REBUILDING FAILED STATES

 

What can the world do about state failure? Surprisingly, quite a lot

 

 Artículo de  “The Economist” del 3-3-05. FREETOWN AND MONROVIA

 

Por su interés y relevancia, he seleccionado el artículo que sigue para incluirlo en este sitio web. (L. B.-B.)

 

 ONE and a half years ago, Liberia was a failed state. Two separate groups of drug-emboldened teenage rebels controlled most of the country. A gangsterish president, Charles Taylor, was losing control even over Monrovia, the capital, where all sides were firing heavy artillery into office blocks and looting strategic spots such as the brewery. In August 2003 (see article), The Economist reported from that unhappy city that “famished townsfolk have already eaten their neighbours' dogs and are reduced to scrounging for snails.”

Today, thanks to the world's largest UN peacekeeping force, Liberia is calm. Some 15,000 blue helmets are keeping the streets more or less safe. There are still road blocks, but not the old sort, where militiamen stretched human intestines across the road as a signal to motorists to stop and be robbed. The UN road blocks are typically manned by disciplined Bangladeshis, of whom the locals vocally approve.

“They are very nice,” says Richard Dorbor, an office assistant in Buchanan, Liberia's main port. During the civil war, rebels looted the town clean: Mr Dorbor points to the dark patch on the wall where the kitchen sink used to be. But then the Bangladeshis came, overawed them and disarmed them, without a single casualty.

“In any group, there are good boys and bad boys,” says Colonel Anis Zaman, the Bangladeshi commander in Buchanan, relaxing in cricket whites on a Sunday. “With the bad boys, you have to be firm. You say: ‘If you want to be funny, look at our APCs [armoured personnel carriers] and machineguns. We can be funny, too. So let's just put down the guns and talk.'”

Scholars cannot agree how to define a failed state, but most concur that state failure is one of the world's gravest challenges. The World Bank frets about 30 “low-income countries under stress” (LICUS). Britain's Department for International Development (DFID) worries about 46 “fragile” states.

This article is concerned with the toughest cases: states that have lost control over most of their territory and stopped providing even the most basic services to their people. Only Somalia unambiguously fits this definition. A larger group of countries, mostly in Africa, are close to failure (see chart). Some, such as Zimbabwe, are cantering towards a cliff-edge. Others, having recently failed, appear to be recovering, if fitfully: Afghanistan, Haiti, Sierra Leone and Liberia all fall into this category

 

States can fail because of external shocks, or they can decay from within, or both. Afghanistan and Angola collapsed when their colonial overlords suddenly withdrew. In Sierra Leone and Congo, the state was looted into putrescence, thus inviting rebellion and ultimately, collapse.

It is tough to mend a failed state, but the fact that some formerly failed states are now doing quite well—eg, Mozambique and East Timor—shows that it is not impossible. And although treatment is costly—the UN mission in Liberia costs $800m a year—the cost of doing nothing is often higher. When governments collapse, it is not only bad for citizens who thereby lose the law's protection. It can also cause regional or even global repercussions.

Lawlessness, it is often argued, creates space for terrorists to operate. This is sometimes true: there are almost certainly al-Qaeda operatives lurking in Somalia and the wilder parts of Pakistan. But the most-cited example, Afghanistan, does not really support this argument. Osama bin Laden used Afghanistan as a base not because it was a failed state, but because its government invited him to.

The chief reason why the world should worry about state failure is that it is contagious. Liberia's civil war, for example, infected all three of its neighbours, thus destabilising a broad slice of West Africa. Congo's did the same for Central Africa.

Lisa Chauvet and Paul Collier of Oxford University have tried to measure the cost of a typical poor country becoming a LICUS, ie, as unstable as Nigeria or Indonesia, but nowhere near as bad as Liberia. They added together an estimate of growth forgone because of instability and an estimate of the spillover effect on neighbouring countries, and arrived at the startling figure of $82 billion.

Since this is more than the world's entire annual aid budget, it suggests that even costly interventions, if they help to stabilise a failing state, are likely to be worthwhile. Looking only at war-torn states, Mr Collier and Anke Hoeffler, also of Oxford, found that three types of intervention were highly cost-effective, even before one considers the value of saving lives.

One good idea is to try to restrict the sales of commodities that fuel war. Extractable minerals often provide both the means to fight and an incentive to do so: rebels in Sierra Leone, for example, dug diamonds to pay for arms, and fought to seize power so they could grab all the mines. A global embargo on “conflict diamonds” has reduced the flow of cash to similar rebel groups, thereby probably foreshortening a war or two at minimal cost.

Another worthwhile tactic is to offer generous aid to war-flattened countries, once they have stabilised a bit, so that they can rebuild their buildings and institutions. Mr Collier and Ms Hoeffler estimated that increasing aid to post-conflict countries by the equivalent of 2% of GDP per year for five years, starting half a decade after the war ended, would cost $13 billion but yield $31.5 billion in benefits.

