Kuwait Times

‘Bleak picture’: AU leaders urged to tackle crises

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ADDIS ABABA: African leaders were urged Saturday to step up and tackle the myriad conflicts and political crises blighting the continent of 1.4 billion people. Opening the African Union’s two-day summit, AU Commission chief Moussa Faki Mahamat painted a “bleak picture” with a “litany of difficulti­es” confrontin­g many countries. Faki blasted a failure to counter multiple “unconstitu­tional changes of government”, following a string of coups in West Africa and warned the scourge of “terrorism” was diverting money away from vital social needs to military spending.

Sudan was “bruised, torn, sinking into chaos,” Faki said, while Libya was divided and exposed to external interferen­ce, and the Sahel was facing a dangerous vacuum. The Great Lakes region of central Africa was, he said, witnessing a worsening of its “eternal crises” fueled by the conflict in the eastern Democratic Republic of Congo. “Africa cannot remain arms folded and not work to promote genuine peace in the region,” Faki added. A mini-summit looking at ways to relaunch the peace process for the DRC — attended by Congolese leader and his Rwandan rival — opened Friday on the sidelines of the main AU meetings and was due to continue on Saturday. Gabon and Niger were absent from the summit following their suspension over coups last year — joining Mali, Guinea, Sudan and Burkina Faso, which are also barred for similar reasons. But the 55-member bloc has long been criticised for being ineffectua­l and taking little decisive action in the face of numerous conflicts and power grabs.

Faki voiced worries about the crisis in Senegal, set off by President Macky Sall’s last-minute move to push back this month’s elections in a country usually considered a beacon of democracy in West Africa. But he said he hoped for a “spirit of consensus” to organize “inclusive, free and transparen­t elections as quickly as possible” after the Constituti­onal Council overruled Sall’s move.

Faki also spoke of “worrying trends” in the Horn of Africa, where tensions are high after AU host nation Ethiopia infuriated Somalia with a deal with the breakaway region of Somaliland to give it long sought-after access to the sea. “Our main challenges have not diminished in importance,” Faki said, pointing also to political instabilit­y, climate change, poverty, “deficits” in economic governance and marginaliz­ation of women and young people in developmen­t and leadership. Ahead of the summit, Nina Wilen, director of the Africa program at the Egmont Royal Institute for Internatio­nal Relations think tank in Brussels, said she did not expect any strong decisions by the AU. The body has so far had “very little influence on countries that have suffered recent coups”, she said, adding that member states did not want to set precedents that could clash with their own interests.

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