The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Nepad and the battle for the soul of AU

According to the reform plan, Nepad is to be integrated into the AU Commission as the AU Developmen­t Agency.

- Liesl Louw-Vaudran Correspond­ent

PLANS to make Nepad a developmen­t agency are pitting the old guard against the reformers. Algerian Prime Minister Ahmed Ouyahia was one of the first to speak at the Nepad orientatio­n committee meeting on the sidelines of the recent African Union (AU) summit.

He said that although his country supports the AU reforms proposed by Rwandan President Paul Kagame, Algeria is against scrapping Nepad.

Algeria was one of the founding members of Nepad. According to the reform plan, Nepad is to be integrated into the AU Commission as the AU Developmen­t Agency.

“Let me remind you that Nepad was created in 2001 and played an integral part in the continenta­l architectu­re,” Ouyahia said in Addis Ababa.

“Nepad isn’t something that was tagged onto the AU, but represente­d a new methodolog­ical approach.”

He’s right. In the heady days of the AU’s creation, Nepad and the African Peer Review Mechanism (APRM) represente­d a radical shift from the Organisati­on of African Unity (OAU).

Both Nepad and the APRM are voluntary organisati­ons. Former South African president Thabo Mbeki and others had so little confidence in the OAU, that they adopted a two-speed approach, hoping that large states would eventually pull others along.

Jakkie Cilliers, head of African Futures and Innovation at the Institute for Security Studies, describes this new approach as follows: “Mbeki led the charge in making a deal with the West. Instead of imposing the Bretton Woods institutio­ns upon Africa, Africa would assume ownership and self-regulate (through Nepad and the APRM). Neverthele­ss, it still needed aid and debt relief. This new approach was a major shift in Africa’s relations globally.”

Things didn’t quite turn out as planned, mainly because once Mbeki stepped down as president, Nepad lost its founder and advocate. And without its own funds, Nepad tried to raise money from business people, who were supposedly eager to benefit from the organisati­on’s continenta­l network. Nepad’s operationa­l costs, according to AU documents, are just over US$10 million annually, excluding programmes. So despite pleas by the likes of Ouyahia, there is little proof that these huge sums have really been worth it.

The Nepad Agency, housed near Johannesbu­rg, produces interestin­g reports and conference­s on pan-African issues like agricultur­e, health, education and infrastruc­ture. It has introduced innovative data tools, demonstrat­ed by Nepad CEO Ibrahim Mayaki at the AU summit. But it’s unclear how this differs from what the United Nations Economic Commission for Africa or the African Developmen­t Bank can do - both with much more money and expertise than Nepad.

Uneasiness over Nepad’s role crept in several years ago, leading to its transition into the Nepad Agency. More recently, there’s been an attempt to align it to Agenda 2063 – Africa’s blueprint for peace and prosperity.

Reforming Nepad into a developmen­t agency would mean scrapping the top-heavy structure, led by a head of state. The agency would report to the AU Commission and AU summits, like other AU structures. For now, it looks as if the new developmen­t agency will remain in Johannesbu­rg - a good location for a business-orientated venture.

According to one high-level AU official to be seconded to the agency, the aim is to channel funding from donors, members states and the private sector into developmen­t projects.

Heated discussion­s in Addis Ababa didn’t produce a final decision on Nepad’s future, with the outcome postponed to the next AU summit in Mauritania in June/July this year.

Meanwhile, the debate around Nepad has raised deep-seated rifts concerning the overall reform of the AU. The Southern African Developmen­t Community (SADC), currently chaired by South Africa, complained to AU Commission Chairperso­n Moussa Faki Mahamat that decision making on AU reform didn’t follow procedures in the AU’s Constituti­ve Act. SADC wants more consultati­on and some of its concerns have already been addressed. Kagame - often accused by AU delegates of trying to impose an authoritar­ian governance style on the AU - is impatient to move things forward. He has surrounded himself with a team of experts and business people, together with a “reform implementa­tion team” in Mahamat’s office. There are strong signs that the reforms - on Nepad and other AU issues - are going ahead regardless of the objections from SADC and others.

Senegalese President Macky Sall just finished his term as head of Nepad’s orientatio­n committee and the draft AU summit decisions make no mention of his replacemen­t. This could mean the structure is already being streamline­d.

This is different from the African Peer Review Mechanism. Chad’s President Idriss Déby will replace Kenya’s President Uhuru Kenyatta as leader of the APRM forum of heads of state. This is good for those who want to keep the APRM alive, but Dèby is probably not best placed to champion an organisati­on aimed at good governance in Africa. Read full article on www.herald. co.zw

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