African Union

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African Union

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African Union
Motto: 
“A United and Strong Africa”
An orthographic projection of the world, highlighting the African Union and its member states (green).

Dark green: member states
Political centres
Largest city Lagos
Official languages
Demonym(s) African
Type Continental union
Membership 55 member states
Leaders
Cyril Ramaphosa
Moussa Faki[3]
Roger Nkodo Dang
Legislature Pan-African Parliament
Establishment
25 May 1963; 56 years ago
3 June 1991
9 September 1999
• African Union founded
9 July 2002
Area
• Total
29,922,059[4] km2 (11,552,972 sq mi)
Population
• 2020 estimate
Increase 1,321,000,000[note 1]
GDP (PPP) 2020 estimate
• Total
Increase $7.573 trillion[5][note 2]
• Per capita
Increase $5,733[5]
GDP (nominal) 2020 estimate
• Total
Increase $2.587 trillion[5][note 3]
• Per capita
Increase $1,958[5]
HDI (2019) 0.538
low
Internet TLD .africa c
Website
au.int

The African Union (AU) is a continental union consisting of 55 member states located on the continent of Africa. The AU was announced in the Sirte Declaration in SirteLibya, on 9 September 1999, calling for the establishment of the African Union. The bloc was founded on 26 May 2001 in Addis AbabaEthiopia, and launched on 9 July 2002 in DurbanSouth Africa.[6] The intention of the AU was to replace the Organisation of African Unity (OAU), established on 25 May 1963 in Addis Ababa by 32 signatory governments; the OAU was disbanded on 9 July 2002. The most important decisions of the AU are made by the Assembly of the African Union, a semi-annual meeting of the heads of state and government of its member states. The AU’s secretariat, the African Union Commission, is based in Addis Ababa. The largest city in the AU is LagosNigeria, while the largest urban agglomeration is CairoEgypt.

The African Union has just over 1 billion people and an area of around 29 million km2 (11 million sq mi) and includes popular world landmarks, including the Sahara desert and the Nile river.[7] The primary languages spoken include ArabicEnglishFrenchPortugueseSpanishSwahili, and other languages of Africa. Within the African Union, there are official bodies such as the Peace and Security Council and the Pan-African Parliament.

Overview[edit]

The objectives of the AU are the following:

  1. To achieve greater unity, cohesion and solidarity between the African countries and African nations.
  2. To defend the sovereignty, territorial integrity and independence of its Member States.
  3. To accelerate the political and social-economic integration of the continent.
  4. To promote and defend African common positions on issues of interest to the continent and its peoples.
  5. To encourage international cooperation, taking due account of the Charter of the United Nations and the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.
  6. To promote peace, security, and stability on the continent.
  7. To promote democratic principles and institutions, popular participation and good governance.
  8. To promote and protect human and peoples’ rights in accordance with the African Charter on Human and Peoples’ Rights and other relevant human rights instruments.
  9. To establish the necessary conditions which enable the continent to play its rightful role in the global economy and in international negotiations.
  10. To promote sustainable development at the economic, social and cultural levels as well as the integration of African economies.
  11. To promote co-operation in all fields of human activity to raise the living standards of African peoples.
  12. To coordinate and harmonise the policies between the existing and future Regional Economic Communities for the gradual attainment of the objectives of the Union.
  13. To advance the development of the continent by promoting research in all fields, in particular in science and technology.
  14. To work with relevant international partners in the eradication of preventable diseases and the promotion of good health on the continent.

The African Union is made up of both political and administrative bodies. The highest decision-making organ is the Assembly of the African Union, made up of all the heads of state or government of member states of the AU. The Assembly is chaired by Abdel Fattah el-Sisi, President of Egypt. The AU also has a representative body, the Pan African Parliament, which consists of 265 members elected by the national legislatures of the AU member states. Its president is Roger Nkodo Dang.

Other political institutions of the AU include:

The AU Commission, the secretariat to the political structures, is chaired by Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma of South Africa. On 15 July 2012, Ms. Dlamini-Zuma won a tightly contested vote to become the first female head of the African Union Commission, replacing Jean Ping of Gabon.

Other AU structures are hosted by different member states:

The AU’s first military intervention in a member state was the May 2003 deployment of a peacekeeping force of soldiers from South Africa, Ethiopia, and Mozambique to Burundi to oversee the implementation of the various agreements. AU troops were also deployed in Sudan for peacekeeping during Darfur conflict, before the mission was handed over to the United Nations on 1 January 2008 UNAMID. The AU has also sent a peacekeeping mission to Somalia, of which the peacekeeping troops are from Uganda and Burundi.

The AU has adopted a number of important new documents establishing norms at continental level, to supplement those already in force when it was created. These include the African Union Convention on Preventing and Combating Corruption (2003), the African Charter on Democracy, Elections and Governance (2007), the New Partnership for Africa’s Development (NEPAD) and its associated Declaration on Democracy, Political, Economic and Corporate Governance.[8]

History[edit]

The historical foundations of the African Union originated in the First Congress of Independence African States, held in AccraGhana, from 15 to 22 April 1958. The conference aimed at forming the Africa Day, to mark the liberation movement each year concerning the willingness of the African people to free themselves from foreign dictatorship, as well as subsequent attempts to unite Africa, including the Organisation of African Unity (OAU), which was established on 25 May 1963, and the African Economic Community in 1981.[9] Critics argued that the OAU in particular did little to protect the rights and liberties of African citizens from their own political leaders, often dubbing it the “Dictators’ Club”.[10]

The idea of creating the AU was revived in the mid-1990s under the leadership of Libyan head of state Muammar al-Gaddafi: the heads of state and government of the OAU issued the Sirte Declaration (named after Sirte, in Libya) on 9 September 1999, calling for the establishment of an African Union. The Declaration was followed by summits at Lomé in 2000, when the Constitutive Act of the African Union was adopted, and at Lusaka in 2001, when the plan for the implementation of the African Union was adopted. During the same period, the initiative for the establishment of the New Partnership for Africa’s Development (NEPAD), was also established.

