Africanarguments.org: IGAD's Credibility Seriously Damaged By South Sudan Summit Fiasco

From: Berhane Habtemariam <Berhane.Habtemariam_at_gmx.de_at_dehai.org>
Date: Thu, 4 Sep 2014 22:29:39 +0200

East Africa: IGAD's Credibility Seriously Damaged By South Sudan Summit
Fiasco


4 September 2014

Analysis

August was not IGAD's finest month. In Bentiu, a ceasefire monitor died of a
heart attack after his captors forced him to march for miles; IGAD was
unable to muster more than a strongly worded statement. In the same week, a
shambolic heads of state summit adopted an 'inclusive' protocol that doesn't
include most of the parties to the talks; changed, at the last minute, the
text of the protocol, virtually ensuring the SPLM/A (In Opposition) wouldn't
sign; and endorsed a cessation of hostilities implementation matrix that the
SPLM/A (IO) claims it never saw, amidst such confusion that even attendees
at the summit weren't sure of what happened. It gets worse. On August 26,
the day after the re-dedication of the cessation of hostilities and the
'signing' of the matrix, an UNMISS helicopter was apparently shot down. And
then, just days later, the peace talks were adjourned, once more. Just what
is going on in Addis?

Uganda, the bogeyman

Since the IGAD mediation began, there has been criticism of the region's
lack of impartiality. How can interested parties, especially Uganda, the
argument went, be honest brokers in South Sudan? This criticism, however,
overlooked one crucial point: the difference between IGAD member states and
the IGAD mediation, run by the largely autonomous chief mediator, Seyoum
Mesfin of Ethiopia. Certainly, Ugandan interests and military intervention
caused and continue to cause any number of complications. But Ugandan
influence on the mediation itself is minimal: there are hardly any Ugandans
in the mediation's secretariat, and none at senior level. Chief mediator
Mesfin does not take his orders from Kampala. Addis drives the mediation, to
the extent anyone is driving it at all.

Summits, however, are different. Heads of state can do what they like,
ignore the guidance of their appointed mediators and change the draft
documents that appear in front of them. While no one, save the South Sudan
government, is standing up for the document today, there was broad agreement
amongst all parties on 25 of the 28 articles in the Protocol on Agreed
Principles on Transitional Arrangements Towards Resolution of the Crisis in
South Sudan. While the original draft was not perfect, in its original form
the SPLM/A (IO), the former detainees and the political parties, as well as
the government, would likely have signed the document.

Two of the three disputed articles (Articles 2 and 3) were changed at the
summit, after the draft text had been introduced. The most significant
change is in Article 2. The original text provided for South Sudan's
president to serve as head of state and for the prime minister to serve as
head of government, with the powers of each to be negotiated in the talks.
The final text combined these roles: the president would be head of state
and government.

This change came as a direct result of the intervention of Uganda's
President, Yoweri Museveni, who argued that a transitional government could
not change the constitutional order: if the president was head of state and
government now, he should remain so in the transition period. From there,
changing article 3 was a formality. The carefully crafted draft didn't
matter: a head of state had spoken.

Summit screw-ups: incompetence, not design

The IGAD heads of state summit had two original objectives. The first was to
definitively end the circular argument over the Cessation of Hostilities
(CoH) Agreement, dating to January 2014. The government argued that it could
not continue political negotiations until the CoH was truly in force; the
SPLM/A (IO) argued it would not sign the CoH implementation modalities until
Ugandan forces withdrew. The result of these duelling, intractable positions
was no progress on any front. After many months, language that was
acceptable to both parties - see section 1.2(e) of the matrix - was
developed, and on that basis brought to the summit for final signature.

