home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- <text id=90TT2363>
- <link 91TT0394>
- <link 90TT2816>
- <link 90TT2123>
- <title>
- Sep. 10, 1990: Liberia:In The Heart Of Darkness
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- Sep. 10, 1990 Playing Cat And Mouse
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WORLD, Page 51
- LIBERIA
- In the Heart of Darkness
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>West African troops find there is no peace to keep where tribal
- carnage masquerades as war
- </p>
- <p>By Marguerite Michaels/Monrovia
- </p>
- <p> The civil war in Liberia is about hatred: personal hatred
- based on political rivalry, brutally used to turn tribe against
- tribe. Charles Taylor, head of the rebel National Patriotic
- Liberation Front, and President Samuel Doe, the harsh ruler of
- the country's 2.5 million people for the past decade, loathe
- each other. Says Taylor: "The only good Doe is a dead Doe." In
- the past eight months Taylor's 10,000-member army has overrun
- most of the country, leaving only small pieces of Monrovia, the
- capital, in Doe's control and setting the Gio tribe, which
- supports Taylor, against one of Liberia's smallest but most
- powerful tribes, Doe's people, the Krahn.
- </p>
- <p> Few soldiers or rebels have died in battle, but thousands
- of civilians have perished. Two weeks ago, two bodies lay by
- the side of the road leading to a Monrovia airport, hands tied
- behind their backs. A third man, denying he was a Krahn,
- pleaded with the rebels for his life--but to no avail.
- Creating yet more violence, Prince Yormie Johnson, a Gio, split
- away from Taylor last February. By the summer, Johnson and his
- few hundred men had swept into the center of the capital,
- taking on both Doe's and Taylor's forces.
- </p>
- <p> Last week, in an effort to halt the tribal carnage, 3,000
- troops of a five-nation West African peacekeeping force began
- to fan out in besieged Monrovia (pop. 500,000). Doe and Johnson
- welcomed the troops, but Taylor, challenging their legitimacy,
- vowed to kill them all. If the fighting cannot be stopped, the
- attempted overthrow of Doe could threaten the stability of the
- whole West Africa region. Already, the intervention has ignited
- bitter controversy among Liberia's neighbors.
- </p>
- <p> Taylor is unimpressed by outside efforts to calm the civil
- strife. "I am not going to roll over and play dead," he told
- TIME. "This is an attempt to rescue Doe. A peacekeeping force
- means all sides agree. We have not agreed. If we're attacked,
- the price will be expensive. The world is going to remember."
- </p>
- <p> Most of the world has paid little attention to the war, and
- Liberia's neighbors are only belatedly showing concern. When
- the Economic Community of West African States, a 16-nation body
- formed 15 years ago to promote regional cooperation, held an
- emergency summit in early August, only seven members bothered
- to attend. Determined to solve their problems without the help
- of uninterested superpowers, they hastily decided that ECOWAS
- should go into the peacekeeping business. To achieve a
- cease-fire in Liberia and supervise free elections, they created
- a West African force, the Economic Community Monitoring Group.
- Yet when the time came to pass out white ECOMOG helmets, only
- five countries sent troops: Nigeria, Ghana, Guinea, Sierra
- Leone and Gambia.
- </p>
- <p> Taylor does not trust any of them. "Peacekeeping?" he
- scoffs. "We've arrested Guinean soldiers here in Liberia. How
- can they come to keep the peace? We've captured Nigerian
- weapons from Doe's soldiers. How can you bring a jaguar into
- the house and say he has come to make the peace? ECOWAS is
- going to make this another Vietnam--a war that never ends."
- </p>
- <p> Whether Taylor has actually arrested Guinean soldiers or
- captured Nigerian weapons, the neutrality of the peacekeeping
- force is very much compromised by political friendships and
- tribal affinities. The stated purpose may be to restore order,
- but Liberia's rival leaders suspect that some peacekeepers are
- actively supporting the other side. Nigerian President Ibrahim
- Babangida has been a longtime ally of Doe's and has reportedly
- offered him asylum. Guinea and Sierra Leone are home to a large
- number of Mandingo, a tribe that has supported Doe and his
- Krahns.