The African Union was launched in Durban on 9 July 2002, by its first chairperson, South African Thabo Mbeki, at the first session of the Assembly of the African Union. The second session of the Assembly was in Maputo in 2003, and the third session in Addis Ababa on 6 July 2004.

Since 2010, the African Union eyes the establishment of a joint African space agency.[11][12][13][14]

Barack Obama was the first-ever sitting United States president to speak in front of the African Union in Addis Ababa, on 29 July 2015. With his speech, he encouraged the world to increase economic ties via investments and trade with the continent, and lauded the progresses made in education, infrastructure and economy. But he also criticised a lack of democracy and leaders who refuse to step down, discrimination against minorities (including LGBT people, religious groups and ethnicities) and corruption. He suggested an intensified democratisation and free trade, to significantly increase living quality for Africans.[15][16]

Treaties[edit]

Signed
In force
Document
1961
1962
1963
1965
OAU Charter
1991
N/A
Abuja Treaty
1999
2002
Sirte Declaration
Pix.gif Pix.gif Pix.gif Pix.gif Pix.gif Pix.gif Pix.gif Pix.gif
Organisation of African Unity (OAU) African Economic Community: (AEC)
Community of Sahel-Saharan States (CEN-SAD)
Common Market for Eastern and Southern Africa (COMESA)
East African Community (EAC)
Economic Community of Central African States (ECCAS)
Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS)
Intergovernmental Authority on Development (IGAD)
Southern African Development Community (SADC)
Arab Maghreb Union (AMU)
Casablanca Group African Union (AU)
Monrovia Group

Geography[edit]

Member states of the African Union cover almost the entirety of continental Africa, except for several territories held by Spain (Canary IslandsPlazas de soberanía); France (MayotteRéunionScattered Islands in the Indian Ocean); Portugal (MadeiraSavage Islands); and the United Kingdom (Saint Helena, Ascension and Tristan da Cunha). Consequently, the geography of the African Union is wildly diverse, including the world’s largest hot desert (the Sahara), huge jungles and savannas, and the world’s longest river (the Nile).

The AU presently has an area of 29,922,059 square kilometres (11,552,972 sq mi), with 24,165 kilometres (15,015 mi) of coastline. The vast majority of this area is on continental Africa, while the only significant territory off the mainland is the island of Madagascar (the world’s fourth-largest island), and the Sinai peninsula accounting for slightly less than 2% of the total.

Demographics[edit]

Population[edit]

The total population of the African Union as of 2017 is estimated at more than 1.25 billion, with a growth rate of more than 2.5% p.a.[citation needed]

Languages[edit]

According to the Constitutive Act of the African Union, its working languages are Arabic, English, French, Portuguese, Spanish, Swahili and other African languages “if possible”.[17] A protocol amending the Constitutive Act, adopted in 2003 but as of June 2016 not yet ratified by a two-thirds majority of member states, would add Spanish, Swahili and “any other African language” and declare all “official” (rather than “working”) languages of the African Union.[18] The Executive Council shall determine the process and practical modalities for the use of official languages as working languages.

Founded in 2001 under the auspices of the AU, the African Academy of Languages promotes the usage and perpetuation of African languages among African people. The AU declared 2006 the Year of African Languages.[19][20] 2006 also marked Ghana’s 55th anniversary since it founded the Bureau of Ghana Languages originally known as Gold Coast Vernacular Literature Bureau.

Politics[edit]

Map of the African Union.svg
This article is part of a series on the
politics and government of
the African Union

The African Union has a number of official bodies:

Pan-African Parliament (PAP)
To become the highest legislative body of the African Union. The seat of the PAP is at MidrandJohannesburg, South Africa. The Parliament is composed of 265 elected representatives from all 55 AU states, and intended to provide popular and civil-society participation in the processes of democratic governance. Its president is Roger Nkodo Dang, of Cameroon.
Assembly of the African Union
Composed of heads of state and heads of government of AU states, the Assembly is currently the supreme governing body of the African Union. It is gradually devolving some of its decision-making powers to the Pan African Parliament. It meets once a year and makes its decisions by consensus or by a two-thirds majority. The current chair of the AU is South African President Cyril Ramaphosa.
African Union Commission (or Authority)
The secretariat of the African Union, composed of ten commissioners and supporting staff and headquartered in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia. In a similar fashion to its European counterpart, the European Commission, it is responsible for the administration and coordination of the AU’s activities and meetings.
Court of Justice of the African Union
The Constitutive Act provides for a Court of Justice to rule on disputes over interpretation of AU treaties. A protocol to set up this Court of Justice was adopted in 2003 and entered into force in 2009. It was, however, superseded by a protocol creating an African Court of Justice and Human Rights, which will incorporate the already established African Court on Human and Peoples’ Rights (see below) and have two chambers: one for general legal matters and one for rulings on the human rights treaties.
Executive Council
Composed of ministers designated by the governments of member states. It decides on matters such as foreign trade, social security, food, agriculture and communications, is accountable to the Assembly, and prepares material for the Assembly to discuss and approve. It is chaired by Shawn Makuyana of Zimbabwe (2015– ).
Permanent Representatives’ Committee
Consisting of nominated permanent representatives of member states, the Committee prepares the work for the Executive Council, similar the role of the Committee of Permanent Representatives in the European Union.
Peace and Security Council (PSC)
Proposed at the Lusaka Summit in 2001 and established in 2004 under a protocol to the Constitutive Act adopted by the AU Assembly in July 2002. The protocol defines the PSC as a collective security and early-warning arrangement to facilitate timely and effective response to conflict and crisis situations in Africa. Other responsibilities conferred to the PSC by the protocol include prevention, management and resolution of conflicts, post-conflict peace building and developing common defence policies. The PSC has fifteen members elected on a regional basis by the Assembly. Similar in intent and operation to the United Nations Security Council.
Economic, Social and Cultural Council
An advisory organ composed of professional and civic representatives, similar to the European Economic and Social Committee. The chair of ECOSOCC, elected in 2008, is Cameroonian lawyer Akere Muna of the Pan-African Lawyers Union (PALU).
Specialised Technical Committees
Both the Abuja Treaty and the Constitutive Act provide for Specialised Technical Committees to be established made up of African ministers to advise the Assembly. In practice, they have never been set up. The ten proposed themes are: Rural Economy and Agricultural Matters; Monetary and Financial Affairs; Trade, Customs, and Immigration; Industry, Science and Technology; Energy, Natural Resources, and Environment; Transport, Communications, and Tourism; Health; Labour, and Social Affairs; Education, Culture, and Human Resources.
Financial institutions

