Accord de cessation des hostilités en République Centrafricaine (Brazzaville Agreement on Cessation of Hostilities)
- Country/entityCentral African Republic
- RegionAfrica (excl MENA)
- Agreement nameAccord de cessation des hostilités en République Centrafricaine (Brazzaville Agreement on Cessation of Hostilities)
- Date23 Jul 2014
- Agreement statusMultiparty signed/agreed
- Interim arrangementYes
- Agreement/conflict levelIntrastate/intrastate conflict ()
- StageCeasefire/related
- Conflict natureGovernment
- Peace processCAR: coups and rebellions process
- PartiesOnt Signé: Les ex-Combattants et Eléments armés
Pour le Front Populaire pour la Renaissance de la Centrafrique (FPRC),
Géneral Mohamed MOUSSA DHAFANE
Pour les anti-Balaka,
Monsieur Patrice Edouard NGAISSONA
Pour le Front Democratique du Peuple Centrafricain (FDPC),
Monsieur André Le-Gaillard RINGUI
Pour Révolution et Justice (RJ),
Monsieur Armel SAYO
Pour le Mouvement de Libération Centrafricaine pour la Justice (MLCJ),
Monsieur ABAKAR SABONE
Pour l'Union des forces Républicaines (UPR)
Monsieur Florian N'DJADDER BEDAY
Pour l'Union des Forces Républiques Fondamentales (UFRF)
Monsieur Dieu-benit GBEYA-KIKOBE - Third partiesEn présence de:
Gouvernement de Transition:
Le Ministre des Affaires Etrangères, de li'Integration Africaine et de la Francophonie,
Son Excellence Toussaint KONGO-DOUDOU
Conseil National de Transition,
Honorable Alexandre Ferdinand N'GUENDET
Alternative Citoyenne pour la Démocratie et la Paix (ACDP)
Monsieur Enoch DERANT LAKOUE
Ancienne Majorité Présidentielle
Monsieur Laurent NGON-BABA
Groupement des Partis Politiques/Républicains Travaillistes Légalistes (GPP/RTL),
Monsieur Bertin BEA
Union des Partis Politiques pour la Reconstruction Nationale (UPPRN),
Pierre Abraham MBOKANI
Rassemblement des autres Partis Politiques
Monsieur Auguste BOUKANGA
Partis Politiques sans Plateforme
Monsieur Henri GOUANDIA
Personnalités Indépendantes:
- Madame Alphonsine BOGANDA-YANGONGO
- Monsieur Stève KOBA
Conseil National de la Jeunesse (CNJ)
- Monsieur Félix Wulfrand RIVA
- Monsieur Abdel-Aziz AROUFAЇ
Organisation des Femmes Centrafricaines (OFCA)
Madame Marie-Annick SERVICE
Comité Consultatif des Femmes Leaders,
Dr. SOKAMBI DIBERT BEKOY
Haut Conseil de la Communication,
Monsieur José Richard POUAMBI
Syndicats des Travailleurs,
Monsieur Michel LOUDEGUE
Conféderation Nationale des Agriculteurs et éleveurs
Madame Brigitte ANDARA
Confessions Religieuses:
- Monseigneur Dieudonné NZAPALAINGA
- IMAM KOBINE LAYAMA
Conseil Inter-ONG en Centrafrique (CIONGCA)
Monsieur Célestin NGAKOLA
Groupement Interprofessionnel Centrafrique (GICA),
Monsieur Giles POTOLO NGBANGANDIMBO
La Diaspora,
Monsieur Maurice OUAMBO
Déplacés Internes,
Monsieur Jean Clause MALABI
Communautés à Risques:
- Monsieur ATAHIROU BALLA DODO
- Madame ADJA ASTA MOUSSA
La Médiation Internationale
Pour Les Nations Unies
Le Représentant Spécial du Secrétaire Général de l'ONU en Afrique Centrale,
Monsieur Abdoulaye BATHILY
Pour L'Union Africaine
Le Vice-Médiateur,
Monsieur SOUMAILOU BOUBEY MAIGA
Pour la CEEAC
Le Rapporteur
Le Secrétaire Général de la CEEAC
Ambassadeur Ahmad ALLAM-MI
Le Médiateur international
Le Président de la République du Congo
Son Excellence Monsieur Denis SASSOU N'GUESSO - DescriptionA Short agreement ceasing hostilities between the conflict parties. The agreement covers ceasefire provisions, DDR, and some broader humanitarian issues.