IGAD's incompetence gave the SPLM/A (IO) an escape from this commitment. The
operative paragraphs on the preambulatory pages of the CoH re-dedication
clearly commit the signatories of the document to the terms of the CoH
implementation matrix. But in the confusion precipitated by shoddy
organization and the looming departure of the heads of state, no one from
IGAD obtained the copy of the matrix signed by both government and SPLM/A
(IO), and nobody asked either party to sign or initial each page of the
matrix, as the convention of protocol dictates. Later, the SPLM/A (IO) was
able to claim that it had only signed the CoH re-dedication, not the matrix,
and recommenced the same cycle of arguments about the withdrawal of the
Ugandan forces. Requested to initial the pages of the matrix in the days
following the summit, and the SPLM/A (IO) chief negotiator point blank
refused. IGAD's position is that the matrix was signed by virtue of the
operative clauses of the preamble.

The second aim of the summit was to introduce a protocol, to be endorsed by
all the May 9 Agreement 'stakeholders' - government, opposition, the former
detainees, political parties, civil society and faith based leaders - which
would advance the ongoing multi-stakeholder negotiations by locking in
agreement on the key principles, and shaping the area for future negotiation
- to end talks about talks. The draft of the agreement originally read: "The
GRSS and SPLM/A (IO) shall be signatories of this Protocol. The other
stakeholders shall endorse this Protocol; The Member States of IGAD, and the
undersigned Partners of IGAD and Friends of South Sudan, shall serve as
guarantors and witnesses of this Protocol."

But witness the signature page of the signed Protocol: it is silent about
signatories and guarantors. By oversight, not design, the hastily edited
document removed the signature lines for the other stakeholders. The event
was such a mess that the protocol officers didn't even remember to invite
representatives of the former detainees, political parties, civil society
and faith leaders into the summit room. Instead, they remained in the
National Palace's ballroom all day, while the summit stumbled on down the
hall. Government mouthpiece Michael Makuei gloated: 'I didn't see you in the
hall,' he told the former detainees and political party leaders afterwards.
Naturally, the other stakeholders felt they had been purposely left out,
when poor management, not purposeful exclusion, was the cause. IGAD endorsed
an inclusive agreement that forgot inclusivity, and signed an agreement in
the name of stakeholders who weren't even present.

In defence of inclusivity and the protocol: rebuilding the credibility of
the process

While there is little encouraging by this episode of the peace process,
criticism of the concept of inclusivity is misplaced. Amongst others, Jok
Madut Jok and Francisco Toro have criticised the IGAD process for pursuing a
multi-stakeholder format. Jok argues:

"... the IGAD model of multi-stakeholder peace talks [is] inappropriate in
the current circumstances and likely to prolong this destructive conflict...
Parties not directly engaged in the fighting have a lot to contribute to
South Sudan's future. But unfortunately, while violence is ongoing, they can
only get in the way of serious and substantive talks."

This argument forgets that the months of bilateral talks between the
government and opposition prior to May 9 achieved almost nothing. It's
evident that the Protocol's principles on accountability (article 15);
institutional reform and oversight mechanisms in the security sector
(articles 18-19); resource, economic and financial management (articles
20-22); transitional justice, reconciliation and healing (articles 23-24)
were a direct result of the multi-stakeholder negotiations, and were
unlikely to have been adopted if the government and opposition had been left
to their own devices. In order words, inclusivity is the only way to salvage
the ambition of this peace process. From the beginning, the risk has always
been that an elite arrangement restores the status quo ante - involving
other actors is the only way this can be avoided.

The credibility of IGAD and the IGAD mediation is seriously damaged by the
summit fiasco - but at the same time important, and unprecedented, ideas are
now part of the framework of the peace process. In rebuilding the process,
the focus must shift to these principles: while the furore today is on the
mechanics of an elite, power sharing arrangement, real change was only ever
going to come from the pursuit of other ideas - not in haggling over the
predatory arrangements of the executive, which no matter its configuration
is almost destined to disappoint whomever observes too closely. Future talks
will only be useful if the negotiations focus on actions and reforms in the
future transitional arrangements, and not only about who wields power.

This post is contributed by a long-time observer of South Sudan who has
closely followed the Addis talks.

 
Received on Thu Sep 04 2014 - 16:29:41 EDT

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