- </p>
- <p> The Ivory Coast, a supporter of Taylor's and one of West
- Africa's dominant economies, did not bother to attend last
- month's summit. When the peacekeeping forces were deployed last
- week without having first achieved a cease-fire, Togo refused
- to participate. President Blaise Compaore of Burkina Faso
- promised to aid Taylor with his own troops if asked. Even the
- U.S. withdrew its original approval of ECOMOG, saying that
- without a cease-fire, there was no peace for any international
- force to keep.
- </p>
- <p> Taylor dismisses all criticism of his refusal to accept a
- cease-fire. "Why negotiate?" he says. "Is there any group that
- has taken nine-tenths of a country and then negotiated? Who's
- providing food to the people? Who's providing water? Who has
- put drugs in the hospitals? Haven't you seen my soldiers
- everywhere? We surround Monrovia. We are the government. Doe
- is the rebel."
- </p>
- <p> Taylor is called the President by more than just his
- followers and has named a cabinet of ministers. He travels in
- a presidential-style convoy, riding in a bulletproof
- taupe-colored Mercedes with the red flag of his army fluttering
- on the left fender and the Liberian flag on the right. A white
- police motorcycle stolen from Doe leads the motorcade, while
- two or three cars stuffed with armed men trail Taylor's car.
- Bringing up the rear is an antiaircraft gun balanced on the
- back of a pickup truck.
- </p>
- <p> The "President" receives visitors in his "executive mansion"--the Coca-Cola bottling plant in Paynesville, a suburb east
- of Monrovia--wearing a bulletproof vest, surrounded by
- gun-toting bodyguards garbed in strange, looted clothing.
- Groups of soldiers await his bidding nearby in the garage; they
- are mostly children in dirty T-shirts and ragged shorts, a
- rifle in one hand, a bottle of Sprite in the other.
- </p>
- <p> The war has taken a heavy toll. In Nimba County the villages
- were never heavily populated. Now they are deserted: some
- people have joined Taylor, some are dead, most have fled in
- fear. The county produces 25% of Liberia's rice, and a few
- paddies along the road still flourish, but there is no one to
- harvest the crop. The iron-ore mines at Yekepa once earned 70%
- of Liberia's foreign currency, but work has been suspended
- since late January. Whatever glory the war once held here has
- dimmed. At checkpoints the youthful soldiers who jauntily
- display human skulls with sunglasses perched over the empty eye
- sockets are themselves dull-eyed with hunger. Before they let
- a car pass through, they ask for bread.
- </p>
- <p> Taylor's so-called capital is Kakata, about 35 miles
- northeast of Monrovia. He has distributed thousands of bags of
- stolen Pakistani rice there, and the rebels say volunteer
- doctors from the relief agency Medecins sans Frontieres are
- working in the hospital.
- </p>
- <p> But Kakata is without almost everything else. At night,
- lights burn in just three houses, powered by privately owned
- generators. There is no water. The streets were once lively
- with Mandingo shops; now much of Kakata is burned and looted.
- Any Mandingo who did not manage to escape was "killed like a
- chicken," boasts a rebel. Every morning hundreds of people
- gather alongside the road, waiting for the occasional bus or
- truck to take them east to safety. If they are lucky, they will
- join 300,000 other refugees who have fled this war. "Doe started
- the killing 10 years ago," says an old man waiting with his
- family. "Who will stop it now?"
- </p>
- <p> Few think that ECOMOG can. While President Dawda Jawara of
- Gambia played host at a meeting in the capital of Banjul to
- choose an interim President for Liberia, men with guns were
- very much in control. Taylor forcibly moved nearly 2,000
- Nigerians and Guineans, mostly civilians seeking refuge in
- their embassy compounds in Monrovia, south to the port city of
- Buchanan, out of the reach of rescue. With Taylor's rebels
- shooting at Nigerian soldiers and Burkina Faso sending in
- troops to support Taylor, escalation of the war has already
- begun.
- </p>
- <p> "Want a short-term worst-case scenario?" asked a Western
- diplomat in the Ivory Coast. "Everyone divides into constituent
- parts: Doe, Taylor and ECOMOG. Want a long-term worst-case
- scenario? Doe goes back to his Krahn in Grand Gedeh County.
- Taylor goes back to where he started in Nimba. And it's Doe
- against Taylor." All over again.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-