- Agreement document
- Agreement document (original language)
Groups
- Children/youthGroups→Children/youth→SubstantivePage 2, Article 2
The cessation of hostilities implies:
...
• The cessation of all acts of violence against civil and military populations, and respect for and protection of human rights. These acts of violence include summary executions, torture, harassment, burning of villages and public and private property, destruction of religious buildings, pillage, the arbitrary detention and execution of civilian and military personnel, recruitment of child soldiers, sexual violence and arming civilians;
Page 3, Article 5
The parties also agree to:
...
d. To end and prevent any future violations of children, in particular murder, mutilation, exploitation, rape and other violence
e. To end the recruitment of child soldiers, in line with the African Charter for the Rights and Welfare of the Child, the Convention on the Rights of the Child, and the Optional Protocol on the Convention on the Rights of the Child on the involvement of children in armed conflict. - Disabled persons
No specific mention.
- Elderly/age
No specific mention.
- Migrant workers
No specific mention.
- Racial/ethnic/national groupGroups→Racial/ethnic/national group→SubstantivePage 2, Article 2
The cessation of hostilities implies:
...
• The Parties to desist from all propaganda, and discourse of hatred and division based on religious, tribal or partisan allegiance; and to put an end to acts of intolerance and media campaigns liable to provoke religious or political confrontation; - Religious groupsGroups→Religious groups→RhetoricalPage 1, PREAMBLE
...
Considering the enthusiasm across the nation, particularly among the institutions of the Transition, in the living forces of the Nation including the religious authorities, civil society and the political parties, to build a peaceful society and national agreement, by supporting the present Transition framework.Groups→Religious groups→SubstantivePage 2, Article 2
The cessation of hostilities implies:
...
• The Parties to desist from all propaganda, and discourse of hatred and division based on religious, tribal or partisan allegiance; and to put an end to acts of intolerance and media campaigns liable to provoke religious or political confrontation; - Indigenous people
No specific mention.
- Other groups
No specific mention.
- Refugees/displaced personsGroups→Refugees/displaced persons→SubstantivePage 1, PREAMBLE
...
Considering the African Union Convention on the protection and assistance of displaced persons in Africa, signed in Kampala on October 23 2009
Page 4, Article 6
The parties undertake to:
a. Respect free movement in general, and in particular of humanitarian convoys, as well as humanitarian enclaves, and to create favourable conditions for assisting refugees and displaced persons
b. To promote a favourable social and security environment for the return of refugees and displaced persons to their communities.
Page 4, Article 7
A priority programme must be implemented urgently in order to:
a. Create the necessary conditions for the return, reinstallation and reinsertion of persons displaced by the conflict - Social class
No specific mention.
Gender
- Women, girls and genderPage 1, PREAMBLE
...
Considering the ongoing desire of Her Excellency Madame Catherine SAMBA-PANZA, Head of the State of Transition, reiterated in various speeches (Brussels, Paris, Oslo, Malabo) and her last address to the Nation on July 4, 2014, to promote political dialogue and national reconciliation among all the sons and daughters of Central Africa
Page 2, Article 2
The cessation of hostilities implies:
...
• The cessation of all acts of violence against civil and military populations, and respect for and protection of human rights. These acts of violence include summary executions, torture, harassment, burning of villages and public and private property, destruction of religious buildings, pillage, the arbitrary detention and execution of civilian and military personnel, recruitment of child soldiers, sexual violence and arming civilians;
Page 3, The ex-combatants and Central African armed elements agree the following, Article 5
The parties also agree to:
...
b. Prohibit and condemn all violence, including sexual violence, against civilian and military populations
...
d. To end and prevent any future violations of children, in particular murder, mutilation, exploitation, rape and other violence
Page 8, (signed) In the presence of:
...Organisation des Femmes Centrafricaines (OFCA) [Organisation of Central African Women]
Madame Marie-Annick SERVICE
...Comité Consultatif des Femmes Leaders [Consultation Committee of Women Leaders]
Dr. SOKAMBI DIBERT BEKOY - Men and boysGender→Men and boys→Gender neutral wordingPage 1, PREAMBLE
...
Considering the ongoing desire of Her Excellency Madame Catherine SAMBA-PANZA, Head of the State of Transition, reiterated in various speeches (Brussels, Paris, Oslo, Malabo) and her last address to the Nation on July 4, 2014, to promote political dialogue and national reconciliation among all the sons and daughters of Central Africa - LGBTI
No specific mention.
