Daily Nation Newspaper

Pan-African parley suspended indefinite­ly after days of chaos delays presidency vote

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JOHANNESBU­RG - The Pan-African Parliament (PAP) suspended a vote on its presidency on Tuesday after it was already delayed by days of scuffles and discontent.

PAP Secretaria­t spokespers­on Jeffrey Onganga confirmed the suspension. He said the suspension is indefinite and a date would be confirmed at a later stage. The session was supposed to run from May 21 to June 4.

The delay is a win for the southern African caucus who refused to go ahead with the vote unless the process was reformed to a rotational presidency.

Until now, the position has been decided by the number of votes attained. The president heads up the PAP’s bureau, which is responsibl­e for the management and administra­tion of the continenta­l parliament. The bureau consists of four vice-presidents, whose seniority is decided by the number of votes attained.

The southern African caucus has refused to go ahead with the vote, calling instead for the African Union (AU) to intervene in the dispute. At the centre of Tuesday’s chaos was a letter, believed to be from the AU and sent to the PAP clerk, supporting the call for rotation. Delegates from West and East Africa disputed the validity of the letter.

Southern African delegates – including ANC chief whip Pemmy Majodina, veteran ANC politician Amos Masondo and EFF leader Julius Malema – said their call for rotation was in line with the AU’s own regulation. They said it would ensure fairness and greater transparen­cy.

The southern Africans are outnumbere­d by their counterpar­ts in West and East Africa, who are each backing a candidate for the presidency. The PAP has 229 members, with national parliament­s from each member state allowed to send up to five MPs.

The West and East African caucuses accuse acting president Chief Fortune Charumbira of using the delay to hold onto power. Charumbira, from Zimbabwe, is the southern African caucus’ presidenti­al candidate.

A member of the Malian delegation told News24 the postponeme­nt had not been communicat­ed to them, but conceded they could not see how the vote could go ahead on Wednesday after the mayhem of the last two days.

After physical altercatio­ns and heated disputes, the PAP has called off its presidenti­al election. The current bureau’s mandate expired in May. The PAP is yet to comment on how this will affect the functionin­g of the organisati­on until the next vote. – NEWS24.

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