Africa needs collective approach to genuine sovereignty
ON JULY 3-4 the African Union held its 29th annual Summit in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, while the continent is faced with monumental challenges from Cairo to Cape Town. Held under the theme of “Harnessing the Demographic Dividend through Investment in Youth”, the gathering recognised the necessity of economic and social development to ensure a prosperous and sustainable future for Africa. A recent decline in commodity prices impacting the raw materials, energy and agricultural producing states illustrates the need to plan for an independent strategy of guaranteeing the health and wellbeing of over one billion people.
The two leading economic countries on the continent, South Africa and Nigeria, are both in recession. Unemployment is growing and the national currencies of these states have fallen into precipitous decline. Bond rating agencies based in the United States are issuing reports that question the capacity of the ruling parties of each nation to engineer remedies that will make them more creditworthy to international finance capital.
South Africa and Nigeria encompass growing youth populations placing social and political pressure on their governments to address the need for accessible employment opportunities for all. Nonetheless, the dependence upon foreign markets for the export of natural resources and cash crops systematically undermines strategic planning within the present world division of labour and economic power.
Just three years ago Western financial publications were hailing what they described as phenomenal growth in many African nations. Nigeria was proclaimed to have surpassed South Africa as the leading powerhouse of the region.
Countries such as Angola, Algeria, Gabon, Nigeria and Ghana experienced an influx of foreign direct investment largely due to the rising oil and natural gas prices. However, by 2015 the prices of oil, natural gas and other resources had declined by over 60 percent.
These factors compounded the social and political instability brought about by US and NATO wars against the governments in Libya and Ivory Coast, which resulted in the collapse of these societies, fuelling migration from Africa across the Mediterranean and into Southern, Central and Eastern Europe.
Similar Western interventions in Iraq, Syria, Yemen, Afghanistan and the unresolved question of Palestine’s independence, have worsened the crisis of displacement. United Nations agencies have reported that the situation of dislocated persons domestically, as well as refugees and migrants, with estimates numbering 65-75 million people, easily surpasses any period since the conclusion of World War II.
In his opening address, AU Chairperson President Alpha Conde of Guinea noted that: “Aware of the importance of human capital, the AU has decided to harness the African youth, to find ways and means of developing the youth which constitute 70 percent of the total population. The holistic management of the challenges faced by the youth call on us to find alternatives to build economies that are resilient and capable of ensuring the space for the youth in our continent.” (Zimbabwe Chronicle, July 4)
If these issues are not the focus of AU policy the future painted by Conde would not be a desirable one. A region so rich in minerals and land could further deteriorate, making conditions unlivable to even larger numbers of people across the continent.
Conde went on to emphasise that: “It is imperative on us African leaders that if we don’t invest in the youth, we would have failed our duty and compromised dangerously the future of our youth. We would have condemned them to unemployment and immigration to become parasites and beggars.”
These observations are poignant in light of the hostility that African migrants are met with in Europe and the US. The migration issue is being utilised by the ultra-right wing neo-fascist groups and political parties as a wedge to win political power and advance policies which reinforce racism and national discrimination against people from the former colonial territories of Africa, the Middle East and the Asia-Pacific.
Gender equality, youth and economic development
Although the AU mandated at its conception in 2002 the full integration of women within the governing structures of national and regional centres of power there is still considerable work to be done in this arena. In some countries women are represented in significant numbers within cabinet and parliamentary bodies, the civil service and professional fields. However, the onus of the declining economic situation, foreign intervention and internecine conflict falls upon the backs of women and youth.
The 19th Ordinary General Assembly of First Ladies of Africa (OAFLA) took place simultaneously with the overall AU Summit. Ms. Amira El Fadil Mohamed, the Commissioner for Social Affairs of the AU Commission, stressed that there is a pressing need for a systematic and integrated strategy aimed at tackling all four areas of the thematic demographic dividend pillars. These areas include health and wellbeing; employment and entrepreneurship; education and skills development and rights and good governance. Without adequate progress in all four areas there cannot be long lasting growth, social stability and genuine development.
According to a press release issued by OAFLA on July 4: “Sustainable and affordable access to maternal and child health care, HIV testing and counselling and immunization services, according to the Commissioner of Social Affairs, will ultimately result in young people meaningfully contributing to the socio-economic development of their society, thereby enabling them to make the right informed decisions about their health.”
Ms Mohamed said of the challenge that: “The youth of our continent need to be guaranteed social and economic development if they are to contribute to their nations’ and continents’ economic development.”
Mrs. Roman Tesfaye emphasised: “It is high time that African nations put in place favourable policies and increase youth targeted investments. We need to lift and break the barriers faced by African youth in accessing and utilising reproductive health information and services.”
Pan-Africanism, self-reliance and liberation
Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe followed through on a previous commitment when he served as AU Chairperson. (President) Mugabe presented a check for $1 million to the AU Foundation saying it was a “modest contribution” aimed at breaking the cycle of donor dependency.
Zimbabwe and other anti-imperialist states had criticised the AU’s readmission of the Kingdom of Morocco earlier this year absent of the resolution of the Western Sahara question. Now both the Saharawi Arab Democratic Republic (SADR) and their occupiers in Rabat are members of the continental organisation.
Morocco has carried out a diplomatic offensive among the AU member-states. Its offers of economic assistance have swayed numerous governments to agree on a compromised position on the inherent anti-colonial mission of the organisation. In the aftermath of the 29th Summit, the Minister of Foreign Affairs for the SADR, Mohamed Salem Ould Essalek, said that the AU would deploy a taskforce to explore solutions to the Western Sahara crisis. The UN has gone on record calling for an internationally supervised referendum on the future of the SADR.
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