Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Mbeki: Diversity failures root cause of wars

- EDITH M. LEDERER

UNITED NATIONS — One by one, South Africa’s former president listed African countries Tuesday where the failure to deal with diversity was a root cause of conflict, from the Biafran war in Nigeria in the late 1960s to the current clashes in Ethiopia’s Tigray region.

Thabo Mbeki also cited “the centrality of failure properly to manage diversity” in the conflicts in Congo, Burundi, Ivory Coast and Sudan.

He pointed to the 2004 report of the Sierra Leone Truth and Reconcilia­tion Commission “which tells the naked truth, that it was as a result of the failure to manage diversity that the country experience­d a very costly 11-year war which started in 1991” — and there is a similar failure to manage diversity “in the violent conflict which has been and is still going on in Cameroon.”

France’s U.N. ambassador, Nicolas De Riviere, had some additions.

In the Sahel region stretching across northern Africa between the Atlantic Ocean and the Red Sea, “terrorist groups use difference­s to stir up hatred between communitie­s,” he said. And ethnic and religious violence is also prevalent in the Middle East including Iraq, Yemen and Syria.

They spoke at a U.N. Security Council meeting on “Diversity, State Building and the Search for Peace” that was organized by Kenya, which holds the council presidency this month, and chaired by its president, Uhuru Kenyatta.

“The key message I wish to deliver today is that poor management of diversity is leading to grave threats to internatio­nal peace and security,” Kenyatta said.

He said inequality within and between countries “is too often the result of exclusion on the basis of identity” that becomes institutio­nalized in government­s and in economic relations. “And it manifests in stereotypi­ng and bigotry,” leading among other consequenc­es to lack of work for billions of people simply based on who they are, he said.

“The result is a profound sense of grievance and bitterness that populists and demagogues can easily exploit,” Kenyatta said. “It is fodder for terrorism, insurgenci­es, the rise of xenophobia, hate speech, divisive tribalism, as well as racism.”

U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres cited a U.N.-World Bank study that found “many conflicts are deeply rooted in longstandi­ng inequaliti­es among groups,” which leave people feeling excluded and marginaliz­ed because they are denied opportunit­ies based on their culture, race, skin color, ethnicity or income.

He pointed to the sharp increase in armed groups at the heart of conflicts — “rebels, insurgents, militias, criminal gangs and armed traffickin­g, terrorist and extremist groups” — as well as a rise in military coups.

While combatants can agree to end hostilitie­s, Guterres warned, “without including a wide range of diverse voices at every step of this process — without bringing all people along — any peace will be shortlived.”

He said that women and young people must be “meaningful participan­ts” and that “when we open the door to inclusion and participat­ion, we take a giant step forward in conflict prevention and peacebuild­ing.”

Fawzia Koofi, the first woman to be deputy speaker of Afghanista­n’s Parliament who left the country after the Taliban takeover on Aug. 15, said her country is the latest test of whether the global community can come together to uphold the principles of the U.N. Charter, including promoting the rule of law, justice, and equality for men and women.

“There are serious reports that fundamenta­l freedoms are being flouted,” she said. “Women and girls are once again regarded as second-class citizens, literally.

They are making us invisible again … (and) thousands of people from religious minorities and other minority groups are forced to flee their villages.”

Koofi said the Afghan situation shows how the imbalance in power is “at the roots of so much conflict and inequality.”

Rwandan President Paul Kagame, whose country was the scene of genocide in 1994 in which 800,000 Tutsis and moderate Hutus were massacred by the majority Hutu population, said sustainabl­e peace can only be built if the root causes of conflict are understood by a broad range of the population, and it requires dialogue and search for solutions.

“It may not be possible to entirely prevent all conflict,” he said. “In fact, disagreeme­nts and grievances will always be there in one form or another. But the intensity and the impact of conflicts can be minimized by remaining attentive to local needs” and delivering “the results that citizens expect and deserve.”

South Africa’s Mbeki recalled that the Nigerian government was victorious against secessioni­st-seeking Biafra 50 years ago but its leaders announced “that they would follow a policy of no victor, no vanquished.”

Looking at the “painful example” of the ongoing conflict between the Ethiopian government and ethnic Tigrayans, Mbeki said, “this is exactly what Ethiopia needs.”

“The key message I wish to deliver today is that poor management of diversity is leading to grave threats to internatio­nal peace and security.”

— Uhuru Kenyatta, president of Kenya

 ?? (File Photo/AP/Ben Curtis) ?? A fighter loyal to the Tigray People’s Liberation Front walks along a street May 7 in the town of Hawzen, then-controlled by the group but later retaken by government forces, in the Tigray region of northern Ethiopia.
(File Photo/AP/Ben Curtis) A fighter loyal to the Tigray People’s Liberation Front walks along a street May 7 in the town of Hawzen, then-controlled by the group but later retaken by government forces, in the Tigray region of northern Ethiopia.
 ?? ?? Ethiopian government soldiers ride in the back of a truck May 8 on a road near Agula, north of Mekele, in the Tigray region of northern Ethiopia.
Ethiopian government soldiers ride in the back of a truck May 8 on a road near Agula, north of Mekele, in the Tigray region of northern Ethiopia.
 ?? ?? A fighter loyal to the Tigray People’s Liberation Front mans a guard post May 7 on the outskirts of the town of Hawzen.
A fighter loyal to the Tigray People’s Liberation Front mans a guard post May 7 on the outskirts of the town of Hawzen.
 ?? ?? A destroyed tank is seen by the side of the road May 1 south of Humera, in an area of western Tigray then annexed by the Amhara region during the ongoing conflict in Ethiopia.
A destroyed tank is seen by the side of the road May 1 south of Humera, in an area of western Tigray then annexed by the Amhara region during the ongoing conflict in Ethiopia.

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