Human rights report: Private security companies in Africa violate human rights

On the sidelines of its participation in the activities of the 68th session of the African Commission on Human and Peoples' Rights, the Maat Foundation for Peace, Development and Human Rights released a new study entitled “Private Military Companies in Africa and Their Impact on Human Rights Case Studies: Libya and the Central African Republic”.
The study traces the development of private security
companies in Africa and their role, which is not only limited to providing
security but also assisting governments or implementing their own agendas for
their countries. It emphasized that these companies had created a dangerous
“gray zone” in which private military companies operate. The paper focused on
studying the cases of Libya and the Central African Republic, and it dealt with
the impact of these private companies on the human rights situations in both
countries.
In this regard, Maat Director Ayman Okeil stated that Libya’s
former Government of National Accord (GNA) received covert and overt
international support from a large number of actors through security companies,
which turned the country into a proxy conflict, in light of the maze of private
military actors that have been recruited, especially from Russia (Wagner Group)
and Turkey. Okeil also warned of the indiscriminate attacks caused by private
security companies there, which caused the death of thousands of civilians, the
destruction of vital infrastructure, disappearances, arbitrary detention,
unlawful killings, and torture, to name a few, all without any legal liability
for them or their states.
Okeil pointed out that the increasing threat in the Central
African Republic, in which the situation has escalated into greater violence
since 2013, has led to an increasing role for private security companies,
especially Russian, which have been used to respond to violence and killings
against civilians there. He called on the international community to clarify
the “gray zone” contained in international law about the legal status of these
companies, which gave them a greater opportunity for lack of accountability for
themselves or their countries.
It is worth noting that Maat Foundation for Peace,
Development and Human Rights is currently participating as an observer member
of the African Commission on Human and Peoples' Rights in its sixty-eighth
session, and it is holding awareness seminars on the sidelines of the session's
work.