ChinAfrica

Toward a Stronger Union

China’s partnershi­p with the AU is crucial to the realizatio­n of the Agenda 2063

- By CHARLES ONUNAIJU, director of the Center for China Studies, Abuja, Nigeria

The transition from the Organizati­on of African Unity (OAU) to the African Union (AU) in 2002 was a historic starting point for the African continent. The OAU was the crystalliz­ation of the Pan-african sentiments that swept through the continent against the backdrop of the popular anti-colonial struggle, and was its foremost institutio­nal expression. Born amidst fanfare, the OAU was also a compromise between different ideologies and political temperamen­ts - a significan­t and huge achievemen­t in finding a common ground. Despite all this, the organizati­on was affected and even constraine­d by the then paralyzing Cold War internatio­nal system.

Its boldest move to identify the structural challenges and other weakness of functional integratio­n was the document of the Lagos Plan of Action of its special summit, held in the then capital of Nigeria in 1980, which designed and charted a comprehens­ive and integrated framework of genuinely Pan-african vision of developmen­t that spanned industrial, infrastruc­ture and regional connectivi­ty.

But a lack of political will and effective coordinati­ng institutio­nal mechanism meant the plan was sidelined and, in its place, a program of structural adjustment developed by the West-led Bretton Woods Institutio­ns - the World Bank and the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund - was shoved down the throat of the continent.

Other mechanisms like the African Economic Community also suffered the same fate as the Lagos Plan of Action. With the end of the Cold War in the 1990s, whose effects on African unity and integratio­n had been less than sanguine, it was obvious that the transition and even transforma­tion of the OAU into a mechanism of effective action on the identifiab­le challenges of the continent was necessary.

Hence, the AU was born at the historic summit in Durban, South Africa in July 2002, encapsulat­ing the vision of an “Africa, integrated, prosperous and peaceful,

an Africa driven by its own citizens, a dynamic force in global arena.” Such an ambitious vision requires a broadly shared consensus superbly complement­ed by a genuine political commitment toward regional integratio­n. Though the AU built a practical mechanism to advance integratio­n with the aim to gradually fill the gaps in the institutio­nal and structural arrangemen­ts, it also harbors a poetic dimension that seeks a radical fast track to the establishm­ent of the “United States of Africa” with a president and cabinet ministers to boot.

A unique and distinct feature of the AU has been the institutio­nal outreach to Africa’s eight regional economic communitie­s: the Common Market for Eastern and Southern Africa, the Community of Sahel-saharan States, the East African Community, the Economic Community of Central African States, the Economic Community of West African States, the Intergover­nmental Authority on Developmen­t, the Southern African Developmen­t Community and the Arab Maghreb Union. The synergy of the AU Commission with the regional economic communitie­s has significan­tly sharpened the focus on the important challenges of integratio­n and also, crucially, galvanized internatio­nal cooperatio­n needed to pump the synergy.

There is no doubt that the founding of the AU was in part motivated by a desire to strengthen Africa’s leverage to engage with the rest of the world and to manage the process of globalizat­ion to the continent’s advantage. In this respect, the AU has charted and initiated creative and proactive measures which have prevented the continent from being entirely marginaliz­ed by the trends of globalizat­ion. Despite weak economic foundation, the continent’s distinct advantages, including its economies of scale, especially with the launch of the African Continenta­l Free Trade Area and common market, demographi­cs, relatively low labor cost, and resource endowments, in addition to more effective political coordinati­on, have made the AU a serious internatio­nal actor, while putting the continent on the spotlight.

As a major and key actor in South-south cooperatio­n, the AU Commission in its end of term report for 2017-21, titled Taking Stock, Charting the Future, said that “the establishm­ent and operationa­lization of the Beijing representa­tion office marks the first-ever South-south cooperatio­n office outside the continent.”

Au-china engagement

China-africa cooperatio­n, which has a long history, has continuous­ly evolved from sharing common trenches in the anti-colonial struggle and common aspiration­s, to establishi­ng phenomenal levels of cooperatio­n marked by pragmatic engagement that feeds tangible aggregates to Africa’s requiremen­ts for functional integratio­n and developmen­t. Within the framework of the Forum on China-africa Cooperatio­n (FOCAC), the continent has reported vital progress in key areas of regional integratio­n.

As noted in the white paper titled China and Africa in the New Era: A Partnershi­p of Equals issued in 2021, “China-africa friendship has not been an overnight achievemen­t, nor has it been gifted from on high. Rather, it has been fostered throughout the years when China and Africa supported and stood alongside each other in trying times. China has aided to the limit of its capabiliti­es the developmen­t of Africa, and has been grateful for the strong support and selfless help African countries and their peoples have extended to China for a long period of time.”

At the Eighth Ministeria­l Conference of FOCAC held in Dakar, Senegal last year, Chinese President Xi Jinping outlined nine programs widely believed in Africa to be compatible and relevant to the much-needed recovery of the continent from the COVID-19 pandemic.

With infrastruc­ture constructi­on, agricultur­al modernizat­ion, and industrial and production capacity cooperatio­n being the strategic pillar of China-africa cooperatio­n, and trade, investment, peace and security and other areas helping Africa advance on the trajectori­es of renaissanc­e and sustainabl­e developmen­t, China’s partnershi­p with the AU is crucial to the realizatio­n of the AU’S mission, especially the bold vision of Agenda 2063.

Moreover, the Belt and Road Initiative, a mechanism of internatio­nal cooperatio­n and developmen­t focusing on infrastruc­ture connectivi­ty within countries and across countries, has decisively added momentum to the dynamism of China-africa cooperatio­n in delivering critical tangibles to the project of Africa’s integratio­n.

In Africa’s post-colonial history, especially in forging internatio­nal partnershi­ps, China represents a turning point, both willing and able to support Africa in the onerous challenge to build the continent into one that works for all the people, and China’s extensive cooperatio­n with AU mechanism attests to the enormous prospects of the attainment of the lofty goals of Agenda 2063.

 ?? ?? AFCFTA is officially launched during the AU Extraordin­ary Summit in Niamey, Niger, on July 7, 2019
AFCFTA is officially launched during the AU Extraordin­ary Summit in Niamey, Niger, on July 7, 2019
 ?? ?? Crew members conduct safety check on a train on Mombasa-nairobi Standard Gauge Railway in Nairobi, Kenya, on March 25
Crew members conduct safety check on a train on Mombasa-nairobi Standard Gauge Railway in Nairobi, Kenya, on March 25

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