NAIROBI, Kenya
Kenyan President Uhuru Kenyatta said Monday his country will leverage its position as a non-permanent member of the UN Security Council to advance peace, stability and inclusive growth in Africa.
Kenyatta said that Kenya has been deeply involved in preventive diplomacy, peacekeeping, conflict resolution and post-conflict reconstruction across Africa.
“Central to our foreign
policy as a nation and member state of the African Union, is our commitment to
Pan-Africanism,” Kenyatta said in a speech read on his behalf by Eugene
Wamalwa, cabinet secretary in the Ministry of Defence during a regional forum
organized by the African Union.
The 12th AU high-level
retreat on the promotion of peace, security and stability is being attended by
senior government officials including diplomats and former African leaders.
Kenya is one of the
three African countries that are non-permanent Members of the United Nations
Security Council in 2021/2022.
“We accept this high
calling with gratitude and a deep sense of purpose, as demonstrated by our UNSC
Presidency in October 2021,” Kenyatta added.
The Kenyan leader said
that Africa has made considerable progress in addressing traditional peace and
security challenges.
“The African Peace and
Security Architecture has contributed immensely to the promotion of peace,
security, and stability on our continent,” Kenyatta observed.
He revealed that
Africa’s collective efforts to embrace and promote democratic practices have
led to resilience, greater stability, good governance, respect for human
rights, as well as political and social inclusion across the continent.
The president noted
that Kenya is currently hosting over 600,000 refugees from across the region.
He explained that at
the height of the conflicts in some neighboring countries, especially in the
early 1990s, Kenya was receiving 3,000 refugees every hour,” he said.
“It was and continues
to be a difficult task, but we continue to offer a haven for our brothers and
sisters who are unable to return home, owing to serious and indiscriminate
threats to life,” Kenyatta said.
He added that
multilateralism and its constraints are under siege, challenged by more
transactional zero-sum politics.
“Instruments of collective
action are being incapacitated, while those of collective accountability are
increasingly being misused to serve selfish interests,” Kenyatta noted.
Moussa Faki Mahamat,
chairperson of the African Union Commission said that solidarity is key to finding
a durable solution to the threat to peace, stability and economic growth in
Africa.
Mahamat stressed that
dialogue and mediation, as opposed to military intervention, could be the
answer to civil strife that has undermined Africa’s quest for transformation.
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