The Herald (Zimbabwe)

New AU Commission chair has work cut out

Mahamat, 56, has served in public service for 26-years and in various high profile positions in the Chadian government, including as prime minister between 2003 and 2005.

- Collins Mwai

OUTGOING Chadian foreign minister Moussa Faki Mahamat will, in April, take over from Dr Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma as the New African Union Commission chairperso­n, after beating four other candidates to the position on Monday.

Mahamat was elected chairperso­n after seven rounds of voting to garner 28 votes with Kenyan foreign affairs minister Amina Mohamed coming second with 26 votes.

Other candidates for the position included Botswana’s foreign minister Pelonomi Venson-Moitoi and Equatorial Guinea’s foreign minister Agapito Mba Mokuy, who were both eliminated in the first round of voting, as well as Senegal’s Bathily Abdoulaye, who came in third.

Mahamat, 56, has served in public service for 26 years and in various high profile positions in the Chadian government, including as prime minister between 2003 and 2005.

He was fronted by Chadian President Idriss Deby for the position last year after the postponeme­nt of the elections for the AU Commission held in July in Kigali.

Ghanaian former deputy minister for foreign affairs Thomas Kwesi Quartey was elected as the deputy chairperso­n of the Commission, taking over from Kenya’s Erastus Mwencha.

Nigeria’s Fatima Mohammed was elected as commission­er for peace and security, replacing Smail Chergui.

The outgoing chairperso­n, Dlamini-Zuma, served only one term despite being eligible to run for a second term.

The AU Commission chairperso­n heads an organ involved in the day to day management of the Union, defending its interests and elaboratin­g position of the Union on various matters.

Other than the chairperso­n, the commission is made up of a deputy chairperso­n, eight commission­ers overseeing various sectors as well as staff members. Dlamini-Zuma legacy Dr Dlamini-Zuma’s stewardshi­p of the Commission saw some milestones but the Union was also largely seen as failing to progress in other aspects.

Among the progress she will be remembered for is Agenda 2063, an AU blueprint for socio-economic progress that aims at eradicatin­g poverty, and achieving sustainabl­e developmen­t all the while achieving integratio­n.

Also during her tenure, the African Union launched the continenta­l passport, which is expected to eradicate visas and facilitate free movement of citizens.

It was also during her tenure that reforms process to make the Union more effective and efficient in addressing concerns of African citizens commenced.

However, Dlamini-Zuma failed to address some of the continent’s long pressing challenges such as timely and impactful deployment of peacekeepe­rs to intervene in conflict situations.

Although the AU’s self-financing mechanism was adopted during her tenure, Dlamini-Zuma’s reign will, like her predecesso­rs, be remembered for continued dependence on donor funding to finance AU activities and operations.

UN at AU summit The AU Heads of State Summit was also attended by UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres, who said he looks forward to strengthen­ing cooperatio­n with Africa in multiple aspects such as promoting peace and security as well as working with the various regional economic communitie­s.

Among the aspects he said he would work on improving is peacekeepi­ng operations such as readiness and mandate.

“Africa provides the majority of UN peacekeepe­rs. I take note of your concerns about the challenges faced by several peacekeepi­ng missions in countries where there is effectivel­y no peace to keep and also African countries and sub-regional organisati­ons to be ready for peace enforcing operations, provided that they have the appropriat­e mandate from the Security Council and resources necessary to implement the operations,” Guterres said.

At a time refugees and immigrants are facing a plethora of challenges to resettle, he said, African countries have a lesson to teach some developed countries on keeping borders open for the needy.

“African nations are among the world’s largest and most generous hosts of refugees. African borders remain open for those in need of protection, when so many borders are being closed, even in the most developed countries in the world,” he said.

Meanwhile, the Summit has readmitted Morocco to the Union after 33-year ‘self-exile’. Morocco left AU predecesso­r, the Organisati­on of African Unity, in 1984 after the latter recognised the independen­ce of Moroccan-occupied Western Sahara.

Morocco submitted its bid to rejoin in 2016, reportedly in the hope that being inside the AU would bring it diplomatic gains against Western Sahara’s independen­ce movement, Polisario Front.

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