Mail & Guardian

AU, UN need to work together

Deadly conflicts will be best addressed if Addis Ababa and New York increase co-operation

- Internatio­nal Crisis Group

Since the beginning of the year, long-running tensions between the United Nations Security Council and the African Union Peace and Security Council over the handling of African crises have broken into the open, as demonstrat­ed by friction about how to address the political turmoil in Sudan and the upsurge of violence in Libya.

The catalyst of the disagreeme­nts intensifyi­ng was a December 2018 dispute over the proposed use of Un-assessed contributi­ons to fund Au-led peace operations. But there are deeper, longer-term dynamics at work, underminin­g both councils from within and sharpening debates about which institutio­n should have primacy in pursuit of their common mission.

The councils can take practical steps to lower tensions, increase cooperatio­n and improve prospects for reducing conflict on the African continent.

Forces underminin­g the two councils from within also make each less reliable in its engagement with the other. On the one hand, splits among the security council’s five veto-wielding permanent members (China, France, Russia, the United Kingdom and the United States — also known as the P5) regarding conflict situations such as Syria and Ukraine are infecting deliberati­ons on African conflicts, at the same time as competitio­n is rising among these countries for influence on the African continent.

On the other hand, AU leaders’ and senior officials’ increasing marginalis­ation of the peace and security

council is denting that institutio­n’s confidence and is underminin­g its credibilit­y as a voice for African affairs with the security council.

The two councils must also struggle with time-worn questions about which body ultimately has the lead when it comes to peace and security in Africa. The AU and its member states tend to believe that there must be African solutions for African problems — a logic that would privilege the peace and security council’s positions on African crises when they come before the security council.

But the security council’s permanent members, especially France, the UK and the US, jealously guard the council’s role under the UN Charter as the principal protector of global peace and security. The AU often interprets the lack of deference to peace and security council positions as arrogance, which can undermine the perceived legitimacy of security council decisions.

To the extent that the lack of connection between the councils reflects a lack of African support for decisions emanating from New York, they can also be a harbinger of failure. Without regional co-operation, it is hard — if not impossible — for UN efforts to succeed.

Although many of these problems run deep, there are some irritants to inter-council relations that could be more readily and productive­ly addressed. For example, annual consultati­ons and possible joint visits to Africa, which should foster greater understand­ing and co-operation, too often have the opposite effect; New York delegation­s behave in ways that come off as high-handed and noninclusi­ve, reinforcin­g the peace and security council’s impression that the security council views it as a junior partner. For its part, the peace and security council’s failure to consistent­ly lay out clear and timely positions on issues on the security council’s agenda weakens its influence, as do persistent difficulti­es in co-ordinating its views with those of the three rotating African participan­ts (A3) on the security council.

The peace and security council takes the view that the A3 should represent its views in New York. In reality, however, their role visà-vis the AU is complicate­d by both AU and UN politics. The peace and security council’s protocols mean that the A3 states are not invited to attend the council’s closed consultati­ons (unless they sit on both councils simultaneo­usly) and, therefore, have no input into the decisions they are meant to advocate. Meanwhile, the A3 are targets of heavy political lobbying at the UN, especially by the P5. Historical ties also matter. Côte d’ivoire has, for example, sometimes sided with France.

Resolving the core issues that aggravate inter-council relations may be beyond immediate reach. But addressing some procedural irritants and focusing on practical improvemen­ts offers the potential for some progress. Among other things, the peace and security council could improve its ability to influence security council deliberati­ons and decisions by discussing conflicts well in advance of key council meetings and mandate renewals.

To ensure that agendas are better aligned, the peace and security council chairperso­n and security council president (which rotate monthly) could meet before their terms to begin jointly defining areas of interest. The councils could plan more frequent and better-prepared direct engagement­s to promote mutual understand­ing. And the peace and security council could improve communicat­ion and co-ordination with the A3 — both by inviting them to participat­e in its deliberati­ons and giving them clear negotiatio­n mandates.

But none of these proposals will make much difference if security council members do not take greater notice of the AU’S views. Simple steps, such as echoing the language of peace and security council decisions in council resolution­s could demonstrat­e increased sensitivit­y to AU positions.

Far from diminishin­g the security council’s status under the UN Charter, these initiative­s could instead help it increase regional support for its efforts and make it more effective in serving its paramount goal of ending deadly conflict.

The Internatio­nal Crisis Group is an independen­t, nonprofit, nongovernm­ental organisati­on committed to preventing and resolving conflict

 ??  ?? Salahuddie­n/anadolu Agency
Salahuddie­n/anadolu Agency
 ??  ?? Mandates: The civil war in South Sudan (above) has resulted in the death of hundreds of thousands of people and the displaceme­nt of millions. In Libya government troops are fighting rebels in a battle for Tripoli (below). AU and UN co-ordination is crucial to ending such conflicts. Photos: Albert Gonzalez Farran/afp and Amru
Mandates: The civil war in South Sudan (above) has resulted in the death of hundreds of thousands of people and the displaceme­nt of millions. In Libya government troops are fighting rebels in a battle for Tripoli (below). AU and UN co-ordination is crucial to ending such conflicts. Photos: Albert Gonzalez Farran/afp and Amru

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