By far the most cost-effective way of stabilising a failed state, however, is to send peacekeepers. Mr Collier and Ms Hoeffler calculated that $4.8 billion of peacekeeping yields nearly $400 billion in benefits. This figure should be treated with caution, since it is extrapolated from one successful example. In 2000, a small contingent of British troops smashed a vicious rebel army in Sierra Leone, secured the capital and rescued a UN peacekeeping mission from disaster.

Not all interventions go so well. But a study by the RAND Corporation, a think-tank, suggests that the UN, despite its well-publicised blunders, is quite good at peacekeeping. Of the eight UN-led missions it examined, seven brought sustained peace (Namibia, El Salvador, Cambodia, Mozambique, Eastern Slavonia, Sierra Leone and East Timor), while one (in Congo) did not. An earlier RAND study had looked at eight American-led missions and found that only four of the nations involved (Germany, Japan, Bosnia and Kosovo), were now at peace, while the other four (Somalia, Haiti, Afghanistan and Iraq) were not, or at any rate, not yet.

The comparison is not entirely fair. The Americans took on tougher targets: Iraq has more suicide-bombers than East Timor. On the other hand, the UN had punier forces and budgets at its disposal. The annual cost of all 11 UN peacekeeping operations today is less than America spends in a month in Iraq.

 

A cautionary but hopeful tale

Liberia illustrates some of the opportunities and pitfalls for peacemakers. The country was founded by freed American slaves in the 19th century, who at times enslaved the indigenous population, but also brought laws, roads and industry to Liberia. By the 1960s, the country was one of the most prosperous in Africa.

Its descent into mayhem began in 1980, when a semi-literate master-sergeant named Samuel Doe disembowelled the president in his bed and seized power. As violent as he was corrupt, Doe scared most of the middle class into emigrating, causing the average Liberian income to plummet by three-quarters in ten years.

Charles Taylor, an opportunist who had trained as a guerrilla in Libya, started a revolt against Doe in 1989. Doe was caught and filmed being tortured to death in 1990, but the civil war continued, on and off, for another 13 years. Mr Taylor emerged as the most fearsome warlord, and was elected president during a ceasefire in 1997, after promising voters that if they spurned him, he would go back to war. His campaign slogan was: “He killed my ma; he killed my pa; I'll vote for him.”

Once in the executive mansion, he ruled like a mafia boss, grabbing a slice of every sizeable business and wasting his rivals as if they were money. He did not even pretend to provide the services that normal governments do. Asked whether he would restore electricity to Monrovia, he advised people to buy generators. His misrule provoked a fresh civil war, and he used obscene tactics to defend his turf.

“I've never seen things like this before,” says Daniel Lomboy, a Filipino policeman hired by the UN to investigate Liberian war crimes. “In one mass grave, we found [the remains of] a pregnant woman whose fetus's bones were outside her stomach but inside her dress.” Mr Taylor's men sometimes took bets as to the sex of an unborn child, he explains, and then had a look.

Eventually, Mr Taylor made too many enemies. In return for a share of the loot, he armed rebels in all three neighbouring countries. Guinea and Côte d'Ivoire retaliated by backing Liberian rebel groups. In June 2003, George Bush said it was time for Mr Taylor to go, a suggestion he underlined by parking warships off Monrovia. Nigeria offered Mr Taylor sanctuary if he came quietly and ceased to meddle in Liberian politics. He flew into exile, where he remains, still plotting.

A peace deal brought the two anti-Taylor rebel groups into a power-sharing transitional government with some of Mr Taylor's former lieutenants. The United States, the UN and Nigeria insisted that those with the most blood on their hands should not be ministers. So the government now consists of personable but weak ministers with scary deputies. Elections are scheduled for October. In the meantime, the UN is trying to make the country safe for rough-and-ready democracy.

The UN secretary-general's “special representative” in Liberia, a forceful American called Jacques Klein, is the most powerful man in the country. He may lack an “executive mandate”, including the power to arrest people, such as the UN had in East Timor, but his budget is roughly ten times larger than the Liberian government's. A UN embargo on Liberia's main exports (timber and diamonds) remains in force, pending proof that the money is not falling into the wrong pockets.

Mr Klein put 48 Liberian “generals” (with noms de guerre such as “General Peanut Butter” and “General Fuck-Me-Quick”) on the UN payroll, so that they would help him disarm their men (and boys and girls). The ex-fighters were offered incentives to surrender their guns: $300 and help with school fees or vocational training. About 100,000 handed in weapons or ammunition, which is encouraging. But not everyone is happy.

