THISDAY

ORGANISATI­ON OF AFRICAN UNITY: 60 YEARS ON

The organisati­on, renamed AU, may have fallen short of expectatio­ns, but it is soldiering on, writes CHARLES ONUNAIJU

- Onunaijuis­researchdi­rector,Abujabased­ThinkTank

The Organizati­on of African Unity, founded and launched on the 25th of May 1963, was the highest and the most concentrat­ed expression of Pax Africana in the twilight of colonial domination in Africa. It was Africa’s epic united front against the cunning shenanigan­s of then retreating European colonialis­m. The path to shaping and consolidat­ing on this pan African framework to tackle the burning issues of the then, remnants of colonial vestiges and chart the course of total independen­ce of all Africa was tortuous. The ideologica­l gulf and rift among leaders of the independen­t African countries then was real and the retreating European colonialis­ts in cahoots ZLWK $PHULFDQ LPSHULDOLV­P KDG ÀHOG GD\ LQ manipulati­ng the ideologica­l divide. Prior to the founding of the OAU, leaders were in various groups denoting their respective political temperamen­t and ideologica­l leanings. The Casablanca group consisting then, of Ghana, Guinea, Mali, Libya, Egypt, Morocco and Algeria wanted a radical and complete continenta­l integratio­n, while Nigeria, Tunisia, Ethiopia, Liberia, Sudan, Togo and Somalia known then as Monrovia group proposed a moderate approach to continenta­l unity, preferring incrementa­l and gradual steps. The Brazzavill­e group consisting of Francophon­e countries and led by Senegal then, remained tied to the interest of the metropolit­an ex-colonial power, France. The diverging strategies of these groups did not dissipate on the overall vision of African unity and the overriding sentiment that the much sought-after continenta­l unity cannot come until colonial domination of every inch of the continent is totally dismantled. Despite the differing approaches to achieving the unity of the continent there were broad consensus that restoring the dignity of her various peoples and enabling a roadmap to social progress and inclusive economic developmen­t would require a considerab­le measure of a political united front. The founding of the Organizati­on of Africa Unity (OAU) in May 1963 was a grand compromise in which various approaches to the challenges of the continent were subsumed to the overriding imperative for a continenta­l unity. Though, much has been said that the grand compromise weakened the platform from the very start, as the OAU remained more or less a “clearing house” through which various leaders and government­s in the continent bargained and accommodat­ed each other, while the higher principle of dynamic and functional continenta­l took a backburner.

Despite this type of criticism, the OAU was forthright in its avowed commitment to rid the continent of colonial rule especially in Southern Africa where Portuguese colonial domination was recalcitra­nt and in addition to the vile racist minority rule in South Africa. The OAU persisted in its militant advocacy of mobilizing member states to contribute material and even military support to end vestiges of colonial rule in the continent. Even in the then, internatio­nal atmosphere of cold war, the total commitment of the OAU to ending the minority regime in South Africa, including the obnoxious unilateral declaratio­n of independen­ce by a white racist clique in Zimbabwe was unwavering. Despite the paralyzing impact of the cold war, and its own internal contradict­ions the OAU was considerab­ly successful in one of its core and avowed commitment to bring to a close, colonial domination in the continent. And in the discharge of this enormous responsibi­lity, which was the very core principle of its charter, the Peoples Republic of China and the former Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR) played unforgetta­ble roles. Both Beijing and Moscow were dependable source of moral, political, diplomatic, material and even military assistance and support in the project of the total liberation of Africa from colonial domination for which the OAU was the most formidable pivot.

Despite that the dream of a United Africa, especially, the militant variant of a common continenta­l government of a “United States of Africa” was not achieved, the project remained on course. The OAU has also been criticized for being overly political, without much attention on building economies of scale and other measures to foster economic integratio­n. This is however, not very correct. The Organizati­on in 1980 in its special session held in the then Nigeria’s Capital Lagos formulated its iconic “Lagos Plan of Action for the Economic Developmen­t of Africa, 1980 – 2000. In the preamble to the historic document adopted by the head of states and government at a special session lamented WKDW ´WKH HIIHFW RI XQIXOÀOOHG SURPLVHV RI global developmen­t strategies has been more sharply felt in Africa than in the other continents of the world. Indeed, rather than result in an improvemen­t in the economic situation of the continent, successive strategies have made it stagnant and become more susceptibl­e than other regions to the economic and social crises suffered by the industrial­ized countries: Thus, Africa is XQDEOH WR SRLQW WR DQ\ VLJQLÀFDQW JURZWK UDWH or satisfacto­ry index of general well-being in the past 20 years. Faced with this situation and determined to undertake measures for the basic restructur­ing of the economic base of our continent, we resolved to adopt a farreachin­g regional approach based primarily on collective self-reliance”.

What followed in the 104-page document was an equivalent of China’s avowed determinat­ion around the same time to pursue a home-grown agenda of economic modernizat­ion centered on the twin policies of “reform and opening up.” The Lagos Plan of Action, OAU most comprehens­ive and promising Charter for economic integratio­n and collective reliance of the continent was derailed by the counter measures of the Breton Wood Institutio­ns (World Bank and the IMF) that imposed the structural adjustment program, a neoliberal economic shock therapy under the ideologica­l suzerainty of the so-called Washington consensus. The outcome would later become known as Africa’s lost decades. Other economic initiative­s of the OAU like the African Economic Community faltered, leaving the organizati­on in the limbo until it transited and transforme­d to the African Union (AU) at a conference in Durban, South Africa in 2002. The AU, though committing to build on the legacy of the OAU, evolved unique mechanism focused on engaging practical issues of the continent in its diverse dimensions.

Peace and security, economic integratio­n through horizontal network of various layers including non-government­al groups serve to generate momentum for a new vision of African dream geared towards continenta­l renaissanc­e. Engaging a long standing and historic partner, the Peoples Republic of China, that have traversed the path of “standing up” to the vicissitud­es of imperialis­t domination and plunder to become both strong and prosperous, Africa comes face to face to a new historic opportunit­y. The deficits of infrastruc­ture connectivi­ty, funding and manpower which had historical­ly hobbled the effort to build continenta­l economies of scale, enhance functional integratio­n and sustain a common free trade Area is being addressed through the mechanism of the Forum on China-Africa cooperatio­n, Belt and Road framework of internatio­nal cooperatio­n. For more than two decades and especially since the launch of the Belt and Road Initiative, 10 years ago, Africa andChinaha­veestablis­hedamodelo­fcooperati­on that are practical, tangible and result oriented, giving effects to the contempora­ry internatio­nal trend of building a community of shared future for all mankind.

In many respects, the bold vision of the OAU, nurtured currently in the dynamism of the AU and enhanced through China-Africa community with a shared future, is alive, kicking, and a work in progress.

 ?? ??
 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Nigeria