« Ce que nous voulons, c’est une Commission vérité et réconciliation ». La justice transitionnelle en Mauritanie : un modèle, sa promotion et des évitements politiques

In 2007, when Sidi Ould Cheikh Abdellahi came to power, he launched a process of “national reconciliation” which was intended to bring about public recognition of the violence from the 1980s and 1990s and its victims. But very quickly, the measures in favor of that policy of recognition and the poss...

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Main Author: Sidi N’Diaye
Format: Article
Language:fra
Published: CNRS Éditions 2022-01-01
Series:L’Année du Maghreb
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/anneemaghreb/10070
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author Sidi N’Diaye
author_facet Sidi N’Diaye
author_sort Sidi N’Diaye
collection DOAJ
description In 2007, when Sidi Ould Cheikh Abdellahi came to power, he launched a process of “national reconciliation” which was intended to bring about public recognition of the violence from the 1980s and 1990s and its victims. But very quickly, the measures in favor of that policy of recognition and the possibility of seeing the whole truth emerge, deplored the army Generals, on top of the former regime. They seized power in August 2008. With the General Ould Abdel Aziz who took over from Ould Cheikh Abdellahi, the process of national reconciliation brought about confusion and ambiguity. The work of military authorities, in collaboration with a group of victims, seemed to many others to be an attempt to remove the painful past. It was therefore urgent, according to the “excluded” victims, to return to the negotiation table. Facing the unwillingness of the authorities to return to the negotiations, some victims’ groups and human rights organizations, along with international NGOs, tackled the issue over the violence from the past and its consequences by resorting to a mechanism to end the crisis, which was the subject of promising discussions during the short mandate of Ould Cheikh Abdellahi: transitional justice. Based on interviews with victims involved in associative and political bodies, on public statements from associative leaders and the work of victims’ associations and of international NGOs, this article reports on the conditions to introduce transitional justice into the debate on “national reconciliation”, but also on the work of promoting this model by associative actors and their international partners. In addition, as this promotional effort has met with the reluctance of the official authorities, the article looks back at the motivations of the latter, before concluding wih the ongoing demands of victim’s organizations.
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spelling doaj.art-eeb26b168ccd434cb5adf7de632fa69f2024-02-13T14:54:24ZfraCNRS ÉditionsL’Année du Maghreb1952-81082109-94052022-01-01269711810.4000/anneemaghreb.10070« Ce que nous voulons, c’est une Commission vérité et réconciliation ». La justice transitionnelle en Mauritanie : un modèle, sa promotion et des évitements politiquesSidi N’DiayeIn 2007, when Sidi Ould Cheikh Abdellahi came to power, he launched a process of “national reconciliation” which was intended to bring about public recognition of the violence from the 1980s and 1990s and its victims. But very quickly, the measures in favor of that policy of recognition and the possibility of seeing the whole truth emerge, deplored the army Generals, on top of the former regime. They seized power in August 2008. With the General Ould Abdel Aziz who took over from Ould Cheikh Abdellahi, the process of national reconciliation brought about confusion and ambiguity. The work of military authorities, in collaboration with a group of victims, seemed to many others to be an attempt to remove the painful past. It was therefore urgent, according to the “excluded” victims, to return to the negotiation table. Facing the unwillingness of the authorities to return to the negotiations, some victims’ groups and human rights organizations, along with international NGOs, tackled the issue over the violence from the past and its consequences by resorting to a mechanism to end the crisis, which was the subject of promising discussions during the short mandate of Ould Cheikh Abdellahi: transitional justice. Based on interviews with victims involved in associative and political bodies, on public statements from associative leaders and the work of victims’ associations and of international NGOs, this article reports on the conditions to introduce transitional justice into the debate on “national reconciliation”, but also on the work of promoting this model by associative actors and their international partners. In addition, as this promotional effort has met with the reluctance of the official authorities, the article looks back at the motivations of the latter, before concluding wih the ongoing demands of victim’s organizations.https://journals.openedition.org/anneemaghreb/10070Mauritanianational reconciliationvictims« passif humanitaire »transitional justice
spellingShingle Sidi N’Diaye
« Ce que nous voulons, c’est une Commission vérité et réconciliation ». La justice transitionnelle en Mauritanie : un modèle, sa promotion et des évitements politiques
L’Année du Maghreb
Mauritania
national reconciliation
victims
« passif humanitaire »
transitional justice
title « Ce que nous voulons, c’est une Commission vérité et réconciliation ». La justice transitionnelle en Mauritanie : un modèle, sa promotion et des évitements politiques
title_full « Ce que nous voulons, c’est une Commission vérité et réconciliation ». La justice transitionnelle en Mauritanie : un modèle, sa promotion et des évitements politiques
title_fullStr « Ce que nous voulons, c’est une Commission vérité et réconciliation ». La justice transitionnelle en Mauritanie : un modèle, sa promotion et des évitements politiques
title_full_unstemmed « Ce que nous voulons, c’est une Commission vérité et réconciliation ». La justice transitionnelle en Mauritanie : un modèle, sa promotion et des évitements politiques
title_short « Ce que nous voulons, c’est une Commission vérité et réconciliation ». La justice transitionnelle en Mauritanie : un modèle, sa promotion et des évitements politiques
title_sort ce que nous voulons c est une commission verite et reconciliation la justice transitionnelle en mauritanie un modele sa promotion et des evitements politiques
topic Mauritania
national reconciliation
victims
« passif humanitaire »
transitional justice
url https://journals.openedition.org/anneemaghreb/10070
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