These institutions have not yet been established, however, the Steering Committees working on their founding have been constituted. Eventually, the AU aims to have a single currency (the Afro).

Human rights
The African Commission on Human and Peoples’ Rights, in existence since 1986, is established under the African Charter on Human and Peoples’ Rights (the African Charter) rather than the Constitutive Act of the African Union. It is the premier African human rights body, with responsibility for monitoring and promoting compliance with the African Charter. The African Court on Human and Peoples’ Rights was established in 2006 to supplement the work of the Commission, following the entry into force of a protocol to the African Charter providing for its creation. It is planned that the African Court on Human and Peoples’ Rights will be merged with the Court of Justice of the African Union (see above).
African Energy Commission

Membership[edit]

All UN member states based in Africa and on African waters are members of the AU, as is the disputed Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic (SADR). Morocco, which claims sovereignty over the SADR’s territory, withdrew from the Organisation of African Unity, the AU’s predecessor, in 1984 due to the admission of the SADR as a member. However, on 30 January 2017, the AU admitted Morocco as a member state.[21]

Members[edit]

Regions of the African Union:
Northern Region (Sahara) ,  Southern Region (Kalahari) ,  Eastern Region (Nile) ,  Western Regions A and B (Niger and Volta Niger) ,  Central Region (Congo)

Governance[edit]

The principal topic for debate at the July 2007 AU summit held in Accra, Ghana, was the creation of a Union Government,[22] with the aim of moving towards a United States of Africa. A study on the Union Government was adopted in late 2006,[23] and proposes various options for “completing” the African Union project. There are divisions among African states on the proposals, with some (notably Libya) following a maximalist view leading to a common government with an AU army; and others (especially the southern African states) supporting rather a strengthening of the existing structures, with some reforms to deal with administrative and political challenges in making the AU Commission and other bodies truly effective.[24]

Following a heated debate in Accra, the Assembly of Heads of State and Government agreed in the form of a declaration to review the state of affairs of the AU with a view to determining its readiness towards a Union Government.[25] In particular, the Assembly agreed to:

  • Accelerate the economic and political integration of the African continent, including the formation of a Union Government of Africa;
  • Conduct an audit of the institutions and organs of the AU; review the relationship between the AU and the RECs; find ways to strengthen the AU and elaborate a timeframe to establish a Union Government of Africa.

The declaration lastly noted the “importance of involving the African peoples, including Africans in the Diaspora, in the processes leading to the formation of the Union Government.”

Following this decision, a panel of eminent persons was set up to conduct the “audit review”. The review team began its work on 1 September 2007. The review was presented to the Assembly of Heads of State and Government at the January 2008 summit in Addis Ababa. No final decision was taken on the recommendations, however, and a committee of ten heads of state was appointed to consider the review and report back to the July 2008 summit to be held in Egypt.[26] At the July 2008 summit, a decision was once again deferred, for a “final” debate at the January 2009 summit to be held in Addis Ababa.

Role of African Union[edit]

Somaliland Cape Verde Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic South Sudan Liberia Guinea Sierra Leone Ghana Nigeria Gambia Ivory Coast Benin Guinea-Bissau Senegal Togo Burkina Faso Niger Morocco Tunisia Libya Mauritania Algeria Egypt Somalia Comoros Eritrea Sudan Djibouti Ethiopia Uganda Rwanda Burundi Democratic Republic of the Congo Kenya São Tomé and Príncipe Chad Cameroon Central African Republic Republic of the Congo Gabon Equatorial Guinea Angola Mozambique Namibia South Africa Botswana Eswatini Zimbabwe Mauritius Zambia Malawi Seychelles Madagascar Tanzania Lesotho Community of Sahel-Saharan States Arab Maghreb Union Common Market for Eastern and Southern Africa East African Community Economic Community of the Great Lakes Countries Southern African Development Community Southern African Customs Union Economic Community of Central African States Economic and Monetary Community of Central Africa West African Economic and Monetary Union Liptako–Gourma Authority Mali Economic Community of West African States Intergovernmental Authority on Development African Union Mano River Union West African Monetary Zone

The image above contains clickable links

Euler diagram showing the relationships among various multinational African entitiesv • t • e

One of the key debates in relation to the achievement of greater continental integration is the relative priority that should be given to integration of the continent as a unit in itself or to integration of the sub-regions. The 1980 Lagos Plan of Action for the Development of Africa and the 1991 treaty to establish the African Economic Community (also referred to as the Abuja Treaty), proposed the creation of Regional Economic Communities (RECs) as the basis for African integration, with a timetable for regional and then continental integration to follow.[27]

Currently, there are eight RECs recognised by the AU, each established under a separate regional treaty. They are:

The membership of many of the communities overlaps, and their rationalisation has been under discussion for several years—and formed the theme of the 2006 Banjul summit. At the July 2007 Accra summit the Assembly finally decided to adopt a Protocol on Relations between the African Union and the Regional Economic Communities.[28] This protocol is intended to facilitate the harmonisation of policies and ensure compliance with the Abuja Treaty and Lagos Plan of Action time frames.

