I think we already have all the three pillars at work in the Congo. We have a government that lacks the capacity, but of course is charged with its national duty. We have an international community that is helping the government. And we have a force that by UN standards has a very strong mandate to protect civilians. And we know that women and children are among the most victimized civilians.
So far, all these three pillars working together are not improving the situation. That's because I do believe we have to shift from dealing with the armed groups, trying to disarm them... While protection of civilians is critically important, we need to shift towards a peace process, a peace process that will bring in all the countries of the region that have a stake.
Now, instead of this, two...in terms of more countries that are overpopulated, open up regional arrangements that will bring all the countries of the region into the picture to create regional peace, security, and stability. The regional approach is effective because countries feel they are in the same boat. They are faced with the same problems; they have to work together to help one another. For instance, ECOWAS has been relatively successful in doing that for the countries of west Africa.
I've just come from Guinea and had discussions in Ghana and Guinea. I was supposed to go to Nigeria. There is a willingness there to work with the international community and to work with my mandate for early prevention. There is already a process going on in the Great Lakes region that also needs support. The thing about these regional initiatives, as we have seen in Darfur with the AU forces, is that there may be the will but the capacity is lacking. And support for the capacity of these countries to be able to do what is in their own regional interest is critically important.
Support can come in a wide variety of forms. We need to get the situation right. If I go into a country using my framework of analysis and I come back and say that the core of the problem is poverty, is resource-sharing, is human rights violations, has to do with political exclusion...
We see what happened in Kenya, where, in the end, despite the elections determining a winner and a loser, they had to come to a government of national unity. The same is being done in Zimbabwe. We have to transcend the feeling that democracy simply means elections with a winner and a loser. In the western context, there is respectful opposition for a minority. Being in or being out does not mean you gain or lose everything. But we tend to see elections these days as being democracy, when that is only a small part of what democracy should be about.