Abstract

Africa is arguably the most important regional selling for United Nations peacekeeping challenges. Hence, Africa is the first continent where extensive efforts have recently been made between the United Nations and the Organisation of African Unity with the specific aim of enhancing the management of conflicts in the region. It is significant that the UN now seems prepared to form partnerships with willing regional organisations and alliances in Africa with regard to the conducting of peace-support operations. At the same time, the United States and certain European nations have begun to support the idea of an African response capability of some kind. Another significant development relates to the fact that sub-regional organisations in Africa have started to feature as important peacekeeping instruments in recent years as it has increasingly been accepted that there is a need for such institutions to take care of their own security requirements. In this regard, the “indigenous" intervention operations without UN endorsement or involvement in Sierra Leone, the Democratic Republic of the Congo and in Lesotho are of particular interest, as these would seem to represent a new dimension in the management of African peacekeeping requirements. What is needed in the African context is to establish an acceptable basis for involvement or intervention in intra-state conflicts that respects the dignity and independence of stales without sanctioning the misuse of sovereign rights to violate the security of people within a stale's borders. It would therefore be desirable that all the roleplayers in Africa and further afield should develop a set of broad principles to respond appropriately and speedily to situations where the security of people is imperilled.

Highlights

  • Africa is a continent that is steeped in conflict and instability, the sources of which are both diverse and endemic

  • It is a truism that the undertaking o f peace initiatives in Africa is by no means a simple and easy task

  • The African continent has had a critical impact on defining the limits and possibilities of the post-Cold War order and the place of the United Nations (UN) in this framework

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Summary

Introduction

Africa is a continent that is steeped in conflict and instability, the sources of which are both diverse and endemic. There is a pressing need for Africa and role-players in the international community to address and resolve the conflicts on the continent and to lay the foundation for durable peace and economic growth. The problems and challenges that the UN has faced in this part of the world have reflected the peculiar difficulties of peacekeeping itself as African conflicts have been among the organisation’s most important initiatives in peacekeeping and conflict resolution since the end of the Cold War. In the same sense, recent developments in Africa in the form of frequent conflicts, the tendency of these problems to generate security problems and humanitarian disasters underscore the necessity for leaders on the African continent and other role-players to consider and reconsider response capabilities or regional peacekeeping capabilities o f some kind. An attempt is made to reflect upon the trends and direction o f peacekeeping efforts in the African context with special reference to recent developments

Conducting multinational peace-support operations
Regional peace initiatives
Sub-regional peace initiatives
Externally inspired capacity-building efforts
Continued UN involvement in African peacekeeping
Non-UN intervention operations
Whither Non-UN intervention operations
Conclusion
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