Selection of the chairperson[edit]

In 2006, the AU decided to create a Committee “to consider the implementation of a rotation system between the regions” in relation to the presidency. Controversy arose at the 2006 summit when Sudan announced its candidacy for the AU’s chairmanship, as a representative of the East African region. Several member states refused to support Sudan because of tensions over Darfur (see also below). Sudan ultimately withdrew its candidacy and President Denis Sassou-Nguesso of the Republic of the Congo was elected to a one-year term. At the January 2007 summit, Sassou-Nguesso was replaced by President John Agyekum Kufuor of Ghana, despite another attempt by Sudan to gain the chair. 2007 was the 50th anniversary of Ghana’s independence, a symbolic moment for the country to hold the chair of the AU—and to host the mid-year summit at which the proposed Union Government was also discussed. In January 2008, President Jakaya Kikwete of Tanzania took over as chair, representing the East African region and thus apparently ending Sudan’s attempt to become chair—at least till the rotation returns to East Africa.[29] The current chair is Egypt.

List of chairpersons[edit]

Muammar Gaddafi embracing Tanzanian President Kikwete after assuming the chairmanship

Chairpersons of the African Union
Name Beginning of term End of term Country
Thabo Mbeki 9 July 2002 10 July 2003  South Africa
Joaquim Chissano 10 July 2003 6 July 2004  Mozambique
Olusegun Obasanjo 6 July 2004 24 January 2006  Nigeria
Denis Sassou-Nguesso 24 January 2006 24 January 2007  Republic of the Congo
John Kufuor 30 January 2007 31 January 2008  Ghana
Jakaya Kikwete 31 January 2008 2 February 2009  Tanzania
Muammar al-Gaddafi 2 February 2009 31 January 2010  Libya
Bingu wa Mutharika[30][31] 31 January 2010 31 January 2011  Malawi
Teodoro Obiang Nguema Mbasogo[32] 31 January 2011 29 January 2012  Equatorial Guinea
Yayi Boni 29 January 2012 27 January 2013  Benin
Hailemariam Desalegn 27 January 2013 30 January 2014  Ethiopia
Mohamed Ould Abdel Aziz 30 January 2014 30 January 2015  Mauritania
Robert Mugabe 30 January 2015 30 January 2016  Zimbabwe
Idriss Déby 30 January 2016 30 January 2017  Chad
Alpha Condé 30 January 2017 28 January 2018  Guinea
Paul Kagame[33] 28 January 2018 10 February 2019  Rwanda
Abdel Fattah el-Sisi 10 February 2019 10 February 2020  Egypt
Cyril Ramaphosa[34] 10 February 2020 Incumbent  South Africa

Headquarters[edit]

The main administrative capital of the African Union is in Addis AbabaEthiopia, where the African Union Commission is headquartered. A new headquarters complex, the AU Conference Center and Office Complex (AUCC), was inaugurated on 28 January 2012, during the 18th AU summit.[35] The complex was built by China State Construction Engineering Corporation as a gift from the Chinese government, and accommodates, among other facilities, a 2,500-seat plenary hall and a 20-story office tower. The tower is 99.9 meters high to signify the date 9 September 1999, when the Organisation of African Unity voted to become the African Union.[36] The building cost US$200 million to construct.[37]

Espionage accusations[edit]

On 26 January 2018, five years after the building’s completion, the French Newspaper Le Monde[38] published an article stating that the Chinese government had heavily bugged the building, installing listening devices in the walls and furniture and setting up the computer system to copy data to servers in Shanghai daily.[37] The Chinese government denied that they bugged the building, stating that the accusations were “utterly groundless and ridiculous.”[37] Ethiopian Prime Minister Hailemariam Desalegn rejected the French media report.[39] Moussa Faki Mahamat, head of the African Union Commission, said the allegations in the Le Monde’s report were false. “These are totally false allegations and I believe that we are completely disregarding them.”[40] The African Union replaced its Chinese supplied servers and started encrypting its communications following the event.[41]

African Union summits[edit]

