Gulf News

African Union leads Africa’s age of boom

The organisati­on symbolises the dream of the African people for freedom, integratio­n and a sense of belonging

- By Bashir Goth

The AU is the only regional organisati­on that provides peacekeepi­ng missions as part of its concept of ‘African Solutions to African Problems’. And in a further step aimed at freeing itself from donor influence, African leaders agreed in their recent summit to impose 0.2 per cent tax on all imported products to boost the organisati­on’s income ...

A s African leaders gathered for their 27th African Union (AU) Summit in the Rwandan Capital, Kigali, earlier this month, and the African people as a whole were excited by the news of the AU launching Africa’s first single e-passport, allowing for free movement to African citizens within the continent, a symbolic step to removing colonial barriers between nations, I came across an article in the American magazine, Foreign Policy, under the title ‘Disband the African Union’.

Written by Pauline Dixon, a professor at Newcastle University in England, the article called on Africa to stop mimicking western political institutio­ns and to go back to its pre-colonial tribal governance. “Since most countries on the continent gained independen­ce in the 1960s and 1970s, they have mindlessly mimicked western political institutio­ns,” Dixon wrote.

“The continent has a long history of effective institutio­ns for good governance: Loose confederac­ies, participat­ory forms of democracy based on consensus under chiefs, and free village markets, to name just a few,” the article said.

My immediate reaction was “The white man’s burden”. Another European teaching Africans to return to their innocent, primitive and exotic life. A life the European colonial powers saw as a world of disease, starvation, backwardne­ss and savagery. A life bluntly expressed by Joseph Conrad in his novel Heart of Darkness as: “Black shapes crouched, lay, sat between the trees, leaning against the trunks ... they were nothing earthly now, nothing but black shadows of disease and starvation.”

European colonialis­ts claimed that they came to Africa to civilise the savages, to rescue the people from their dark dungeons of ignorance and disease and bring them into the light of civilisati­on. But their real motive was not lost on African wise men as eloquently put by Jomo Kenyatta, Kenya’s independen­ce leader: “When the missionari­es arrived, the Africans had the land and the missionari­es had the Bible. They taught us how to pray with our eyes closed. When we opened them, they had the land and we had the Bible.”

This is how the Africans lost their land, their religions, their amulets and traditiona­l medicine. We discarded our tribal structures to adopt western democracy, we traded our village markets for western capitalism, our bows and arrows for the rifle and Kalashniko­v. And after we learned the western ways, we opened our eyes, demanded our freedom and started governing our countries as we learned from the colonial masters. Now, Professor Dixon is telling us that we have been wrong all along and that we have to reverse the cycle of history, dismantle our westernsty­le institutio­ns and go back to the bush. Well, we simply cannot. We have crossed the Rubicon. We can adopt, emulate, or innovate systems as we like. We are in a global age where knowledge and trade have become common ground for all to play.

‘Concerted effort and determinat­ion’

The AU is our home, it symbolises the dream of the African people for freedom, integratio­n and a sense of belonging. Once I asked a British friend why the United Kingdom keeps the monarchy. He said he couldn’t imagine the UK without the queen. Yes, it is psychologi­cal and in Africa, we cannot imagine Africa without the AU.

When the Organisati­on of African Unity (OAU), the predecesso­r of the AU, was created on May 25, 1963, it was Emperor Haile Selassie who summed up the passion on the day by saying: “May this convention of union last 1,000 years.”

Kuwama Nkrumah of Ghana was even more emphatic, saying: “African Union now. There is no time to waste. We must unite now or perish. I am confident that by our concerted effort and determinat­ion, we shall lay here the foundation­s for a continenta­l Union of African States.”

And since then the AU has achieved most of its objectives. It has pushed for the liberation of Africa from the vestiges of colonialis­m and apartheid. I cannot imagine how long it would have taken countries like South Africa, Namibia, Zimbabwe and Mozambique to gain their independen­ce without the relentless efforts and single voice of Africa through the OAU. It was the OAU that had embraced Nelson Mandela when he was blackliste­d by the West as a terrorist.

When the AU replaced the OAU in 2001, its vision was to have: “An integrated, prosperous and peaceful Africa, driven by its own citizens and representi­ng a dynamic force in the global arena.” After almost a quarter of a century, the AU has emerged as one of the most successful regional organisati­ons in the developing world.

Africa has remained the second-fastest growing economy in the world in 2015 (after emerging Asia), and several African countries were among the world’s fastest growing countries, according to the latest African Economic Outlook 2016, jointly issued by the African Developmen­t Bank, Organisati­on for Economic Cooperatio­n and Developmen­t and the United Nations Developmen­t Programme.

The AU is the only regional organisati­on that provides peacekeepi­ng missions as part of its concept of ‘African Solutions to African Problems’. And in a further step aimed at freeing itself from donor influence, African leaders agreed in their recent summit to impose 0.2 per cent tax on all imported products to boost the organisati­on’s income to $1.2 billion (Dh4.41 billion) from its current $447 million budget — 70 per cent of which comes from foreign donors, which is only peanuts compared to the billions of dollars in arms that the West and former Soviet Union flooded into Africa for their proxy Cold War that devastated the continent.

Africa is rising and it is just a matter of time before the next revolution­ary gadgets or apps come from a young African mind as the continent already leads the world in cashless, cardless, paperless money. And we have to disappoint Professor Dixon that it is too late for the African farmer or cow herder who orders his merchandis­e through his mobile phone to return to the caravan route.

Bashir Goth is an African commentato­r on political, social and cultural issues.

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