By Osoro Nyawangah,
At least 40 heads of state and government are expected in the Belgian capital Brussels for a Summit with the European Union, officials said on Wednesday ahead of the crucial inter-bloc meeting with issue of China in the background.
The leaders, including Ethiopian Prime Minister
Abiy Ahmed, African Union Commission Chairperson Moussa Faki Mahamat,
Senegalese President Macky Sall, the current Chairperson of the African Union,
and Burundian leader Evariste Ndayishimiye, will grace the meeting between
European Union and African Union blocs, a first physical gathering of this
level since the Covid-19 pandemic struck more than two years ago.
The attendance list on Wednesday indicates more
African heads of state will gather in Europe for the meeting than the number
that attended the AU General Assembly in Addis Ababa last week.
The Burundian leader, for example, will be touring
Brussels for the first time since the European Union lifted sanctions on his
country earlier this month, having been imposed in 2016.
Prime Minister Abiy might come face to face with
World Health Organization boss Tedros Adhanom, an Ethiopian national his
country had accused of fuelling the Tigray conflict. Ethiopia had even
withdrawn his nomination for a second term at the WHO.
Dr Tedros, International Monetary Fund Managing
Director Kristalina Georgieva, World Trade Organisation Director-General Ngozi
Okonjo-Iweala, and Werner Hoyer, President of the European Investment Bank, are
among the key speakers at events at the Summit.
This will be a first EU-AU Summit in four years.
The meeting signals changing tides in relations, and also comes at a time the
world is recovering from the Covid-19 pandemic, with Africa still lagging on
vaccination rates.
However, there is always the issue of China in the
background.
Part of this funding has been seen as a direct
contest with China, whose funding of African infrastructure has remained supreme
for the last few decades.
On Wednesday, officials said their money will come
with requirements for transparency, accountability and respect for
conservation.
But they did admit “we have got competition.”
A spokesman for the ministry in Beijing cited a
survey published in November 2021 by the pan-African institute Afrobarometer, which states 63% of Africans believe China
has had a positive influence in their country.
"I see the influence of the Chinese,"
admitted Bamidele Adekunle, adjunct professor at the Canadian University of
Guelph, to DW. "When I was in Dar es Salaam, I saw lots of things done by
the Chinese. And it has really transformed Dar es Salaam," said Adekunle.
Investments and credit lines extended to Africa in the last two decades have seen Beijing being accused of practicing debt-trap diplomacy on the continent. The theory goes that Beijing is seeking to saddle nations with debt to increase its leverage over them.
Officials in Brussels told journalists on Wednesday
the meeting will touch on an investment package to address the urgent
challenges of climate change and insufficient healthcare in Africa, as well as
the unresolved issue of intellectual property rights for vaccine production in
Africa.
“Our investment in Africa responds to demands and
needs of our African partners,” said an official during a background virtual
briefing to journalists on Wednesday.
“The EU is working on a comprehensive response,
through the World Trade Organisation…but also the most important issue is the
know-how of vaccine production,” he added.
As part of a wide-ranging package of financing, the
officials said the EU is allocating up to $170 billion worth of funding for
Africa to go into investments in transport, economic integration, green energy,
healthcare and security programmes in the next two years.
The money will include funds for more vaccines for
Africa, including 450 million doses of Covid-19 jabs.
The European Investment Bank announced a $70
million package it said will “tackle the impact of Covid-19 and unlock
sustainable growth.”
The money will be channelled through the Bank’s new
specialised arm of investment, EIB Global, to start-ups in Africa to help
create jobs, according to Werner Hoyer, the President of the European
Investment Bank.
Activists called for “fairness” in negotiating
financing deals, warning the African continent that Covid-19 has posed
unprecedented challenges, with countries diverting reserves, delaying
repayments or borrowing to respond to the pandemic.
“This vicious cycle—debt leading to default leading
to draconian cuts in public services leading to more debt—has laid bare the
dysfunction and injustice of the current global financial architecture,” a
briefing paper released by a group of activists said.
Part of the problem, according to Dr Chiek Tidiane Dieye, the founder and executive director of the African Centre for Trade, Integration and Development, is that the AU teams often lack a coherent set of minimum economic positions during negotiations. - Africa
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