Session Host country Host city Date Theme Notes
33rd[42]  Ethiopia Addis Ababa 9 February 202010 February 2020[43] “Silencing the guns: creating conducive conditions for Africa’s development’”[42] Agreement for African Continental Free Trade Agreement to become operational across the continent in July 2020.[44] Agreements also reached to reduce gender gap and inequality in Africa and to “silence guns” on the continent.[44]
12th Extraordinary Summit on AfCFTA[45]  Niger Niamey 48 July 2019 “Refugees, Returnees and Internally Displaced Persons: Towards Durable Solutions to Forced Displacement in Africa” Launch of the African Continental Free Trade Agreement
32nd[46]  Ethiopia Addis Ababa 1011 February 2019 “Refugees, Returnees and Internally Displaced Persons: Towards Durable Solutions to Forced Displacement in Africa”
11th Extraordinary Summit on AfCFTA[47]  Ethiopia Addis Ababa 518 November 2018 Agreement reached on reorganization AU Commission[47]
31st[48]  Mauritania Nouakchott 25 June2 July 2018 “Winning the Fight against Corruption: A Sustainable Path to Africa’s Transformation”
10th Extraordinary Summit on AfCFTA[49]  Rwanda Kigali 1721 March 2018 “Creating One African Market” Agreement reached on the AfCFTA
30th[50]  Ethiopia Addis Ababa 2229 January 2018 “Winning the Fight against Corruption: A Sustainable Path to Africa’s Transformation”
29th[51]  Ethiopia Addis Ababa 27 June4 July 2017 “Harnessing the Demographic Dividend through Investments in Youth”
28th[52]  Ethiopia Addis Ababa 2231 January 2017 “Harnessing the Demographic Dividend through investments in Youth” Morocco rejoins the AU after 33 years
27th[53]  Rwanda Kigali 1018 July 2016 “African Year of Human Rights with particular focus on the Rights of Women” Launch of African Union Passport
26th[54]  Ethiopia Addis Ababa 2131 January 2016 “African Year of Human Rights with particular focus on the Rights of Women”
Third India-Africa Forum Summit  India New Delhi 26–29 October 2015 Reinvigorated Partnership-Shared Vision
25th[55][56]  South Africa Johannesburg 715 June 2015 “Year of Women Empowerment and Development Towards Africa’s Agenda 2063” Featured Angelina Jolie[57]
24th[58]  Ethiopia Addis Ababa 2331 January 2015 “Year of Women Empowerment and Development Towards Africa’s Agenda 2063”
2nd Africa-Turkey Summit[59][60]  Equatorial Guinea Malabo 1921 November 2014 “A new model of partnership to enhance a sustainable development and integration of Africa”
23rd[61]  Equatorial Guinea Malabo 2027 June 2014 “Year of Agriculture and food security”
22nd[62][63]  Ethiopia Addis Ababa 2131 January 2014 “Year Agriculture and food security, Marking 10th Anniversary of the Adoption of the Comprehensive Africa Agriculture Development Programme (CAADP)”
ICC – Extraordinary Summit[64]  Ethiopia Addis Ababa 1112 October 2013 “Africa’s relationship with the ICC This was in regards to the ICC’s non-adherence to AU calls to drop certain charges against sitting leaders and claims that it was disproportionally targeting Africans.[65]
21st[66]  Ethiopia Addis Ababa 1927 May 2013 “Panafricanism and African Renaissance” 50th Anniversary of the Establishment of the Organisation of African Unity
20th[67]  Ethiopia Addis Ababa 2728 January 2013 “Panafricanism and African Renaissance”
Diaspora Summit[68]  South Africa Sandton 2325 May 2012 “Towards the realisation of a united and integrated Africa and its diaspora”
19th[69]  Ethiopia Addis Ababa 916 July 2012 “Boosting Intra-African trade”
18th[70]  Ethiopia Addis Ababa 2330 January 2012 “Boosting Intra-African trade”
17th[71]  Equatorial Guinea Malabo 23 June1 July 2011 “Youth empowerment for sustainable development”
2nd Africa-India Summit[72]  Ethiopia Addis Ababa 2025 May 2011 “Enhancing partnership: shared vision”
16th[73]  Ethiopia Addis Ababa 2431 January 2011 “Towards greater unity and integration through shared values”
15th[74]  Uganda Kampala 1927 July 2010 “Maternal, Infant, and Child Health and Development in Africa”
14th[75]  Ethiopia Addis Ababa 25 January2 February 2010 “Information and Communication Technologies (ICT) in Africa: Challenges and Prospects for Development”
13th[76]  Libya Sirte 24 June3 July 2009 “Investing in Agriculture for Economic Growth and Food Security”
12th[77]  Ethiopia Addis Ababa 26 January3 February 2009 “Infrastructure Development in Africa”
11th[78]  Egypt Sharm el-Sheikh 24 June1 July 2008 “Meeting the Millennium Development Goals on Water and Sanitation”
10th[79]  Ethiopia Addis Ababa 25 January2 February 2008 “Industrial Development of Africa”
9th[80]  Ghana Accra 25 June6 July 2007 “Grand Debate on the Union Government”
8th[81]  Ethiopia Addis Ababa 2230 January 2007 1. Science, Technology and Scientific Research for Development
2. Climate change in Africa
7th[82]  Gambia Banjul 25 June2 July 2006 “Rationalisation of Recs and Regional Integration”
6th[83]  Sudan Khartoum 1624 January 2006 “Education and Culture”
5th[84]  Libya Sirte 2829 June 2005
Extraordinary summit on UN Reform[85]  Ethiopia Addis Ababa 4 August 2005
4th[86]  Nigeria Abuja 2431 January 2005
3rd[87]  Ethiopia Addis Ababa 68 July 2004
2nd[88]  Mozambique Maputo 212 July 2003
1st[89]  South Africa Durban 2810 July 2002 “Peace, Development and Prosperity: The African Century” Notable events include the launch of the African Union.[90]

Foreign relations[edit]

The individual member states of the African Union coordinate foreign policy through this agency, in addition to conducting their own international relations on a state-by-state basis. The AU represents the interests of African peoples at large in intergovernmental organisations (IGOs); for instance, it is a permanent observer at the United Nations General Assembly. Both the African Union and the United Nations work in tandem to address issues of common concerns in various areas. The African Union Mission in United Nations aspires to serve as a bridge between the two Organisations.

Membership of the AU overlaps with other IGOs and occasionally these third-party organisations and the AU will coordinate matters of public policy. The African Union maintains special diplomatic representation with the United States and the European Union.

