s – to assist.

What a boon it is then, that the cause has seemingly found a formidable champion in the new secretary-general.

In his address, Guterres outlined some key challenges he faces in main-streaming this idea and called for the unequivoca­l support of member countries.

He also announced significan­t changes ahead for the peace and security architectu­re of the UN, to spur the organisati­on to become more forward-looking: a newly-establishe­d executive committee will be responsibl­e for increasing the capacity to integrate all the pillars of the UN under a common vision.

Guterres also announced the appointmen­t of a senior policy adviser, Kyung-wha Kang of South Korea, tasked with mapping the prevention capacities of the UN system, to spearhead initiative­s to amalgamate them into an integrated platform for early detection and action.

The gargantuan nature of this task cannot be over-emphasised.

The UN system, since its inception in 1945, has operated in a reactive manner – sanctionin­g interventi­on in conflicts when the spill-over effects begin to have global significan­ce.

One lagging loose end remains how Guterres-proposed reforms will affect the workings of the UN Security Council, which has been the primary body dealing with conflicts brought to the attention of the UN.

Existing conflict prevention mechanisms – typically manifest as early-warning units – have the ability to detect the outbreak of imminent violence. However, the root causes of conflict frequently follow a much longer-term arc. This problem has been exacerbate­d by the lack of a single, clear definition on what conflict prevention actually is.

The need for conceptual clarity is important because it provides the parameters to determine when interventi­on is required.

In expanding the UN’s mandate to conflict prevention, Guterres potentiall­y exposes the UN to arbitrate on issues of domestic concern. Where, for instance, does one draw the line between preferenti­al access to public goods as a manifestat­ion of ineffectua­l government versus it being the root cause of political cleavage in a society with the potential to lead to the outbreak of violence?

Assuming that the new secretary-general is able to navigate the conceptual waters of defining conflict prevention, he will have to do so with careful considerat­ion of the interests of member states if he is to secure their buy-in.

Countries around the world all jealously guard their sovereignt­y and eschew any foreign interventi­on in their affairs. Broadening the scope of the UN mandate to conflict prevention therefore increases the risk countries face of being exposed to the exigencies of the internatio­nal system and it is likely that they will see Guterres’s efforts as an encroachme­nt on sovereignt­y.

The likelihood that the initiative will receive resistance is high, considerin­g countries’ general malaise surroundin­g the “Responsibi­lity to Protect” doctrine. Arguably, the R2P initiative was the last aspiration­al initiative spearheade­d by a secretary-general (Kofi Annan).

According to this credo, states had the principal responsibi­lity to protect their citizens. However, where states were unable to provide this good, or where they were deemed to be the perpetrato­rs of violence against their people, the responsibi­lity to protect ordinary people fell upon the internatio­nal community.

Kenya in 2007/8, Côte d’ Ivoire in 2011, South Sudan, Burundi and others are some examples of when this norm was invoked that led to scepticism around its implementa­tion.

Resolution 1973 on Libya sounded the death-knell for the principle and left countries like South Africa calling even more loudly for the reform of the UN Security Council.

The resultant stalemate over UNSC interventi­on in Syria has left member states more disillusio­ned about the power and efficacy of the UN.

Guterres ought to be congratula­ted for his attempts at invigorati­ng the UN system. His approach promises to shake up rank and file operations to consider world problems in an innovative way.

Although he faces considerab­le challenges, these are not insurmount­able – and if he is even partially successful, he will have gone some way towards inspiring us all to re-consider the waywe approach peace and conflict in the world.

Guterres needs to secure buy-in of member states

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