- Family
No specific mention.
State definition
- Nature of state (general)
No specific mention.
- State configurationPage 3, Article 3
As soon as the present Agreement enters into force:
...
d. The Parties undertake to reject any project to divide up the Central African Republic. - Self determination
No specific mention.
- Referendum
No specific mention.
- State symbols
No specific mention.
- Independence/secession
No specific mention.
- Accession/unification
No specific mention.
- Border delimitation
No specific mention.
- Cross-border provision
No specific mention.
Governance
- Political institutions (new or reformed)
No specific mention.
- Elections
No specific mention.
- Electoral commission
No specific mention.
- Political parties reform
No specific mention.
- Civil societyPage 1, PREAMBLE
...
Considering the enthusiasm across the nation, particularly among the institutions of the Transition, in the living forces of the Nation including the religious authorities, civil society and the political parties, to build a peaceful society and national agreement, by supporting the present Transition framework - Traditional/religious leaders
No specific mention.
- Public administration
No specific mention.
- Constitution
No specific mention.
Power sharing
- Political power sharing
No specific mention.
- Territorial power sharing
No specific mention.
- Economic power sharing
No specific mention.
- Military power sharingPower sharing→Military power sharing→ProportionalityArticle 8: The parties will establish a committee to monitor implementation of the present agreement as follows:
1. 01 representative per politico-‐military group; 2. G8-‐RCA;
3. 06 representatives of the Transition Institutions (Presidency, CNT, Government).
This Committee should establish regional and local sub-‐committees as needed. The monitoring
committee for implementation of the present Agreement may be advised by any
qualified person.
Human rights and equality
- Human rights/RoL generalPage 2, Article 2
The cessation of hostilities implies:
...
• The cessation of all acts of violence against civil and military populations, and respect for and protection of human rights. These acts of violence include summary executions, torture, harassment, burning of villages and public and private property, destruction of religious buildings, pillage, the arbitrary detention and execution of civilian and military personnel, recruitment of child soldiers, sexual violence and arming civilians;
• The denunciation of all acts of violence and violations of human rights and international humanitarian law
Page 3, Article 5
The parties also agree to:
a. Respect and engender respect for human rights;
...
c. To put in place a mechanism within their own organisations to monitor these commitments, and to report any violations to the competent authorities, to guard against impunity;
...
e. To end the recruitment of child soldiers, in line with the African Charter for the Rights and Welfare of the Child, the Convention on the Rights of the Child, and the Optional Protocol on the Convention on the Rights of the Child on the involvement of children in armed conflict. - Bill of rights/similar
No specific mention.
- Treaty incorporation
No specific mention.
- Civil and political rights
No specific mention.
- Socio-economic rights
No specific mention.
Rights related issues
- Citizenship
No specific mention.
- DemocracyPage 1, PREAMBLE
...
Conscious of the need for dialogue in order to establish a durable and secure peace throughout the national territory, an essential condition for reconstructing the country and building democracy; - Detention procedures
No specific mention.
- Media and communicationRights related issues→Media and communication→Media rolesPage 2, Article 2
The cessation of hostilities implies:
...
• The Parties to desist from all propaganda, and discourse of hatred and division based on religious, tribal or partisan allegiance; and to put an end to acts of intolerance and media campaigns liable to provoke religious or political confrontation;
• The organisation of an information campaign for their supporters on the content of the present Agreement, and on the part of the government, one targeted on the whole Central African population. - Mobility/accessPage 3, Article 3
As soon as the present Agreement enters into force:
...
b. The Parties commit to the global process of national reconciliation to be pursued in the Central African Republic, and to end immediately any restrictions on the free movement of goods and people throughout the national territory, and on the work of national and international actors in exercising their duties under different United Nations Resolutions.
Page 4, Article 6
The parties undertake to:
a. Respect free movement in general, and in particular of humanitarian convoys, as well as humanitarian enclaves, and to create favourable conditions for assisting refugees and displaced persons - Protection measuresRights related issues→Protection measures→Protection of civiliansPage 3, Article 2:
The cessation of hostilities implies:
• The cessation of all acts of violence against civil and military populations, and respect for and protection of human rights.Rights related issues→Protection measures→Protection of groupsPage 1, Preamble
Considering the African Union Convention on the protection and assistance of displaced persons in Africa, signed in Kampala on October 23 2009; - Other
No specific mention.