In 2016, the Union introduced continent-wide passports.[91]

Upon the election of Donald Trump for the presidency of the U.S., in 2017, the latter passed an executive order for a ban on citizens from seven countries with suspected links to terrorism, that concerns three African countries. During the 28th African Union Summit, in Ethiopia, African leaders criticised the ban[92] as they expressed their growing concerns for the African Economy, under Trump’s policies.

Africa–China relations[edit]

One of the leading economic partners of the continent has been the People’s Republic of China (PRC). In September 2018, the bloc held its third Forum on China–Africa Cooperation summit in Beijing, China.

Economy[edit]

The AU’s future goals include the creation of a free trade area, a customs union, a single market, a central bank, and a common currency (see African Monetary Union), thereby establishing economic and monetary union. The current plan is to establish an African Economic Community with a single currency by 2023.[93]

Indicators[edit]

The following table shows various data for AU member states, including area, population, economic output and income inequality, as well as various indices, including human development, viability of the state, perception of corruption, economic freedom, state of peace, freedom of the press and democratic level.

Country Land Area(km²) 2015[94] Population2018[95][96] GDP (PPP)(Intl. $) 2015[94] GDP (PPP)per capita (Intl. $) 2015[94] HDI2014[97] FSI2016[98] CPI2016[99] IEF2016[100] GPI2016[101] WPFI2016[102] DI2016[103]
 Algeria 2,381,741 42,228,408 548,293,085,686 13,823 0.736 78.3 34 50.06 2.21 41.69 3.56
 Angola 1,246,700 30,809,787 173,593,223,667 6,938 0.532 90.5 18 48.94 2.14 39.89 3.40
 Benin 112,760 11,485,044 21,016,184,357 1,932 0.48 78.9 36 59.31 2.00 28.97 5.67
 Botswana 566,730 2,254,068 33,657,545,969 14,876 0.698 63.5 60 71.07 1.64 22.91 7.87
 Burkina Faso 273,600 19,751,466 28,840,666,622 1,593 0.402 89.4 42 59.09 2.06 22.66 4.70
 Burundi 25,680 11,175,374 7,634,578,343 300 0.4 100.7 20 53.91 2.50 54.10 2.40
 Cape Verde 4,030 543,767 3,205,197,585 6,158 0.646 71.5 59 66.46 N/A 19.82 7.94
 Cameroon 472,710 25,216,267 68,302,439,597 2,926 0.512 97.8 26 54.18 2.36 40.53 3.46
 Central African Republic 622,980 4,666,368 2,847,726,468 581 0.35 112.1 20 45.23 3.35 33.60 1.61
 Chad 1,259,200 15,477,729 28,686,194,920 2,044 0.392 110.1 20 46.33 2.46 40.59 1.50
 Comoros 1,861 832,322 1,098,546,195 1,393 0.503 83.8 24 52.35 N/A 24.33 3.71
 Congo, Democratic Republic of the 2,267,050 84,068,091 56,920,935,460 300 0.433 21 46.38 3.11 50.97 1.93
 Congo, Republic of the 341,500 5,244,359 27,690,345,067 5,993 0.591 92.2 20 42.80 2.25 35.84 2.91
 Côte d’Ivoire 318,000 25,069,230 74,916,780,423 3,300 0.462 97.9 34 60.01 2.28 30.17 3.81
 Djibouti 23,180 958,923 2,911,406,226 3,279 0.47 89.7 30 55.96 2.29 70.90 2.83
 Egypt 1,010,407 98,423,598 1,173,000,000,000 10,250 0.69 90.2 34 55.96 2.57 54.45 3.31
 Equatorial Guinea 28,050 1,308,975 32,317,928,931 38,243 0.587 85.2 N/A 43.67 1.94 66.47 1.70
 Eritrea[104] 101,000 3,452,786 8,845,000,000b 600b 0.391 98.6 18 42.7 2.46 83.92 2.37
 Eswatini 17,200 10,452,834,007 8,122 0.531 87.6 N/A 59.65 2.07 52.37 3.03
 Ethiopia 1,104,300 109,224,414 152,057,290,468 1,530 0.442 97.2 34 51.52 2.28 45.13 3.60
 Gabon 257,670 2,119,275 32,539,376,597 18,860 0.684 72 35 58.96 2.03 32.20 3.74
 Gambia, The 10,120 2,280,094 3,140,820,062 1,578 0.441 86.8 26 57.14 2.09 46.53 2.91
 Ghana 227,540 29,767,102 108,393,071,924 3,955 0.579 71.2 43 63.00 1.81 17.95 6.75
 Guinea 245,720 12,414,293 14,316,884,358 1,135 0.411 103.8 27 53.33 2.15 33.08 3.14
 Guinea-Bissau 28,120 1,874,303 2,521,743,682 1,367 0.42 99.8 16 51.81 2.26 29.03 1.98
 Kenya 569,140 51,392,565 133,592,522,053 2,901 0.548 98.3 26 57.51 2.38 31.16 5.33
 Lesotho 30,360 2,108,328 5,914,437,068 2,770 0.497 80.9 39 50.62 1.94 28.78 6.59
 Liberia 96,320 4,818,973 3,533,313,381 500 0.43 95.5 37 52.19 2.00 30.71 5.31
 Libya[105] 1,759,540 6,678,559 94,010,000,000b 14,900b 0.724 96.4 14 N/A 3.20 57.89 2.25
 Madagascar 581,800 26,262,313 33,354,200,458 1,376 0.51 84.2 26 61.06 1.76 27.04 5.07
 Malawi 94,280 18,143,217 19,137,290,349 1,112 0.445 87.6 31 51.8 1.82 28.12 5.55
 Mali 1,220,190 19,077,749 33,524,899,739 1,905 0.419 95.2 32 56.54 2.49 39.83 5.70
 Mauritania[106] 1,030,700 4,403,313 16,190,000,000b 4,400b 0.506 95.4 27 54.8 2.30 24.03 3.96
 Mauritius 2,030 1,267,185 23,817,914,134 18,864 0.777 43.2 54 74.73 1.56 27.69 8.28
 Morocco 446,300 36,029,093 257,398,957,178 7,365 0.628 74.2 37 61.27 2.09 42.64 4.77
 Mozambique 786,380 29,496,004 31,326,751,237 1,120 0.416 87.8 27 53.19 1.96 30.25 4.02
 Namibia 823,290 2,448,301 24,043,436,006 9,778 0.628 71.1 52 61.85 1.87 15.15 6.31
 Niger 1,266,700 22,442,831 17,857,377,171 897 0.348 98.4 35 54.26 2.24 24.62 3.96
 Nigeria 910,770 195,874,685 1,168,000,000,000 5,639 0.514 103.5 28 57.46 2.88 35.90 4.50
 Rwanda 24,670 1,230,197 19,216,033,048 1,655 0.483 91.3 54 63.07 2.32 54.61 3.07
 São Tomé and Príncipe 960 211,028 575,391,345 3,023 0.555 72.9 46 56.71 N/A N/A N/A
 Senegal 192,530 15,854,323 34,398,281,018 2,274 0.466 83.6 45 58.09 1.98 27.99 6.21
 Seychelles 460 97,096 2,384,515,771 25,525 0.772 60.2 N/A 62.2 N/A 30.60 N/A
 Sierra Leone 72,180 7,650,150 9,511,431,824 1,474 0.413 91 30 52.31 1.81 29.94 4.55
 Somalia[107] 627,340 15,008,226 5,900,000,000c 600c N/A 114 10 N/A 3.41 65.35 N/A
 South Africa 1,213,090 57,792,518 742,461,000,000 12,393 0.666 69.9 45 61.9 2.32 21.92 7.41
 South Sudan 619,745 10,975,927 21,484,823,398 1,741 0.467 113.8 11 N/A 3.59 44.87 N/A
 Sudan 1,886,086 41,801,533 165,813,461,495 4,121 0.479 111.5 14 N/A 3.27 72.53 2.37
 Tanzania 885,800 56,313,438 130,297,806,032 2,510 0.521 81.8 32 58.46 1.90 28.65 5.76
 Togo 54,390 7,889,093 10,018,697,437 1,372 0.484 85.8 32 53.64 1.95 30.31 3.32
 Tunisia 155,360 11,565,201 121,200,025,401 10,770 0.721 74.6 41 57.55 1.95 31.60 6.40
 Uganda 200,520 42,729,036 67,856,334,117 1,738 0.483 97.7 25 59.26 2.15 32.58 5.26
 Western Sahara[108] 266,000 567,402 906,500,000d 2,500d N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A
 Zambia 743,390 17,351,708 58,400,082,027 3,602 0.586 86.3 38 58.79 1.78 35.08 5.99
 Zimbabwe 386,850 14,438,802 26,180,942,292 500 0.509 100.5 22 38.23 2.32 40.41 3.05
 African Union 30,370,000 1,275,920,972 5,457,724,064,668 4,602 0.524d 88.99d 31.51d 55.55d 2.27 37.89 4.30
Country Land Area (km²) 2015 Population 2018 GDP (PPP)(Intl. $) 2015 GDP (PPP)per capita (Intl. $) 2015 HDI2014 FSI2016 CPI2016 IEF2016 GPI2016 WPFI2016 DI2016

