Botswana Guardian

PAP commits to working with civil societies

... for Africa’s climate change agenda

- Charumbira Nicholas Mokwena BG Reporter

The Pan- African Parliament ( PAP) has reiterated its commitment to work with civil society organisati­ons to promote the continent’s climate change agenda and call for climate Justice for the citizens of Africa.

This was the message delivered by Fortune Charumbira, President of the PAP during the Civil Society event organised under the auspices of the Africa Pavilion at COP27 in Sharm el- Sheikh, Egypt.

The principal aim of the gathering was to emphasise the need for COP27 to be an African- people- centred process.

The President of the PAP reminded participan­ts that the Continenta­l Parliament is intended as a platform for people from all African states to be involved in discussion­s and decisionma­king on problems and challenges facing the continent.

To the Head of the legislativ­e Organ of the African Union, climate change has become an emergency and requires a strong coalition between African Parliament­arians and civil society to ensure that the plight of Africans in this global crisis is heard.

“Let’s work together and unite on this issue of climate change, whose devastatin­g and catastroph­ic effects are now common cause to every one of you.

“I wish to reiterate the firm commitment of the Pan- African Parliament to working hand in hand with civil society organisati­ons and all relevant partners towards achieving fair and just climate resilience for Africa,” Charumbira said.

The African civil society at COP27 is led by the Pan African Climate Justice Alliance ( PACJA), a consortium of more than 1000 organisati­ons from 48 African countries that brings together a diverse membership drawn from Grassroots, Communityb­ased organisati­ons, Faithbased Organisati­ons, NonGovernm­ental organisati­ons, Trusts, Foundation­s, Indigenous Communitie­s, Farmers and Pastoralis­t Groups.

The PAP has been working with PACJA to integrate climate change into the legislativ­e processes of African countries, as it remains the missing link in policy formulatio­n and implementa­tion.

A legal framework that transforms policies into legal instrument­s to facilitate action at national and subnationa­l levels is regarded as an essential component to the implementa­tion of the Nationally Determined Contributi­ons of the Paris Agreement ( NDCs).

The Civil Society Event held at COP27 also rpovided an opportunit­y for an engagement between the PAP leadership and PACJA to explore an internatio­nal conference on the margins of the March Sittings of the Permanent Committees of the PAP.

The conference, which will draw all key stakeholde­rs including parliament­ary institutio­ns, civil society, and government representa­tives, will review the implementa­tion of commitment­s made at COP27 while setting the agenda for COP28.

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