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    Farewell to wars, Africa gears up for revival
    (Xinhua)
    Updated: 2005-12-10 13:22

    A continent whose potentials long confined by not only the reality, but also the perception, of poverty, conflict and disease, Africa has been held back in nearly every aspect of development as the rest of the world excel in areas of their respective strength.

    However, in the year 2005, this disastrous and conflict-ridden continent seemed to have caught a glimpse of ways out of this vicious circle of stagnation and pessimism. The countries are gearing up for an overdue revival and probably a last-minute opportunity to board the train of growth, before it's gone for good.

    BE COOL, CONTINENT-WIDE

    Nearly incessant conflicts have depicted Africa through the world's media in people's eyes as an unsafe continent, heaven for warlords ready to ruin the wealth of a nation for his own profit, and paradise for corrupt officials who look after their own bank accounts by taking advantage of impunity endemic in conflict zones. But the tide is turning, as key governments and Pan-African bodies such as the African Union go an extra mile to solve conflicts that have paralyzed the economies in hotspots and impacted, at the least, negatively on the whole continent.

    In January this year, the Sudanese government and southern rebels signed a comprehensive peace accord in Nairobi, culminating two years of peace process to end the 21-year-old civil war in southern Sudan, the longest-running in Africa.

    The Sudanese civil war broke out in 1983 when the rebels took up arms fighting for self-determination in the southern part of the country. It is estimated that two decades of conflict have claimed 2 million lives, primarily from war-induced famine and diseases, and displaced over 4 million others. The peace accord is expected to usher in stability and development for the south, and the broader neighboring areas.

    The Great Lakes region, which used to be the fuse of conflicts in the whole of Africa, is making rapid progress in ethnic reconciliation and peace process.

    Ten years after the genocide that claimed an estimated 800,000 lives and tore apart the social fabric, Rwanda is now the exemplar in national reconciliation and reconstruction.

    In neighboring Burundi, which has suffered similar ethnic conflicts, the presidential elections in August ended a transitional period following decades of ethnic feud. Pierre Nkurunziza, a former Hutu rebel leader, took the helm of the tiny central African country, pledging to bring Hutus and Tutsis together.

    In the turbulent Democratic Republic of the Congo, thousands who had fled have returned to register for a vote scheduled before June 2006. The vote will be the country's first in 45 years.

    Not surprisingly, at the end of a UN Security Council mission to the Great Lakes area last month, the head of the delegation said that compared to two years earlier, when he was on a similar tour in the region, the situation has improved markedly.

    "We are profoundly impressed with the positive developments particularly in the Democratic Republic of the Congo and Burundi," Jean-Marc de la Sabliere, France's ambassador to the UN, who led the 15-member delegation, said at a news conference in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania.

    "Relations between countries in the region are also encouraging, " he said.

    Encouraging developments also emerged in Liberia, a country notorious for decades of bloody conflicts and coups, and its governments' and rebels' roles in the volatility of the whole west Africa, foreign observers have praised the presidential election in November, in which Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf was voted the first female president in Africa. Liberians are expecting the elections will mark a departure from war to lasting peace and stability in a country rich in rubber, timber, iron ore, diamond and gold as well as fertile soil.

    Somalia, the lawless Horn of Africa nation that early this year has moved its transitional federal government back home from Kenya, is beginning reconstruction after more than a decade of factional warfare, although the process is still haunted by insecurity, infighting and pirates that roam free along the country's 3,000-km long coastline.
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