Rights institutions
- NHRI
No specific mention.
- Regional or international human rights institutions
No specific mention.
Justice sector reform
- Criminal justice and emergency law
No specific mention.
- State of emergency provisions
No specific mention.
- Judiciary and courts
No specific mention.
- Prisons and detention
No specific mention.
- Traditional Laws
No specific mention.
Socio-economic reconstruction
- Development or socio-economic reconstructionSocio-economic reconstruction→Development or socio-economic reconstruction→Socio-economic developmentPage 1, PREAMBLE
...
Reaffirming their unwavering determination to bring to an end the underlying causes of this ongoing state of violence, insecurity, political instability and exclusion which has reduced the Central African people to a state of distress and suffering, and which is gravely compromising any prospect of economic development, of equality and of social justice in the country
Page 4, The ex-combatants and Central African armed elements agree the following, Article 7
A priority programme must be implemented urgently in order to:
...
c. Rehabilitate the zones affected by the conflict. - National economic plan
No specific mention.
- Natural resources
No specific mention.
- International funds
No specific mention.
- Business
No specific mention.
- Taxation
No specific mention.
- Banks
No specific mention.
Land, property and environment
- Land reform/rights
No specific mention.
- Pastoralist/nomadism rights
No specific mention.
- Cultural heritageLand, property and environment→Cultural heritage→TangiblePage 2, Article 2
The cessation of hostilities implies:
...
• The cessation of all acts of violence against civil and military populations, and respect for and protection of human rights. These acts of violence include summary executions, torture, harassment, burning of villages and public and private property, destruction of religious buildings, pillage, the arbitrary detention and execution of civilian and military personnel, recruitment of child soldiers, sexual violence and arming civilians - Environment
No specific mention.
- Water or riparian rights or access
No specific mention.
Security sector
- Security GuaranteesPage 1, PREAMBLE
...
Reaffirming their unwavering determination to bring to an end the underlying causes of this ongoing state of violence, insecurity, political instability and exclusion which has reduced the Central African people to a state of distress and suffering, and which is gravely compromising any prospect of economic development, of equality and of social justice in the country
Page 4, Article 6
The parties undertake to:
...
b. To promote a favourable social and security environment for the return of refugees and displaced persons to their communities. - CeasefireSecurity sector→Ceasefire→Ceasefire provision[The whole agreement provides for a ceasefire and its modalities]
Page 2, Article 2
The cessation of hostilities implies:
... • The cessation of all acts of violence against civil and military populations, and respect for and protection of human rights. These acts of violence include summary executions, torture, harassment, burning of villages and public and private property, destruction of religious buildings, pillage, the arbitrary detention and execution of civilian and military personnel, recruitment of child soldiers, sexual violence and arming civilians
Page 4, Article 10
The present Agreement enters into force upon signature. - Police
No specific mention.
- Armed forces
No specific mention.
- DDR
No specific mention.
- Intelligence services
No specific mention.
- Parastatal/rebel and opposition group forcesPage 2, Article 2
The cessation of hostilities implies:
...
• Commitment by the parties to communicate cessation of hostilities to the general public within 24 hours of the date of signature of the present Agreement, via their respective chains of command and to the general public
Page 3, Article 4
All ex-combatants and armed elements signatories to the present Agreement must be re-grouped without undue delay, if the necessary resources are available, in areas to be mutually agreed with the Transition Government and the International Community.
Page 4, Article 8
The parties will establish a committee to monitor implementation of the present agreement as follows:
1. 01 representative per politico-military group - Withdrawal of foreign forcesPage 3, Article 3
As soon as the present Agreement enters into force:
...
c. The Parties undertake to remove from their ranks and repatriate any mercenaries such that they may return to their own countries with the support of the international community. - Corruption
No specific mention.
- Crime/organised crime
No specific mention.
- Drugs
No specific mention.
- Terrorism
No specific mention.
Transitional justice
- Transitional justice general
No specific mention.
- Amnesty/pardon
No specific mention.
- Courts
No specific mention.
- Mechanism
No specific mention.
- Prisoner release
No specific mention.
- Vetting
No specific mention.
- Victims
No specific mention.
- Missing persons
No specific mention.
- Reparations
No specific mention.
