- Title: [SW News] (Africa News Service/ IRIN) The Sanctions
Decade
- From:[]
- Date :[17 April 2000]
The Sanctions Decade
Story Filed: Monday, April 17, 2000 9:55 PM EST
New York (UN Integrated Regional Information Network, April 17, 2000) - Over the past
decade the UN Security Council has imposed comprehensive or partial sanctions on 12
different countries - six times as often as in its previous 45 years.
In a new book titled 'The Sanctions Decade: Assessing UN Strategies in the 1990s',
David Cortright and George Lopez provide the first in-depth assessment of the
effectiveness of UN sanctions during this period.
Financed mainly by Canada, which has made improving the efficacy of sanctions a major
focus of its agenda during its chairing of the Security Council, the book's Monday release
is timed to prepare Council members for two sessions on sanctions scheduled for the coming
week, the second of which is on Angola.
Described by Canadian Foreign Minister Lloyd Axworthy as "outstanding work",
the study is based on more than 200 interviews with officials from the United Nations and
sanctioned countries, and other involved actors.
In Africa the book describes the UN arms embargoes imposed in Somalia,
Liberia and Rwanda as utterly ineffective responses to the catastrophes of famine, war and
genocide. They were fundamentally flawed and allegedly constituted a desperate attempt by
policy makers to do something in the face of disaster.
"In each case the sanctions came too late, after huge stockpiles of weapons were
already in place and many of the atrocities had already occurred," the authors say.
In the cases of Sierra Leone and Angola, according to the authors, the attempt was to
apply more focused pressure as part of a "smart sanctions" policy. In each case
the Security Council sought to impose sanctions on specific leadership groups and factions
while avoiding measures that would exacerbate existing humanitarian problems.
The authors - from Notre Dame University's Kroc Institute of International Peace
Studies - concluded that in neither case did sanctions manage to constrain the military
capabilities of the rebel movements they targeted as they were neither effectively
monitored nor enforced.
The cases of Libya and Sudan are grouped together as examples of the use of travel bans
and aviation sanctions being used to exert pressure on states perceived to be sponsoring
international terrorism.
In the case of Libya, the authors conclude that sanctions contributed to the resolution
of the crisis as a negotiated solution was reached that permitted the extradition of
suspected terrorists, albeit after a long period of diplomatic stalemate.
With Sudan, travel sanctions were threatened but never imposed and failed to alter
Khartoum's policy of hosting and supporting terrorist organisations, the authors said.
Consequently, controversy over the government's alleged involvement in the 1995
assassination attempt against President Hosni Mubarak of Egypt remained unresolved.
As part of the process of creating more humane and effective sanctions the authors
recommend that sanctions should be designed to deny assets to decision- making elites but
avoid adversely affecting opposition constituencies within the targeted society and
creating humanitarian harm.
Decision makers must realise, the authors say, that sanctions on their own cannot
achieve major policy objectives but can be effective instruments of persuasion when tied
to a carrot-and-stick bargaining process.
Greater transparency needs to be given to the work of the Security Council and its
sanctions committees and communications with member states and the international community
improved. In addition, the capacity of the UN Secretariat to administer sanctions should
be enhanced through the creation of an Office of Sanctions Affairs.
Efforts should be made to freeze the financial assets not only of government entities,
but also their supporters. In addition, Security Council resolutions should include terms
that conform with definitions used in the financial sector, according to the book.
Member states should be encouraged to pass laws criminalising violations of arms
embargoes and military contract services, military training and a specific list of dual
use items should be prohibited in resolutions imposing arms embargoes.
This item is delivered by the UN's IRIN humanitarian information unit (e- mail:
irin@ocha.unon.org; fax: +254 2 622129; Web: http://www.reliefweb.int/IRIN),
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