By Fred Oluoch, NAIROBI Kenya
“Silencing
the Guns”, the continental programme to end civil wars in Africa by the end of
this year, has been disrupted by the coronavirus pandemic.UN commanders in South Sudan inspect confiscated guns in 2014. 'Silencing the Guns', the continental programme to end civil wars in Africa, has been disrupted by the coronavirus pandemic.
The pandemic is exposing weaknesses
in governance, as youth unemployment and restlessness rises in already fragile
countries. This could trigger widespread unrest and test crisis management
systems on the continent.
These issues came up at a virtual
discussion by African security and policy experts on the impact of Covid-19 and
its implications on the Silencing the Guns 2020 programme, and whether the
pandemic could reverse the gains achieved so far.
Experts said that acute food
scarcity, increased gender-based and sexual violence, diminishing economic
opportunities, which has led to lost livelihoods as a result of the pandemic,
were more severe in countries with ongoing conflict.
“Covid-19 will do more harm in
regions experiencing conflicts. We must deal with security in the wake of the
pandemic,” said Andrews Atta Asamoah, a senior research fellow with the
Institute of Security Studies.
The webinar was convened by the
Silencing the Guns unit of the Peace and Security Department of the African
Union Peace and Security Council, and brought together experts to discuss the
impact of the pandemic on governance, security, children, women, youth and on
food security.
The Silencing the Guns 2020 programme
aims to achieve a conflict-free Africa, prevent genocide, make peace a reality
for all and rid the continent of wars and humanitarian disasters.
The regions expected to be most
affected are the Sahel, the Lake Chad Basin, Central African region, eastern
Congo, the Horn of Africa, Sudan, South Sudan and Libya. – The East African
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