- ReconciliationPage 1, PREAMBLE
...
Considering the ongoing desire of Her Excellency Madame Catherine SAMBA-PANZA, Head of the State of Transition, reiterated in various speeches (Brussels, Paris, Oslo, Malabo) and her last address to the Nation on July 4, 2014, to promote political dialogue and national reconciliation among all the sons and daughters of Central Africa
Page 3, Article 3
As soon as the present Agreement enters into force:
...
b. The Parties commit to the global process of national reconciliation to be pursued in the Central African Republic, and to end immediately any restrictions on the free movement of goods and people throughout the national territory, and on the work of national and international actors in exercising their duties under different United Nations Resolutions.
Implementation
- UN signatorySigned in the presence of Representative from the UN Secretary General (Monsieur Abdoulaye BATHILY, Représentant Spécial du Secrétaire Général des Nations Unies pour l’Afrique Centrale).
- Other international signatorySigned in the presenec of the Médiation Internationale
Pour L'Union Africaine
Le Vice-Médiateur,
Monsieur SOUMAILOU BOUBEY MAIGA
Pour la CEEAC
Le Rapporteur
Le Secrétaire Général de la CEEAC
Ambassadeur Ahmad ALLAM-MI
Le Médiateur international
Le Président de la République du Congo
Son Excellence Monsieur Denis SASSOU N'GUESSO - Referendum for agreement
No specific mention.
- International mission/force/similar
No specific mention.
- Enforcement mechanismPage 3, Article 5
The parties also agree to:
...
c. To put in place a mechanism within their own organisations to monitor these commitments, and to report any violations to the competent authorities, to guard against impunity
Page 4, Article 8
The parties will establish a committee to monitor implementation of the present agreement as follows:
1. 01 representative per politico-military group;
2. G8-RCA;
3. 06 representatives of the Transition Institutions (Presidency, CNT, Government).
This Committee should establish regional and local sub-committees as needed. The monitoring committee for implementation of the present Agreement may be advised by any qualified person.
Page 4, Article 9
In case of any litigation or disagreement arising during the implementation of this agreement, the Parties may refer to the Monitoring Committee. If this fails they may request International Mediation. - Related cases
No specific mention.
- SourceUN Peacemaker, https://peacemaker.un.org/sites/peacemaker.un.org/files/CAF_140723_Accord-cessation-hostilites.pdf
CENTRAL AFRICAN REPUBLIC
CESSATION OF HOSTILITIES AGREEMENT
PREAMBLE
Considering the relevant provisions in the United Nations Charter, the Resolutions of the United Nations Security Council, and in particular resolutions:
2121 (2013);
2127 (2014);
2134 (2014) and 2149 (2014) of the Constitutive Act of the African Union and the relevant decisions of the Central African Peace and Security Council of Central Africa (COPAX);
Considering the African Union Convention on the protection and assistance of displaced persons in Africa, signed in Kampala on October 23 2009;
Considering the regional resolutions on regulating the conflict in Central Africa;
notably Libreville Global Peace Agreement of 2008 and 2013, as well as the Ndjaema Declarations of 2013 and 2014;
Considering the national initiatives on conflict regulation, notably the Recommendations of the Inclusive Political Dialogue of December 20, 2008, the Charter of Constitutional Transition of 2013, and the Transition Route Map which resulted;
Conscious of the need for dialogue in order to establish a durable and secure peace throughout the national territory, an essential condition for reconstructing the country and building democracy;
Considering the ongoing desire of Her Excellency Madame Catherine SAMBA-PANZA, Head of the State of Transition, reiterated in various speeches (Brussels, Paris, Oslo, Malabo) and her last address to the Nation on July 4, 2014, to promote political dialogue and national reconciliation among all the sons and daughters of Central Africa;
Considering the enthusiasm across the nation, particularly among the institutions of the Transition, in the living forces of the Nation including the religious authorities, civil society and the political parties, to build a peaceful society and national agreement, by supporting the present Transition framework;
Reaffirming their desire to contribute to a definitive return to peace, to take part in the Brazzaville Forum and to sign an Agreement for the cessation of hostilities;
Reaffirming their unwavering determination to bring to an end the underlying causes of this ongoing state of violence, insecurity, political instability and exclusion which has reduced the Central African people to a state of distress and suffering, and which is gravely compromising any prospect of economic development, of equality and of social justice in the country;
Responding to the International Mediation led by his Excellency Denis SASSOU NGUESSO, President of the Republic of Congo, Mediator of the Central African crisis, assisted by Mr BOUBEYE MAÏGA, Representing the President of the Commission of the African Union and Mr Abdoulaye BATHILY, UN Secretary-General Special Representative for Central Africa, set up following the Meeting of Heads of State and of Government in the margins of the 23rd Ordinary Summit of the African Union, held in Malabo in Equatorial Guinea on June 27, 2014, on the situation in the Republic of Central Africa;
The ex-combatants and Central African armed elements agree the following:
Article 1:
- The present Cessation of Hostilities Agreement is established between the belligerents to take effect across the whole territory of the Central African Republic;
- The belligerents agree to end all hostilities upon signature of the Agreement;
Article 2:
The cessation of hostilities implies:
• An immediate end to hostilities and abstention from all military activities and all forms of violence;
• The cessation of all acts of violence against civil and military populations, and respect for and protection of human rights.