a External data from 2016. b External data from 2015. c External data from 2014. d AU total used for indicators 1 through 3; AU weighted average used for indicator 4; AU unweighted average used for indicators 5 through 12.

Culture[edit]

Symbols[edit]

Emblem of the African Union

The emblem of the African Union consists of a gold ribbon bearing small interlocking red rings, from which palm leaves shoot up around an outer gold circle and an inner green circle, within which is a gold representation of Africa. The red interlinked rings stand for African solidarity and the blood shed for the liberation of Africa; the palm leaves for peace; the gold, for Africa’s wealth and bright future; the green, for African hopes and aspirations. To symbolise African unity, the silhouette of Africa is drawn without internal borders.

The African Union adopted its new flag at its 14th Ordinary Session of the Assembly of Heads of State and Government taking place in Addis Ababa 2010. During the 8th African Union Summit which took place in Addis Ababa on 29 and 30 January 2007, the Heads of State and Government decided to launch a competition for the selection of a new flag for the Union. They prescribed a green background for the flag symbolising hope of Africa and stars to represent Member States.

Pursuant to this decision, the African Union Commission (AUC) organised a competition for the selection of a new flag for the African Union. The AUC received a total of 106 entries proposed by citizens of 19 African countries and 2 from the Diaspora. The proposals were then examined by a panel of experts put in place by the African Union Commission and selected from the five African regions for short listing according to the main directions given by the Heads of State and Government.

At the 13th Ordinary Session of the Assembly, the Heads of State and Government examined the report of the Panel and selected one among all the proposals. The flag is now part of the paraphernalia of the African Union and replaces the old one.

The old flag of the African Union bears a broad green horizontal stripe, a narrow band of gold, the emblem of the African Union at the centre of a broad white stripe, another narrow gold band and a final broad green stripe. Again, the green and gold symbolise Africa’s hopes and aspirations as well as its wealth and bright future, and the white represents the purity of Africa’s desire for friends throughout the world. The flag has led to the creation of the “national colours” of Africa of gold and green (sometimes together with white). These colours are visible in one way or another in the flags of many African nations. Together the colours green, gold, and red constitute the Pan-African colours.

