Editorial: UNMIL’s Gen. Daniel Opande’s Bravery, Proactive Diplomacy And Pragmatism
TWENTY-ONE YEARS (2003—2024) after General Daniel Opande’s arrival in Liberia, then a warring faction setting, the guns are still silent, which is testament of the marvelous work the Kenyan military professional assigned to UNMIL accomplished here.
GENERAL OPANDE’S MISSION to Liberia as the UNMIL Commander in 2003 to 2005 was to disarm more than 100,000 combatants, provide security as well as technical and logistical support for the electoral process that culminated in the peaceful democratic elections in 2005.
BEFORE HIS ARRIVAL in the country, everything had broken down, government collapsed, no effective security arrangement; the entire country was in turmoil and in grave danger of falling apart, while people were moving from place to place desperately in dire need of peace and food.
THE RETIRED LIEUTENANT General Opande successfully accomplished the mission because of his bravery and diplomacy, as he got the commanders of all the warring factions in the country to turn in their arms to the peacekeepers, and his pragmatism when it came to finding solutions to issues on the ground, like when the Monrovia-to-Buchanan road was closed by the combatants; he moved there and made sure that it was reopened.
HE WAS ALSO proactive because he engaged each and every leader of the warring factions in their stronghold, despite the associated threat and location, for discussion whenever danger or signs of disturbance seemed eminent.
COUNSELOR LAVELA SUPUWOOD, who was a member of the Lofa Defense Force (LDF), recalled that the UN peace effort in Liberia at that time took a dramatic turn when General Opande, Gordon-Somers, the Special Representative of Kofi Annan, UN Secretary General to Liberia and him flew in the UN helicopter to the National Patriotic Front of Liberia (NPFL)’s leader, Charles Taylor, in Gbarnga. According to him, after that interaction with Taylor, the peace process immediately commenced as instructions came from Washington, D.C.
JOHN T. RICHARDSON, head of the Charles Taylor’s National Security Agency, remarked that the gathering was unique as it is a reflecting moment, but pointed out the compelling need to address the concerns of the people that led to the war, while Counselor Kabineh Ja’neh also told the political leaders that failure on their part to learn the lesson pertaining to the root causes of the 14 years civil war in the country would be the greatest tragedy—more than the deaths of more than 250,000 people and the destruction of properties.