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Crisis in Zimbabwe Coalition meets members of the AU Peace and Security
Council
Crisis in Zimbabwe Coalition
January 24, 2011
In preparation
for the 16th African Union (AU) summit, Crisis in Zimbabwe Coalition
Director Mr. McDonald Lewanika held meetings with;
- Ambassador
Kwesi Quartey - Ghana's Permanent Rep to the AU and the
United Nations Economic Commisison for Africa (UNECA)
- Ambassador
Professor Joseph Nsengimana Rwanda's Ambassador to Ethiopia
and Permanent Re to AU and NECA
- Minister
Plenipotentiary Vincent J Kibwanda of Tanzania, Charge De Affairs
and Acting Head of Mission who are all members of the AU peace
and Security Force.
The meetings
were facilitated by Oxfam International's Liaison Office with
the AU and the state of Union Coalition. He also attended the launch
of the Union Report organised by Oxfam and Partners which saw an
a attendance of at least 25 African Ambassadors, the Ambassadors
of Finland, and Brazil, some AU commissioners, Heads of Departments,
International Civic orgs, as well as National Civic orgs and representatives
from other countries. The meetings are part of the Coalition's
efforts to impact on the AU, which included pre-summit missions
to Zambia, Malawi and SA, Swaziland as well as a possible mission
to Kigali Rwanda all organised by the South African Office.
The AU summit
to be held from the 24th to the 31st of January will be focussing
on unity and integrity in the African Continent under the theme
"Towards greater Unity and Integration through shared values".
Key issues also to be discussed include human rights, democracy,
good governance and these issues will provide a basis for the collective
actions and solutions in addressing Africa's political economic
and social challenges. Given this, one of the key messages to the
African union on Zimbabwe is that the AU's clear, and firm
position on electoral fraud in Ivory Coast is an important first
step which needs to be backed up by appropriate action. AU has an
opportunity for setting a good precedent, which can and should be
applied across Africa, including in Zimbabwe, where electoral fraud
is not tolerated and where losers are forced to leave power in respect
of the people verdict.
Other
key messages included;
- Conceptualising
fraud in the context of the AU governance Peace and Security Architecture,
and come up with frameworks and systems that allow their 5 key
structures to be active. Relating to this, ambassadors were impressed
to note that there is need to properly work on this.
- Enhancing
the capacity of their early warning system and their situation
room in order to have shared meanings and understandings of indicators
that tallow the African Union to avoid conflict rather than wait
for it to happen and then to try to act afterwards - Indications
from countries like Zimbabwe are a case in point.
- Africa's
greater unity, integration and development can only be achieved
on a strong foundation of political stability. The AU must ensure
that electoral processes do not engender conflict and instability
- Zimbabwe's next elections are a litmus test.
- For Zimbabwe's
next elections, whenever they are held, the AU should ensure that
SADC supervises those elections with the AU itself and the 4 wider
international community closely monitoring them to ensure that
they reflect the will of Zimbabweans and are conducted in conditions
that fully comply with regional standards. An AU peacekeeping
force should be on standby to deal with challenges that may arise
during and after elections.
- AU and SADC
must independently monitor Zimbabwe's preparations for credible
elections and be satisfied that conditions are right before Zimbabwe
can have elections. Particular focus should be on a new constitution,
a new voter's roll, an independent and fully capacitated
Electoral Commission, a robust and free media and electorate,
non-violence and non-partisan justice institutions.
In pursuit of
shared values, the decisive leadership shown by the Economic Community
of West African States ECOWAS) was contrasted with SADC, and though
the very situation was different, it was impressed upon the Ambassadors
that the development of shared values on the continent begins with
decisive non negotiable being agreed to and stood by the Regional
Economic Communities (RECS).
The following
are also key messages to the AU on Broader Union matters;
- The issue
of ratification and implementation of AU Statutes was also raised
to the ambassadors, based on findings of the state of the Union
Research Report, which indicated that members of the AU were found
wanting in terms of ratification, and that even those who ratify
key statutes are sometimes found wanting on domestication and
implementation.
- The Sudan,
Ivory Coast and Tunisia issues were raised as issues of concern
needing attention from the AU and its member states, especially
in respect of protection of citizens, an obligation which is found
in the AU Charter as the Right to Protect, given political developments
in those countries at the moment.
Visit the Crisis
in Zimbabwe fact
sheet
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