ADDIS ABABA, Ethiopia
A dramatic escalation of the conflict in the eastern Democratic Republic of Congo and swingeing US humanitarian aid cuts are set to dominate an African Union summit this week, overshadowing the election of its new chairman.
The 55-nation body meets from
Friday in the Ethiopian capital Addis Ababa with Africa facing devastating
conflicts in the DRC and Sudan — as well as US President Donald Trump’s cuts to
US development aid, which have hit the continent hard.
The African leaders represent
some 1.5 billion people in a body long criticized for sluggishness,
inefficiency and toothless statements.
Ahead of the main weekend
summit, the leaders will hold an emergency session on Friday to discuss the
violence in DRC, where the Rwandan-backed M23 armed group has routed the
Congolese army to seize parts of the mineral-rich east.
The International Crisis Group
says there is a high risk it will “morph into a multi-country confrontation in
the Great Lakes recalling the horrors of the 1990s.”
The AU says all heads of state
will attend, but it is not clear if Rwandan President Paul Kagame and his
Congolese counterpart Felix Tshisekedi will meet in person.
It would be the first time
since the recent escalation that has left thousands dead and half a million
displaced.
Having captured the key
provincial capital of Goma last month, M23 has pushed southwards, nearing the
city of Bukavu.
“The AU has the capacity to be
at the forefront of peace negotiations and to put pressure on everyone to avoid
a new escalation,” said ICG researcher Liesl Louw-Vaudran.
A joint summit of eastern and
southern African blocs last week called for a ceasefire but failed to mention
Rwanda’s involvement, which is widely documented, including by the United
Nations.
After a two-day lull, fighting
resumed some 70 kilometres (40 miles) from Bukavu on Tuesday.
Angolan President Joao
Lourenco, heavily involved for several years in futile mediation between
Tshisekedi and Kagame, will take over the rotating presidency of the AU at the
weekend — a ceremonial role that changes hands annually.
There will also be a new
chairman — the AU’s top job, managing operations and policies for four years —
which is chosen by vote.
Three candidates are vying to
replace Chad’s Moussa Faki Mahamat, who has reached the two-term limit.
They are Djibouti’s Foreign
Minister Mahmoud Ali Youssouf, Kenyan opposition veteran Raila Odinga and
Madagascar’s ex-foreign minister Richard Randriamandrato.
The position was reserved for
an East African this time.
Benjamin Auge, researcher at
France’s Institute of International Relations, said it was “impossible to say
who will win”.
Candidates need the backing of
two-thirds of member states with the right to vote, excluding countries
suspended following coups, including Gabon, Mali and Niger.
Also up for discussion is the
issue of reparations for colonial-era abuses.
Ghana’s President Nana
Akufo-Addo called in 2023 for African leaders to seek damages for the
transatlantic slave trade.
While some Western leaders
have begun to acknowledge that history, opinions diverge among the continent’s
leaders on the amount and form of potential reparations.
Paul-Simon Handy, East Africa
director at the Institute for Security Studies, said it was a bad time to
broach the “divisive” issue.
“It comes at a time of global
geopolitics where we need consensus” between African countries and their
Western partners, he told AFP.
No comments:
Post a Comment