These acts of violence include summary executions, torture, harassment, burning of villages and public and private property, destruction of religious buildings, pillage, the arbitrary detention and execution of civilian and military personnel, recruitment of child soldiers, sexual violence and arming civilians;
• The denunciation of all acts of violence and violations of human rights and international humanitarian law
• Abstention from any action or provocation liable to damage efforts to build a spirit of fraternity and national harmony;
• Commitment by the parties to communicate cessation of hostilities to the general public within 24 hours of the date of signature of the present Agreement, via their respective chains of command and to the general public;
• The Parties to desist from all propaganda, and discourse of hatred and division based on religious, tribal or partisan allegiance;
and to put an end to acts of intolerance and media campaigns liable to provoke religious or political confrontation;
• The organisation of an information campaign for their supporters on the content of the present Agreement, and on the part of the government, one targeted on the whole Central African population.
Article 3:
As soon as the present Agreement enters into force:
a. The Parties commit to removing all obstacles to state authority in their respective zones, including in particular illegal barriers and parallel administrations.
b. The Parties commit to the global process of national reconciliation to be pursued in the Central African Republic, and to end immediately any restrictions on the free movement of goods and people throughout the national territory, and on the work of national and international actors in exercising their duties under different United Nations Resolutions.
c. The Parties undertake to remove from their ranks and repatriate any mercenaries such that they may return to their own countries with the support of the international community.
d. The Parties undertake to reject any project to divide up the Central African Republic.
Article 4:
All ex-combatants and armed elements signatories to the present Agreement must be re-grouped without undue delay, if the necessary resources are available, in areas to be mutually agreed with the Transition Government and the International Community.
Article 5:
The Parties also agree to:
a. Respect and engender respect for human rights;
b. Prohibit and condemn all violence, including sexual violence, against civilian and military populations;
c. To put in place a mechanism within their own organisations to monitor these commitments, and to report any violations to the competent authorities, to guard against impunity;
d. To end and prevent any future violations of children, in particular murder, mutilation, exploitation, rape and other violence;
e. To end the recruitment of child soldiers, in line with the African Charter for the Rights and Welfare of the Child, the Convention on the Rights of the Child, and the Optional Protocol on the Convention on the Rights of the Child on the involvement of children in armed conflict.
Article 6:
The parties undertake to:
a. Respect free movement in general, and in particular of humanitarian convoys, as well as humanitarian enclaves, and to create favourable conditions for assisting refugees and displaced persons;
b. To promote a favourable social and security environment for the return of refugees and displaced persons to their communities.
Article 7:
A priority programme must be implemented urgently in order to:
a. Create the necessary conditions for the return, reinstallation and reinsertion of persons displaced by the conflict;
b. Fight against criminality, in particular that specified in Article 2;
c. Rehabilitate the zones affected by the conflict.
Article 8:
The parties will establish a committee to monitor implementation of the present agreement as follows:
1. 01 representative per politico-military group;
2. G8-RCA;
3. 06 representatives of the Transition Institutions (Presidency, CNT, Government).
This Committee should establish regional and local sub-committees as needed.
The monitoring committee for implementation of the present Agreement may be advised by any qualified person.
Article 9:
In case of any litigation or disagreement arising during the implementation of this agreement, the Parties may refer to the Monitoring Committee.
If this fails they may request International Mediation.
Article 10:
The present Agreement enters into force upon signature.
Done in Brazzaville, July 23, 2014
Signatures