NGO Says Liberian Sanctions Should not be Lifted
June 07, 06United Nations sanctions on Liberian diamonds and timber should not be lifted until the government has gained full control over these resources, Global Witness has said in a recently released report.
“Under the leadership of President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, the new Liberian government has made significant progress towards reforming the natural resources sector and tackling corruption”, said Natalie Ashworth, Global Witness Campaigner. “However, much more needs to be done before
Global Witness’s new report, entitled “Cautiously Optimistic: the case for maintaining sanctions in Liberia”, demonstrates how Liberia has not yet complied with the UN criteria for lifting sanctions, due for review in June 2006. It stresses that maintaining sanctions should not be seen as a punitive measure but as a way of supporting the new government’s reforms.
“In the past revenue from both the diamond and timber industries have been used to fuel conflict which consumed
The Global Witness report warns against sacrificing the UN benchmarks for short-term political gains or gestures. Ashworth said, “In the long-term, peace and stability in
Large areas of resource rich territory remain under the control of ex combatants, who are exploiting rubber and diamonds, generating significant illicit revenues. Currently the Liberian government and the United Nations peacekeeping mission in Liberia (UNMIL) have not developed a strategy to deal with this problem, says the NGO in a release.
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“President Sirleaf has recognized the risk presented by the ex-combatants’ presence in the rubber plantations, but the new government and security forces do not have the means to restore control without assistance,” said Ashworth. “UNMIL must urgently assist the government to remove the ex-combatants as part of a broader strategy which provides them with alternative sources of employment.”
The full Global Witness report, “Cautiously Optimistic: the case for maintaining sanctions in