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| CONFLICT PREVENTION AND ANTI-CORRUPTION OVERVIEW |
Home | Overview | ECOWAS Capacity Building | Peace Building | Cross-Border Mano River
Union |Cross-Border Casamance |Women and Children Trafficking
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USAID/WARP seeks to remedy or mitigate two of the most harmful and intractable problems that hinder the full social and economic development of the ECOWAS region – corruption and conflict. The conflict prevention and anti-corruption program tackles the regional aspects of these issues by working with those regional and sub-regional organizations that deal with conflict and through joint-programming with U.S. Embassies and other USAID missions in cross-border conflict sites.
For the past two decades internal and cross-border conflicts have severely disrupted West African social and economic development. The states of the Mano River Union – Guinea, Liberia, and Sierra Leone- have been embroiled in civil wars that have had a negative impact on their neighbors for more than a decade while factions within Burkina Faso and Cote d’Ivoire have, from time to time, sought to further their own ends by becoming involved. Conflict over the Casamance region has intermittently engaged The Gambia, Guinea Bissau, and Senegal for the past decade, while the oil-rich Becasi Peninsula has been the source of conflict between Cameroon and Nigeria for an equal length of time. More often than not, corruption has played a key role in fomenting and prolonging these conflicts. Regional wars are commonly financed by the illegal sale of arms or the illicit extraction of high value natural resources such as diamonds, gold, and timber. In many of these cases, the involvement of one state in another’s conflict, the widespread migration of the victims of war, and the struggle over resources have necessitated a regional or sub-regional approach to resolving, mitigating or preventing conflict.
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The commitment of the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) to preventing conflict is underscored by the Protocol on Conflict Prevention signed by all 15 member countries in 1975. In December 1999 a milestone was reached when ECOWAS promulgated a Code of Conduct for the Implementation of a moratorium on the
importation, exportation and manufacture of weapons in West Africa. This was the first attempt at such a moratorium in the region. While ECOWAS has a history of successful peacekeeping in the region, the Office of the Deputy Secretary for Political Affairs, Defense and Security is now staffing up to take on a conflict management role as well. It has also established the institutional framework for a Conflict Prevention Mechanism that consists of four Observation and Monitoring Centers in Benin, Burkina Faso, Liberia and the Gambia and a Coordinating Office in Nigeria. ECOWAS is thus a key partner for USAID/WARP in the conflict prevention arena.
WARP’s Conflict Prevention and Anti-Corruption program’s primary focus is to improve
enabling conditions for peace and stability in West Africa.
In consequence, WARP collaborates with its partners to contribute to the realization of the
following results:
- Enhanced capacity of regional organizations to address conflict;
- Some causes and consequences of conflict ameliorated in targeted areas;
- Strategic cross-border US Government priorities furthered.
Current conflict prevention activities include: |
| ECOWAS Capacity Building |
WARP works with ECOWAS to strengthen its capacity to undertake conflict prevention and mitigation activities by assisting the development of its conflict early warning system, providing training in planning, analytical and management skills, and furnishing computer equipment. For further information, click here.
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| Civil Society Strengthening for Peace building |
WARP’s current partner in this activity is the West Africa Network for Peace building (WANEP). WARP is funding WANEP to provide technical assistance and training to strengthen this nascent network and other national and regional peace building NGO’s to effectively monitor the region for signs of upcoming conflicts and provide effective responses to prevent and mitigate conflict. For further information, click here.
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| Cross-Border Peace building |
In collaboration with bilateral USAID Missions and U.S. Embassies in the region, WARP developed two activities that seek to recreate the conditions for peace in border communities. A consortium of NGOs provides a response to some of the impacts of the wars in the Mano River Union by assisting the victims of violence in the cross-border areas of Guinea, Liberia, and Sierra Leone. For further information, click here. Peace in the Casamance areas of The Gambia, Guinea Bissau, and Senegal is promoted through grassroots work with communities and NGOs. For further information, click here.
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| Trafficking of Women and Children |
WARP tackles this issue on two levels. Implementing partners work to reach communities and NGOs in the cross-border area of Burkina Faso, Cote d’Ivoire, and Mali to prevent trafficking of children while technical assistance is provided, in collaboration with ECOWAS, under the auspices of the United Nations Office for Drugs and Crime (UNODC) to help national governments update their Action Plans for tackling this crime. For further information, click here.
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New Anti Corruption Activities
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WARP will develop and strengthen anti-corruption and transparency activities in West Africa with a
special emphasis on activities that promote the role of ECOWAS, create synergies with other programs of WARP and leverage resources. For further information, click here. |
WARP works with a range of partners representing international and regional organizations, international and local NGOs, and community-based organizations. The major partners are ECOWAS, the United National Office of Drugs & Crime (UNODC), the United Nations Development Program (UNDP), WANEP, Catholic Relief Services, Adventist Relief Association (Guinea Bissau-Casamance), Center for Victims of Torture (Sierra Leone, Liberia, Guinea), Concern Universal (Gambia-Casamance), International Rescue Committee (Sierra Leone, Liberia, Guinea), Population Media Center (Mali, Burkina Faso, Cote d'Ivoire Coast), and Search for Common Ground (Sierra Leone, Liberia, Guinea).
An annual Technical Advisory Group meeting guides WARP in its programming with USAID missions and U.S. Embassies in the region. |
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