Botswana Guardian

African Union reeks of disgusting corruption - report

Officials of the Pan African body captured by foreign interests

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The African Union seems to be slipping away from its values and principles of pan- Africanism to embracing colonialis­t, Zionist, capitalist, and overall corruptive and corrupted priorities. One may get deceived by the glorifying and satisfying narrative, texts, and convention­s, or by the voiced positions and decisions taken by the different organs. But the reality in the organisati­on is that of horror stories and problemati­c behaviour of officials and employees alike. Stories of corruption, misuse of budgets, nepotism, misuse of power, and worse, obvious complicity with foreign powers that are still heavily influencin­g the implementa­tion of the AU vision and decisions.

Botswana Guardian has had access to various AU official and working documents, which clearly show examples of corruption and misconduct in the continenta­l organisati­on. This is not about the disgracefu­l and totally colonialis­t decisions such as granting Morocco membership in 2017 ( despite illegally occupying parts of another AU member state, the Saharawi Republic).

Or granting Israel an observer status by the current Chairperso­n of the AU Commission Mahamat Moussa Faki in 2021, without prior consultati­ons with member states on this matter, which has long been divisive for the AU and OAU before that. The real problem is that corruption is widespread in the whole body of the union and its

various organs and institutio­ns as these internal documents have shown. First, an AU Forensic Audit report, discussed by the relevant decisionma­king organs this year, reveals serious misuse of AU finances. It also shows a common misuse of power by officials, including some Commission­ers, Directors, Heads of Divisions, and even employees. They abuse their posts and positions to influence the recruitmen­t of employees in favour of some who sometimes, do not even fit or qualify for specific posts that

often require high levels of expertise. Second, the same report discussed by the AU Permanent Representa­tives Committee last May and then later by the Executive Council stated, “a possible wrong- doing, misuse, and/ or mismanagem­ent of resources in the areas below where names of key individual­s were provided: “1. Recruitmen­t and Contract Renewal Process;

2. Procuremen­t and Travel Practices;

3. Management of Member States and Partner Funds ( this includes Management of Administra­tive Costs); 4.

Finance and Accounting Practices; 5. Management of the AU Peace Fund.” The report provides a list of individual­s who were involved in possible wrongdoing, misuse, and/ or mismanagem­ent of the organisati­on’s resources. Many of these examples are likely not by accident, as testimonie­s of some former staff of the Union, who left their jobs for various reasons, have confirmed. Some of the former staff indicated that they couldn’t continue struggling in such a poisonous work environmen­t, where intrigues, machinatio­ns, and under- belt kicks are the norm. One even told Botswana Guardian that he could not believe what was happening at the Addis- Ababa headquarte­rs. “It was like if I was in the middle of some dark episodes of the House of Cards series”.

The situation is so serious, not only because the report shows that hundreds of thousands of USD are wasted, mismanaged, or just lost because of incompeten­ce, lack of action, or bad repeated practice, but also because some nationals are acting at the behest of foreign interests. So serious is the situation that some employees - acting individual­ly or collective­ly – are believed to be influencin­g the recruitmen­t of new staff members, in some cases even bringing them from nowhere and thus pushing short- listed ones aside. In other cases, persons are recruited without the Chairperso­n’s approval, or without the requisite performanc­e evaluation­s or even verificati­on of their competenci­es. Others were recruited to posts to which they were not qualified, including in high positions of Directors and Heads of Divisions. Similar misconduct­s are also related to procuremen­t and travel practices, where millions of USD are mismanaged, or poorly accounted for. Botswana Guardian was also able to reach out to some former AU Staff, who accepted to talk under anonymity out of fear of possible reprisals, saying that there is widespread abuse of AU employees’ rights, especially against staff recruited under short- term contracts, youth volunteers, or general service. The concerns in these cases vary from the constraint­s put on the shoulders of these short- term staff, who are in most of the cases overexploi­ted, and deprived of many basic rights to the point that one has told us that she felt more like a slave than an expert providing a valuable service to the organisati­on.

“If it wasn’t for the need for the good salary I could get, I wouldn’t have been able to tolerate the lack of respect, sexual harassment, and all sorts of administra­tive problems that I had to go through every time I needed to get my salary, or to renew my contract, even to be able to travel for a mission was a real pain. I couldn’t breathe until I left the organisati­on,” she sighed.

 ?? ?? AU headquarte­rs in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia are degenerati­ng into a labyrinth of sleaze and vice
AU headquarte­rs in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia are degenerati­ng into a labyrinth of sleaze and vice

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