By Fred Oluoch, NAIROBI Kenya
The African Union celebrates its 60th anniversary on May 25, commemorating its achievements in the last six decades, from the time it was known as the Organization of African Unity (OAU).
But then as now, 20 years
since it transformed to the African Union in 2002, the continental bloc faces
more failures than successes, analysts say.
There are also differences in
opinion on whether to assess the continental body from May 25, 1963, when the
OAU was founded or base it from 2002 when the organisation got a new name and a
new mandate.
Conflicts are just as
prevalent now as in the 60s and the body struggles to make significant
interventions, even though it now has sufficient legal framework to address
issues of peace and security.
In 2020, it missed its target
of ‘silencing the guns’, and the programme was pushed forward by a decade to
the end of 2030. Fair enough, there was Covid-19 and other problems but so was
the collective will against the vices that have caused conflict, observers
argue.
Hardi Yakubu, a Ghanaian who
is the coordinator of “Africa Rising” — a Pan-African movement that advocates
Justice, Peace in the continent — attributes the failure to silence the gun to
the inability of AU member state to work together while knowing that some of
these conflicts are engineered outside the continent with the target on
resources.
“It is important for us to
work assiduously to ensure that these guns are silenced. One of the reasons we
are failing to achieve the targets is that some of these things are still within
isolated individual countries' perspectives, and the only way to deal with
insecurity is to work together. There is no single African country that can
deal with the issue of insecurity on its own,” said Mr Yakubu.
In 2013, African leaders while
marking the 50th Anniversary, came up with the Silencing of the Gun initiative
as part of the African Agenda 2063 with the leaders resolving not to pass the
burden of conflict to future generations. The objective was to free the African
continent of wars, civil conflicts, humanitarian crises, human rights
violations, gender-based violence, and genocide.
The southern African region
has experienced a similar situation in that attacks in Mozambique’s northern
region of Cabo Delgado prompted military intervention by the Southern African
Development Community (SADC) and Rwanda. The operations of the terrorist group
expanded into countries such as Cameroon, Niger, Central African Republic and
Chad.
Retired Ugandan diplomat,
Harold Acemah, said that he is not surprised that the Au failed to meet the
2020 target because trends show that just like in the 1970s and 1980s, Africa
is reverting to a situation where power comes from the barrel of the gun, not
the ballot.
“What is happening in Sudan
now and what happened in Ethiopia not long ago show that the struggle for
democracy in Africa has fallen on hard times and instead of marching forward,
Africans appear to be marching back to the era of military coups and
countercoups,” said Mr Acemah.
In Africa, according to the
Geneva-based research centre, Small Arms Survey, about 80 percent of all small
arms and light weapons are in the hands of civilians. The centre says that
civilians, including rebel groups and militias, hold more than 40 million small
arms and light weapons.
In 2019, a study by the
African Union mapping arms flows in Africa expressed concerns that there were
more firearms in the wrong hands compared with government-related entities that
hold 11 million.
Prof Patrick Lumumba, a Kenyan
lawyer and political commentator, says that it would be difficult to expect AU
to meet some of its goals such as ending the conflict when 70 percent of its
budget is funded by donors and well-wishers outside the continent.
The African Union’s programmes
including peacekeeping, health and education are 97 per cent funded by donors
including the EU, USA, China, Japan, Turkey and the World Bank.
No comments:
Post a Comment