Africa should be an "army-free zone"...no country south of the Sahara needs
or can afford a military.

Bruce



LIBERIA: Lack of funds delays formation of new army

[This report does not necessarily reflect the views of the United Nations]


MONROVIA, 7 March (IRIN) - Liberia's transitional government is
desperately seeking the funds needed to disband its existing army before
it can form a new national force, Defence Minister Daniel Chea said on
Monday.

Chea told IRIN that the power-sharing government needed US$18.3 million to
disband the current army, which has been in disarray since the start of
the civil war in December 1989 when most of its senior commanders defected
to rebel factions.

Putting the current strength of the Armed Forces of Liberia (AFL) at about
15,000 troops, Chea said the funding was needed "to pay off those former
soldiers who will be retired and also settle the severance benefits of
other soldiers who will not form part of the AFL".

Disarmament and demobilisation of militia fighters and rebel factions
involved in Liberia's 14-year civil war ended last October. The AFL, along
with the two rebel factions who fought the civil war, was disarmed by UN
peacekeepers and all of the rebel movements were disbanded, including
militias groups loyal to Taylor.

The recruitment and training of a new broad-based national army had been
set to begin in March or April but Chea said the start of the
restructuring exercise had been delayed because the Liberian government
are having problems finding the cash.

"According to our plans, if the government had made the money available,
the first battalion of the new national army should have been ready by
December," Chea said. "But this is unlikely."

Liberia's chief peace mediator, the former Nigerian head of state General
Abdulsalami Abubakar, told reporters in the capital, Monrovia on Saturday
that the 15-nation block of Economic Community of West African States
(ECOWAS) was worried about the delay.

ECOWAS brokered a comprehensive peace agreement in August 2003 that ended
Liberia's civil war.

"The new AFL is going to be trained by the Americans, but they can not
come in unless the government disbands the AFL. We are looking for funding
from our international partners to do that," Abubakar said.

The US government has pledged US$35 million to help train a new army but
wants the Liberian government to pay off current soldiers first.

In February, Andy Michels, a US State Department official, told IRIN that
DynCorp International, a private company based in Reston, Virginia, would
carry out the restructuring of a 4,000-strong new national army.

DynCorp, which has just been acquired by the US venture capital group
Veritas Capital, specializes in security and aircraft maintenance
services. Over the past three years it has been hired by the US government
to train new police forces in Afghanistan and Iraq.

During the civil war years, there were several attempts to restructure the
Liberian army but none of them successful.

Under the Abuja peace accord that led to a break in the fighting in 1996
and general elections in 1997, the West African peacekeeping force
(ECOMOG) was supposed to retrain a new national army based on fair ethnic
and geographical representation.

But Charles Taylor, who won the 1997 elections, sidelined the issue,
saying the restructuring was solely a matter for the elected government. A
year later his government established a commission which recommended a
6,000-strong army but the proposal was never implemented.

Then in 1999, civil conflict erupted again and plans for the army fell by
the wayside as Taylor favoured his former rebel fighters, who formed
militia groups that battled rebel insurgents until 2003 when a peace deal
was finally imposed and Taylor fled into exile.






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