The Borneo Post

Kagame highlights reform ‘urgency’ as African Union summit opens

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ADDIS ABABA: Rwandan President Paul Kagame Saturday urged African heads of state to come to an agreement on long-debated reforms to their continenta­l body at a special summit in the Ethiopian capital.

Heads of state and ministers from the 55 African Union member states were gathered at the body’s headquarte­rs for what is seen as a last-ditch attempt to push through reforms that have been mulled for nearly two years.

Declaring “the end is in sight” the AU chairman Kagame highlighte­d the urgency of reforming an organisati­on often seen as toothless and donordepen­dent.

“Events on our continent and across the world continue to confirm the necessity and urgency of this project,” he said at the summit’s opening in the Ethiopian capital.

“The goal is simple: to make Africa stronger and give our people the future they deserve,” said Kagame, whose one-year term as chairman expires in January.

The AU in 2016 put Kagame in charge of the reform project, and observers say time is running out as Egypt — which is set to assume the chairmansh­ip — has little interest in carrying it forward.

In proposals unveiled last year, Kagame envisioned a more narrowly focused AU headed by a powerful commission whose bills are covered by member states rather than foreign donors.

However, key African countries hold reservatio­ns about empowering a continenta­l body they believe could infringe on their sovereignt­y.

Speaking on condition of anonymity, an AU official downplayed Egypt’s opposition and told AFP to expect an agreement on reforms to the body’s administra­tion and financing when the summit concludes on Sunday.

“I think we have 100 per cent consensus on this,” the official said.

However the reforms the official described fell short of Kagame’s initial proposals.

While the Rwandan leader proposed that member states elect a chairperso­n who could then appoint his or her own deputy and commission­ers, AU leaders rejected that proposal, the official said.

Kagame had also floated reducing the AU’s scope to focus on four areas: peace and security, economic integratio­n, political affairs and Africa’s global representa­tions.

But the AU will instead reduce its eight commission­s to six by merging four commission­s that were seen as redundant, specifical­ly political affairs with peace and security, and trade and industry with economic affairs.

Meanwhile 24 countries have made progress on implementi­ng a 0.2 per cent import levy to finance the union, the official said, despite opposition from the United States which argues it violates World Trade Organisati­on (WTO) rules.

“We’ve had a lot of challenges with the US on this for frankly no good reason and we’ve chosen to ignore them, which they don’t like,” the official said. — AFP

 ??  ?? Africa Union Commission chairperso­n Moussa Faki Mahamat (second left front row) poses for a family photo with Africa’s Presidents (from left) Sudan’s Omar al-Bashir, Kagame, Ethiopia’s Prime Minister Abiy Ahamed and Chad’s Idris Deby on the sidelines of a AU summit in Addis Ababa.— AFP photo
Africa Union Commission chairperso­n Moussa Faki Mahamat (second left front row) poses for a family photo with Africa’s Presidents (from left) Sudan’s Omar al-Bashir, Kagame, Ethiopia’s Prime Minister Abiy Ahamed and Chad’s Idris Deby on the sidelines of a AU summit in Addis Ababa.— AFP photo
 ??  ?? This handout video grab taken and released by Nasa at Wallops Island shows the Antares rocket during its launching. — AFP photo
This handout video grab taken and released by Nasa at Wallops Island shows the Antares rocket during its launching. — AFP photo

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