Black Mauritanians: compensation not enough

Twenty years after a military regime killed hundreds of mostly black Mauritanians, another military government is promising to compensate their families. While some victims’ associations welcome reparations, other affected families and many NGOs say compensation equals impunity for those who ordered the killings—and remain in power.

“Three of the officers responsible for extrajudicial killings in the 1990s are once again in power in the military council,” said Abdel Jemal Nasser Ould Yessa with the Mauritanian human rights group SOS Esclaves. “They have killed once before. What is to stop them from killing again?”

Following an August 2008 coup that ousted President Sidi Mohamed Ould Cheikh Abdallahi, a 12-member military council declared itself the desert country’s new government. On March 25, coup leader Mohamed Ould Abdel Aziz pledged in a ceremony in KaĂ©di—a community 430 kilometers south of the capital Nouakchott that is home to many of the victims—that the government would compensate families of 244 identified victims with cash or property.

Former Peulh (Fulani) army lieutenant Abou Sy, who told the UN news agency IRIN he was unjustly imprisoned after witnessing widespread atrocities, said victims’ families need such recognition to honor the memory of those killed.

Border violence
In the late 1980s tensions grew between Senegal and Mauritania after Mauritania jailed black army officers—many with Peulh family ties across the border in Senegal—following a coup attempt against the Arab-dominated government of President Maaouiya Sid’Ahmed Ould Taya.

A 1989 land dispute between herders and farmers fueled political and ethnic tensions on both sides of the border; after thousands of light-skinned Mauritanians living in Senegal were expelled, the Mauritanian military responded with widespread reprisals that forced out tens of thousands of people, the majority of whom were black. More than 500 Mauritanians died during the crackdown, according to 1994 investigations by Human Rights Watch and the International Federation of Human Rights (FIDH).

Compensation
Officials and victims’ families declined to give figures for the reparations. “No amount of money, none, would equal the value of a human life,” said Abdel Aziz at the ceremony.

But money cannot equate—and could even obstruct—justice, said Fatimata M’Baye, president of the Mauritanian Association of Human Rights. “To compensate is not enough. The killers have to be brought to justice, if not, that [reparations] opens the way for impunity.”

Widow MaĂŻmouna Sy told IRIN her husband, a customs official, was killed in 1990 because he was black. “If only [former President] Maaouiya Sid’Ahmed Ould Taya were brought to justice, I would finally have peace.” Ould Taya was overthrown in a 2005 coup and now lives in exile in Qatar.

Ousted President Abdallahi had pledged during the 2007 campaign to pursue national unity and reconciliation related to the 1990s murders. In November 2007, Abdallahi—Mauritania’s first elected civilian leader—convened a roundtable on national unity. Nine months later he was deposed and put under house arrest when the military council took power.

The military council led by Abdel Aziz has pledged to hold a presidential election on June 6. In interviews with Arab media Abdel Aziz has said he will honor the constitution, which prevents the military from holding office, by resigning from the military 40 days before the election—in which he will be a candidate. (IRIN, April 1)

See our last post on the struggle in Mauritania.