The Citizen (KZN)

Africa’s power lies in unity

- Brian Sokutu

Africa is now realising the importance of working together as one powerful block to redress the past.

Years ago, I attended an African conference in Rwanda on the impact of war on women and children.

As it is the case with most summits, delegates break from plenary into various commission­s to flesh out key aspects of topics, with rapporteur­s later reporting on findings and resolution­s.

The commission I sat in could hardly start before delegates spent valuable time in a fierce debate on which language should be used.

Had a delegate proposed Swahili, Oromo, Igbo, Yoruba, isiXhosa, Herero, isiZulu or Mande – among some indigenous languages spoken in Africa – such an intensity of debate would have been understand­able.

Instead, the room was divided into two, with French-speaking delegates insisting on the use of French and Anglophone countries pushing for English. Around me, all the delegates were black Africans, with no one from Europe.

Ultimately, a compromise position was adopted: discussion­s were conducted in English and translated into French, with minutes noted in both languages.

If I were a conference delegate in Cuba, China or France, there would be no argument about the use of Spanish, Mandarin or French, translated into English, for my benefit.

After years of being liberated from colonialis­m and apartheid, it is an indictment on the African Union (AU) that there is no strong campaign to encourage and entrench the use of indigenous languages in a continent endowed with a very rich cultural heritage.

You often hear of cultural, linguistic and traditiona­l exchanges between African, European, American, Chinese and other countries, but the missing part is the AU championin­g the breaking down of linguistic barriers.

After decades of freedom, Africa is seemingly still shackled to its colonial past – marked by man-made borders and separate developmen­t.

From Nelson Mandela to Cyril Ramaphosa, SA leaders who have presided over the AU have played their part in the political and economic invigorati­on of Africa.

During his tenure, Thabo Mbeki popularise­d the concept of African Renaissanc­e – to ensure African people and nations overcame challenges confrontin­g the continent and achieved cultural, scientific, and economic renewal.

Under the stewardshi­p of Ramaphosa, the AU is posed to make inroads towards realising an economical­ly independen­t Africa, if the launch of the African Continenta­l Free Trade Agreement (AFCFTA) is anything to go by.

The agreement, will certainly go a long way in easing trade among African countries.

The operationa­l phase of the AFCFTA, launched last year, will be governed by five operationa­l instrument­s: rules of origin, online negotiatin­g forum, monitoring and eliminatio­n of nontariff barriers, a digital payments system and the African Trade Observator­y.

Trading under the agreement, which was to start next month, has been halted due to the outbreak of Covid-19.

Another milestone has been the launch of the Africa Medical Supplies Platform – a continent-wide strategic plan for a centralise­d coordinati­on, procuremen­t and distributi­on of Covid-19 supplies.

Africa is now realising the importance of working together as one powerful block to redress the past.

To borrow from the late SA poet, Ingoapele Madingoane, there is “no easy way to freedom”.

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