Solomon Dennis, for example, was abducted from a scripture class when he was 13 and press-ganged into Charles Taylor's army. Now 18, he wants to resume his studies, but he complains that the school fees the UN promised him have not been paid, so he can't. Like most former fighters, who have typically learned the joys of consumerism by looting the towns they passed through, Mr Dennis is not content to go back to his village and be a peasant. In a country with almost no jobs, such desires can be dangerous.

Those who did not fight, meanwhile, think it unfair that the killers are rewarded. “They only help the bad people, not the good ones,” fumes Thomas Mambo, a former book-keeper who lost his home and job during the war and now squats with 75 other people in a blackened and gutted building that used to belong to Liberia's old ruling party, the True Whigs. “If the UN doesn't help us, we'll take up arms, too.”

Liberia is small (with a population of only 3m), accessible from the sea and blessedly free of citizens who imagine they have a sacred duty to kill peacekeepers. This may be why it has proven simpler to pacify than, for example, the vast and nearly landlocked Democratic Republic of Congo, where nine blue helmets from Bangladesh were killed last week.

But pacification is only the first step. To ensure that a recovering failed state does not fail again, it needs a government that is legitimate and competent enough not to invite another rebellion. And nation-building is the hardest task of all.

For an illustration of how utterly the Liberian state has decayed, consider the once-busy port at Buchanan. The railway that once brought iron ore there from an inland mine has been swallowed by the bush. The iron-ore processing depot on the quayside has been stripped to its girders, as have most other buildings. A single ship sits at an odd angle in the harbour, with a tree growing out of its deck. Four swaggering youths in flip-flops accost your correspondent and demand to know what he is doing. They introduce themselves as three majors and a colonel from the Liberian security forces.

Practically nothing works in Liberia. There is no piped water, no functioning justice system and the closest approximation to a middle class is 60,000 civil servants who have hardly been paid in 14 years. There are 450,000 prosperous and well-educated Liberians, but they live in America and show no sign of returning. Liberia is not even ranked on the UNDP's annual “human development index”, for lack of data. “We're fighting to get to the bottom of the list,” says the UN's Mr Klein.

The only large organisation that functions adequately in Liberia is the UN. Besides keeping the peace, it helps refugees return home, inoculates babies, feeds a fifth of the population and trains local teachers, policemen, judges, army officers and so forth. This is helpful, but it is hard to support such a weak government without supplanting it. Because the UN offers the best salaries in town, and actually pays them, it often ends up poaching the most able public servants.

The transitional government is better than its predecessor, in that it is less murderous. But it is not noticeably less corrupt. A senior UN official accuses it of making “no effort at all” to deliver social services.

The hope is that this will change after elections in October. There are dozens of possible candidates for the presidency, many of whom have no agenda beyond securing the top job, but there is at least a chance that someone honest will be elected. George Weah, a retired soccer star, is uniformly popular and far too rich to need to steal, but he has no political experience. The worst fear is that Charles Taylor or another warlord might sponsor a successful candidate and then pull the strings.

“Good governance has never crossed the doors of this country in 150 years,” admits Thomas Nimley, the foreign minister, “But now we are willing to learn.” Jerome Verdier, a human-rights lawyer in Monrovia, is less sanguine. “If the next government is as corrupt as the current one,” he says, “we'll have another war.”

If the UN were suddenly to pull out, Liberia would collapse again. But it won't pull out suddenly or soon. Sierra Leone, Liberia's neighbour, which collapsed just as bloodily in the late 1990s, offers a heartening example. Three years ago, it was in roughly the same situation as Liberia is today, held together only by 17,000 blue helmets. The peacekeepers have pulled out gradually, as the Sierra Leonean army has grown stronger with British training. After the last peacekeepers leave, Sierra Leone's elected government will still be shielded by a British promise to send back its troops if rebels attack it. The country is still poor and ill-governed, but it is no longer a charnel house, so it has a chance.

An important reason for optimism is that with the UN's help, Sierra Leone is holding to account those most responsible for despoiling it. A UN-backed special court indicted the 13 worst alleged war criminals. Two or three have since died, but David Crane, the chief prosecutor, argues that putting the others on trial strikes a blow against the culture of impunity that plagues Africa. Sierra Leoneans will see justice done on men who used to be untouchable. That could be the first step towards establishing the rule of law in a country that has never known it.

One indictee flagrantly evades arrest: Charles Taylor, whom the court is applying to have extradited from Nigeria. The Nigerians are not keen, having given him their word. But Mr Crane argues that Mr Taylor has violated the terms of his sanctuary agreement by continuing to meddle in Liberian politics, and predicts that he will soon be handed over.

Ultimately, fixing failed states is a job for the people who live in them. Outsiders can topple despots or crush rebels, and sometimes should. They can also offer cash and advice to help locals rebuild shattered institutions. But unless the fashion for colonialism returns, which it probably won't, they will not accept responsibility for governing the world's worst trouble spots. There will be no rest any time soon for the peacekeepers.