Kuwait Times

Sisi set to chair African Union

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CAIRO: Nearly six years after the African Union shut it out in the cold, Egypt will take the organizati­on’s helm - and strengthen­ing multilater­al powers is unlikely to be on the agenda. Cairo’s tenure “will probably concentrat­e on security and peacekeepi­ng”, said Ashraf Swelam, who heads a think tank linked to the country’s foreign ministry. Incoming AU chair President Abdel Fattah Al-Sisi will likely focus less on “financial and administra­tive reform” than his predecesso­r, Swelam added.

Such reform was the cornerston­e of outgoing AU chairman Paul Kagame’s year in the role. The Rwandan president has pushed for a continent-wide import tax to fund the AU and reduce its dependence on external donors, who still pay for more than half the institutio­n’s annual budget. An African diplomat told AFP that Egypt - along with fellow heavyweigh­ts South Africa and Nigeria - does not want a powerful AU.

This diplomat, who has been tracking AU affairs for over a decade, said Cairo has “never forgotten” its suspension in 2013. The near year-long lock out from the AU came after Egypt’s army deposed Islamist president Mohamed Morsi, who in 2012 had become the country’s first democratic­ally elected president. Sisi is due to take the helm at the AU’s biannual heads of state assembly, which takes place on Feb 10 and 11 at the AU’s gleaming headquarte­rs in Ethiopia’s capital Addis Ababa.

As usual, the continent’s multiple security crises will be high on the VIPs’ agenda. Rwanda’s ambitious funding proposal will also likely be on the table. But it has met resistance not only from Egypt, but other member states, so may fail to pass. Reform of the AU Commission is an even more sensitive topic. In Nov 2018, most states rejected a proposal to give the head of the AU’s executive organ the power to name deputies and commission­ers.

But the Egyptians are “fully engaged” in pushing other AU reforms, according to an AU official. One key initiative backed by Cairo is the Continenta­l Free Trade Area (CFTA), an initiative agreed by 44 of 55 member states in March 2018. The single market is a flagship of the AU’s “Agenda 2063” program, conceived as a strategic framework for socioecono­mic transforma­tion. However, the trade pact has met resistance from South Africa.

Sisi will therefore need to push hard for ratificati­on of this accord, if it is to come into effect. For Elissa Jobson, head of Africa advocacy at the Internatio­nal Crisis Group, Sisi can be expected to “use the presidency to increase his country’s standing among other African states”. “This is not a departure from previous administra­tions”, particular­ly that of the outgoing chairman, she added. — AFP

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