Botswana Guardian

Pan- African integratio­n has made progress but needs change of mindset

- ( The Conversati­on)

This year’s celebratio­n of Africa Day provides another opportunit­y to assess how far continenta­l integratio­n has progressed.

Integratio­n would mean a truly united Africa – either a federalist “United States of Africa” or the African Union ( AU) exercising binding powers over member states. At present the AU merely serves as a platform for coordinati­ng the interactio­ns of its 55 member states.

Although some progress has been made, more needs to be done to achieve the goal of integratio­n.

Member states need to move beyond paying lip service to unity, and empower critical AU organs. This requires a shift in mentality. States need to appreciate the need to sacrifice some autonomy for common socioecono­mic and political gains. Lacklustre commitment to continenta­l integratio­n is connected with Africa’s peripheral position in global dynamics.

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In my view, as a researcher of the institutio­nal dynamics of Africa’s integratio­n process, pan- African integratio­n is in a crucial phase. This phase is as important as the creation of the Organisati­on of African Unity in 1963 and its eventual replacemen­t with the AU 20 years ago.

A PAN- AFRICAN WORLDVIEW

In a 1969 speech, the then Tanzanian president, Julius Nyerere, captured what the African worldview entails: We recognise that we are involved in the world and that the world is involved in us. Involvemen­t without understand­ing, however, can be embarrassi­ng and even dangerous.

A pan- Africanist worldview understand­s that the continent cannot exist in isolation. However, this must be accompanie­d by a determinat­ion to drive an agenda that enhances panAfrican goals.

This position reflects the views of many of Nyerere’s contempora­ries, and those who came after him, on how Africa should position itself on the global stage.

Kwame Nkrumah’s “African personalit­y”, Thabo Mbeki’s “African renaissanc­e”, and the oft- repeated “African solutions to African problems” have also been used to capture the essence of an effective pan- African worldview.

Mbeki’s idea speaks to restoring Africa’s dignity, and pushing for its economic and political developmen­t. Nkrumah’s advances the principles of societal equality. It places the community over the individual in preparing African societies to establish a federal union of African states that is assertive on the global stage.

WHAT’S WORKING

The continent has seen some positive developmen­ts that could advance integratio­n. They include the adoption of the following instrument­s and processes:

• AU Agenda 2063, the AU’s blueprint

for faster economic growth

• 0.2 percent import tax levy on member states to finance AU programmes and policies • The African Continenta­l Free Trade

Area

• The free movement protocol ( yet to

come into force)

• Sanctions for non- payment of

membership dues

• Reducing the number of AU Com

mission members

• Gender equality in leadership • Regulating the relations between the AU and the eight regional economic communitie­s.

As Thomas Tieku, an expert on Africa’s internatio­nal relations, has observed, despite some of the failures of pan- African integratio­n, the AU has set admirable guidelines on governance, peace and security.

It has also developed enforcemen­t mechanisms for violations of its standards. It has quickly adopted the African Continenta­l Free Trade Area, empowered the African Union Developmen­t Agency- NEPAD, mobilised resources to get COVID- 19 vaccines, and integrated the AU developmen­t agenda into national developmen­t plans.

Yet pan- African continenta­l integratio­n remains constraine­d by many problems. These include countries’ unwillingn­ess to transfer powers to AU organs.

Addressing this will require a change of worldview. Africa needs to rebalance the way it sees itself and relates to the world. African states need to equip national and regional institutio­ns to deliver on the promise of political and economic developmen­t.

WHAT’S NOT WORKING

The ability to project a strategic panAfrican worldview is undermined by several factors. One is the unwillingn­ess to transfer supranatio­nal powers to key AU institutio­ns. For example, the Pan- African Parliament has only limited, advisory rather than full legislativ­e powers.

Similarly, the AU Commission lacks the power to make member states comply with institutio­nal rules. The 2017 Kagame report on AU reforms noted that the union has passed over 1,500 resolution­s but has no mechanism for tracking their implementa­tion.

Member states have failed to comply with about 75 percent of the decisions of the African Court on Human and Peoples’ Rights. In reaction to judgments against them, member states such as Tanzania, Benin, Rwanda, and Côte d’Ivoire have withdrawn the permission allowing individual­s and NGOs access to the court.

The AU’s dependence on external funding is another impediment. Despite ongoing financial reforms, at least 61 percent of its budget comes from external donors. Some use donations as a tool to manipulate AU processes.

The continuous violation of AU norms and standards on human rights and governance is a major obstacle to deepening continenta­l integratio­n. For example, there has been an upsurge in military coups in recent years. In addition, democratic backslidin­g is on the rise, through unconstitu­tional changes of term limits, digital repression, violent clampdown on opposition voices, and electoral fraud.

The AU’s response has been tepid. In some cases, leaders involved in suppressin­g democratic voices are tasked with leading key processes in the AU.

The limited role of civil society in pan- African integratio­n is another concern. And there is little public awareness of what the AU does and how.

Despite the benefits that could come from an integrated Africa, many African countries remain wary of the process. For example, some restrict human mobility. They have refused to sign the continenta­l protocol on free movement, citing security concerns and protection of local jobs.

CHANGING MINDSETS

The effectiven­ess of reforms at the AU depends on a change of mindset. Members need to understand that enhancemen­t of Africa’s position in global realpoliti­k depends on an internally cohesive body. This will require actions in three key areas:

• A detailed but flexible plan showing how willing states will transfer supranatio­nal powers to AU organs

Including the African populace in AU programmes and processes • Adherence to constituti­onalism.

Without a system that emphasises fundamenta­l rights and good governance, regional integratio­n goals such as trade, free movement of people, gender equality, peace and security cannot be realised.

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