The response to our Special Edition on War and Peace in Africa demonstrated
the depth of passion provoked by that subject on the continent.
Yet, to bring about real change in the status quo, we must accept
responsibility. Real change begins when we prioritise solutions
above excuses, when we focus implacably on the true victims.
Who are those victims today? Once again,
the statistics point the way: to the most sick, most hungry, the
most broken… the African continent accommodates us all, yet,
this continent that makes the least weapons also fights the most
wars – and has the largest refugee populations and war casualties
in the world. This is taking ‘accommodation’ one step
too far.
Trade, particularly trade in armaments,
never exists in a vacuum. There is always a moral scale, and much
of the transactions in the African arms trade will be found on closer
examination, to resemble the trade in the dentures of victims on
their way to gas chambers.
The state of the Arms Trade today permits
a robbery of innocents. It is murder by proxy for short-sighted
profits. This situation gives us a responsibility beyond literature,
beyond mere editorials. It calls us to action. And it is a call
founded on this principle:
Developed countries that sell armaments
to illegal and immoral governments in Africa are waging a proxy
war against unarmed populations. They must be held accountable for
the carnage caused by their weapons. Governments and multinationals
that accept money from brigands and illegal regimes are no better
than receivers of stolen property. At best, they appoint themselves
trustees of the wealth of the people they dispossess - to the value
of their arms transactions. These funds should be disgorged to succour
the dispossessed.
Dictators do not become bloodthirsty
scourges on their people, on their own resources. They are mostly
armed and enabled to do this, and this, by countries that often
espouse scrupulous ethics on their own shores.
The reasoning behind our Call to Action
can be simply explained: the young public institutions, like police
and law courts, of many African nations have been so subverted by
ruling cliques that they have no independent will of their own;
developed countries and multinational corporations that deal with
those countries are liable, morally – and ultimately, legally
– to account to the people of the victim countries, for transactions that are manifestly contrary
to their public interest.
In other words, forget about calls
for reparations for the Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade, which was in
part enabled by the arms ‘traded’ between Western countries
and African despots, but do return the millions raked in last week,
last year, last decade as a result of the arms traded with today’s
African despots. Today’s arms trade may be as ‘legally
justified’ as slavery and apartheid was in their time, but
– make no mistake – they are just as iniquitous. We
must not wait another hundred years, to recognise in retrospect
the evil that is happening right before our eyes.
This is a simple call for us to disengage
from a public whose passivity is the problem, from an intellectual vanguard whose incuriosity permits the
perpetration of avoidable violence against innocent civilians in
Africa and elsewhere. All over the world, our governments, and companies
we own and work for, take these actions in our names. They are accountable
to us. Please support this campaign to
Close the flow of armaments to war zones.
Encourage African countries to commit to pegging expenditure
on Defence at 1% of GDP or less, and to
Create a Continental Fund to build civil Infrastructure,
to establish and strengthen civilian-based mediation frameworks
and to permanently rehabilitate the victims of war and conflict.
Thank you.
Chuma Nwokolo
Publisher,
African Writing.
Please
send me some information.
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