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AFRICA:
AU summit: a summing up
IRIN News
July 09, 2004
Http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=42108
ADDIS ABABA - It was
billed as a summit at which a new future for Africa would be unveiled.
Alpha Oumar Konare, the chairman of the African Union Commission, spelt
out his US $1.7-billion strategic plan for revitalising the troubled and
marginalised continent.
But as the three-day session closed in the Ethiopian capital, Addis Ababa,
once again it was conflict, stalled peace deals, atrocities and instability
which had dominated the agenda.
In the last 40 years, conflicts have cost Africa seven million lives and
$250 billion, according to the AU. And, during the summit, leaders agreed
that for so long as wars continued to plague the continent, development
would remain a pipe dream.
So, after Nigerian President Olusegun Obasanjo, the incoming AU chairman,
officially closed the summit on Thursday, it was fringe meetings devoted
to conflict he focused on.
Obasanjo, whose country commands one of the strongest voices in the AU,
said during those meetings, "frank, hard-hitting discussions" had been
held on the subjects of conflict and poverty. Referring to the tough stance
the AU had adopted on hot spots like Sudan, Cote d'Ivoire and the Democratic
Republic of the Congo (DRC), he said: "These issues demonstrate our determination
to be proactive. Without peace, there is no development."
During these mini-summits, leaders agreed to send an 300-strong armed
protection force into western Sudan to try to stabilise the Darfur region
and restore confidence among civilians.
UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan and Konare brokered plans for renewed
talks between the government and rebel forces in Cote d'Ivoire to be held
the end of the month.
During the main proceedings of the summit, a number of proposals on tackling
poverty and disease, as well as on enhancing women’s rights, were agreed
on. The AU will site its $30-million pan-African parliament in South Africa.
Heads of state won plaudits for engaging in their first-ever debate on
gender. The fight against diseases ravaging the continent also took centre
stage. Declarations were issued backing the role of women, and urging
that current EU reforms of the common agricultural policy should not adversely
affect Africa.
And five more countries subscribed to the much-heralded African Peer Review
Mechanism, which rates their performance on everything from human rights
to economic transparency, bringing the number of signed-up countries to
22.
But as the 38 leaders who attended the summit flew out of Addis Ababa,
the question of who would pay remained unanswered. The Peace and Security
Council, a key weapon in the AU’s arsenal, will cost $200 million a year.
The peace mission in Darfur alone will cost $26 million. Currently, however,
just $1.6 million is being paid into the AU peace fund by member states.
And while heads of state endorsed Konare’s ambitious and costly three-year
strategic plan to launch Africa into the 21st century, they stopped short
of committing themselves to his proposed $600 million annual budget. Instead,
they decided that the thorny issue of who paid what would be thrashed
out by their foreign ministers, who would meet to discuss the issue in
November.
The challenge the leaders have set themselves is enormous. Africa’s gross
domestic product (GDP) is dwarfed by its debt. More than 40 percent of
Africa's 830 million people live on less than $1 a day, and hunger and
AIDS are widespread. About 6,500 Africans die each day of AIDS, while,
as the conference was told, 200 million others faced chronic hunger.
Africa accounts for just 1 percent of foreign direct investment, 1 percent
of world GDP and 2 percent of world trade, which has also been declining.
Member states have paid up only $13 million of the AU's $43 million annual
budget this year. Seven countries face AU sanctions – including Central
African Republic, DRC and Guinea Bissau – for nonpayment of AU dues, thereby
losing their voting rights. Meanwhile, the AU's home-grown economic rescue
plan, the New Partnership for Africa’s Development, will cost a staggering
$64 billion a year.
Although foreign aid to the continent has slightly increased to $22 billion
a year. Obasanjo and Konare both conceded that this is an enormous of
money, but even if it were doubled, Konare said, and the continent’s entire
debt was wiped out, Africa would still face a $19 billion shortfall.
Obasanjo said the chances of many African nations meeting the 2015 anti-poverty
targets, known as the Millennium Development Goals, were slim. He told
journalists that without the support of the international community, the
AU would have to struggle, just as did its predecessor, the Organisation
of African Unity (OAU).
The cash-strapped OAU was widely criticised for failing to address crises
on the continent, and leaders are keen not to see the AU go the same way.
But Obasanjo also pointed to a litany of unkept promises by rich nations,
and argued that they too, and not just African countries, should be placed
under the spotlight.
"Africa is suffering an injustice," he said. Debt, massive agricultural
subsidies to the tune of $1 billion a day and unfair trade rules hampered
development in Africa, he added. "If only they would subsidise less, by,
say, 25 percent, that would be US $90 billion available to be taken up,"
he told a news conference at the end of the summit.
Obasanjo also said calls on the eve of the summit on African countries
to refuse to pay the $201-billion debt crippling the continent were "unrealistic".
"How many countries can afford to say, ‘to hell with it, we will not pay’?
Tomorrow aid will be cut off, everything will be cut off," he warned.
AU leaders believe the finances needed to create a new-look Africa and
AU can be raised by way of member states paying 0.5 percent of their national
budgets. Other ideas include taxes on air travel between member states,
and floating AU bonds on financial markets. The private sector, too, is
to be urged to provide funds.
Yet, despite the shortfall in cash, optimism still obtains. "There’s no
point being sceptical about Africa, because we have found our way forward,"
Desmond Orjiako, the AU spokesman, told IRIN. "Any scepticism at this
time, no matter who it comes from, cannot work, because we are determined."
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