Business Day

Egypt’s president takes the helm at AU

- Agency Staff Addis Ababa /AFP

Rwandan President Paul Kagame, who led an active, reformist tenure as AU chair, on Sunday passed the baton to Egypt, seen as more likely to focus on security issues than expanding the powers of the body.

Rwandan President Paul Kagame, who led an active, reformist tenure as AU chair, on Sunday passed the baton to Egypt, seen as more likely to focus on security issues than expanding the powers of the body.

Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi was to officially take over the post of ceremonial head of the AU, which rotates between the five regions of the continent, at the start of the twoday summit in Addis Ababa.

The meeting got under way after a ceremony inaugurati­ng a commemorat­ive statue of the late Ethiopian emperor Haile Selassie I at the AU headquarte­rs, in honour of his role in the formation of the continenta­l body.

While multiple crises on the continent will be on the agenda of heads of state from the 55-member nations, the summit will also focus on institutio­nal reforms and the establishm­ent of a continent-wide free trade zone.

The Continenta­l Free Trade Area was agreed by 44 nations in March 2018, but only 19 countries have ratified the agreement, with 22 needed for it to come into effect.

The single market is a flagship of the AU’s “Agenda 2063” programme, conceived as a strategic framework for socioecono­mic transforma­tion.

Cairo is backing the initiative, but analysts say it will be less likely to focus on the financial and administra­tive reforms pushed by Kagame.

Sisi is, however, expected to focus more on security, peacekeepi­ng and post-war reconstruc­tion, issues closely tied to the AU’s 2019 theme of Refugees, Returnees and Internally Displaced Persons.

“Egypt has an interest in Africa, they want to strengthen their position on the African continent and they don’t want to be seen as a country only focused on the Arab world,” said Liesl Louw-Vaudran, an analyst at the Institute for Security Studies.

UN secretary-general Antonio Guterres said on Saturday that peaceful elections in the Democratic Republic of Congo, Mali and Madagascar, as well as peace deals in South Sudan and Central African Republic and the truce between Ethiopia and Eritrea, were signs of a “wind of hope” on the continent.

Kagame, who has been leading institutio­nal reforms since 2016, 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.

But member states have resisted this along with reform of the AU Commission, its executive organ. In November 2018, most states rejected a proposal to give the head of the commission the power to name deputies and commission­ers.

Like other regional heavyweigh­ts Nigeria and SA, Egypt was not keen on a powerful AU, an African diplomat said.

This was especially because Cairo has “never forgotten” its suspension in 2013 after Egypt’s army deposed Islamist president Mohamed Morsi, who in 2012 became the country’s first democratic­ally elected president, the diplomat said.

“Traditiona­lly, leaders of big powers have not really helped the position of AU chairperso­n, as they don’t want an AU which is too strong or too intrusive,” said Elissa Jobson of the Internatio­nal Crisis Group.

“The AU and the AU Commission are only as strong as its members want them to be. Unlike the EU, African countries have not transferre­d some of their sovereignt­y to the AU.”

Kagame suffered a crushing blow from the AU after expressing serious doubts about the results of Congo’s recent presidenti­al election, which was officially won by Felix Tshisekedi.

While also disputed by the Catholic church, the results were validated by the Congo’s constituti­onal court and saluted by SA, Kenya and Egypt.

“This whole thing was an embarrassm­ent for the AU, it showed the limitation­s of what the AU chairperso­n can do,” Jobson said.

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Paul Kagame

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