The African Union has adopted the anthem, “Let Us All Unite and Celebrate Together“.

Celebration[edit]

Africa Day, formerly African Freedom Day and African Liberation Day, is an annual commemoration regarding the founding of the Organisation of African Unity (OAU), on 25 May 1963, and occurring on the same date of the month each year. Other celebrations include the following:

  • The Fez Festival of World Sacred Music: a week long celebration for harmony between cultures with dancing, Moroccan music, art exhibitions and films.[109]
  • The Knysna Oyster festival: held in Knysna and focused around sport, food and their oyster heritage.[110]
  • Lake of Stars Festival: three-day celebration that takes place in Lake Malawi, showcasing African music and welcoming people from around the world.[111]
  • Fête du Vodoun: also known as the Ouidah Voodoo Festival. It is centred around their rituals on voodoo temples, with entertainment that includes horse races and traditional drum performances.[112]
  • Umhlanga (ceremony): is mainly a private event for young women but on the sixth and seventh days the traditions are done publicly.[113]
  • Marsabit Lake Turkana Cultural Festival: held in Kenya and celebrates harmony amongst tribes with their culture, singing, dancing and traditional costumes.[114]

Current issues[edit]

The AU faces many challenges, including health issues such as combating malaria and the AIDS/HIV epidemic; political issues such as confronting undemocratic regimes and mediating in the many civil wars; economic issues such as improving the standard of living of millions of impoverished, uneducated Africans; ecological issues such as dealing with recurring famines, desertification, and lack of ecological sustainability; as well as the legal issues regarding Western Sahara.

AIDS in Africa[edit]

The AU has been active in addressing the AIDS pandemic in Africa. In 2001, the AU established AIDS Watch Africa to coordinate and mobilise a continent-wide response.[115] Sub-Saharan Africa, especially southern and eastern Africa, is the most affected area in the world. Though this region is home to only 6.2% of the world’s population, it is also home to half of the world’s population infected with HIV.[116] While the measurement of HIV prevalence rates has proved methodologically challenging, more than 20% of the sexually active population of many countries of southern Africa may be infected, with South Africa, Botswana, Kenya, Namibia, and Zimbabwe all expected to have a decrease in life expectancy by an average of 6.5 years. The pandemic has had massive implications for the economy of the continent, reducing economic growth rates by 2–4% across Africa.[117]

In July 2007, the AU endorsed two new initiatives to combat the AIDS crisis, including a push to recruit, train and integrate 2 million community health workers into the continent’s healthcare systems.[118]

In January 2012, the African Union Assembly requested that the African Union Commission would work out “a roadmap of shared responsibility to draw on African efforts for a viable health funding with support of traditional and emerging partners to address AIDS dependency response.” Once created, the roadmap (as it is officially known) provided a group of solutions that would enhance the shared responsibility and global solidarity for AIDSTB, and Malaria responses in Africa by 2015. The roadmap was organised into three pillars which were: diversified financing, access to medicines, and enhanced health governance. The roadmap held stakeholders accountable for the realisation of these solutions between 2012 and 2015.

The first pillar, diversified financing, ensures that countries begin to develop a country specific financial sustainability plans with clear targets, and identify and maximise opportunities to diversify funding sources in order to increase the domestic resource allocation to AIDS and other diseases.

The second pillar, access to affordable and quality-assured medicines, tries to promote and facilitate investing in leading medicine hub manufacturers in Africa, accelerate and strengthen medicine regulatory harmonisation, and create legislation that would help to protect the knowledge of the researchers who develop these life-saving medicines.

The third pillar, enhanced leadership and governance, tries to invest in programs that support people and communities to prevent HIV and ensure that leadership at all levels is mobilised to implement the roadmap. There are several organisations that will ensure the smooth implementation of the roadmap, including NEPADUNAIDSWHO, and several other UN partners.[119]

Corruption[edit]

Daniel Batidam, an anti-corruption advisory board member of the African Union, resigned after stating that the organisation had “multiple irregularities” and that “issues have come up over and over again” regarding corruption. The African Union quickly accepted his resignation, with Batidam saying that it was a sign that mismanagement towards corruption will “continue with business as usual”.[120]

Libya[edit]

When the conflicts in Libya began in 2011, the African Union was initially criticised for not doing much to prevent the escalation of conflict in Libya. Additionally, the AU hesitated to take a side when the conflict in Libya began. There was some vagueness when it came to the African Union’s position in the conflict, it was unclear if they were fully supporting the Libyan regime or if they were instead supporting the Libyan citizens. This ambiguity occurred right around the time when there were several human right violations against the Libyan regime. It was later realised that the hesitation in the AU’s response to the Arab Spring in Libya was due to its lack of capacity and capability for engaging in democratic reforms.[121]

The AU attempted to mediate in the early stages of the 2011 Libyan civil war, forming an ad hoc committee of five presidents (Congolese President Denis Sassou NguessoMalian President Amadou Toumani TouréMauritanian President Mohamed Ould Abdel AzizSouth African President Jacob Zuma, and Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni) to broker a truce.[122] However, the beginning of the NATO-led military intervention in March 2011 prevented the committee from traveling to Libya to meet with Libyan leader and former head of the AU until 2010 Muammar Gaddafi.[123] As a body, the AU sharply dissented from the United Nations Security Council‘s decision to create a no-fly zone over Libya,[124] though a few member states, such as Botswana,[125] Gabon,[126] Zambia,[127] and others expressed support for the resolution.

As a result of Gaddafi’s defeat at the Battle of Tripoli, the decisive battle of the war, in August 2011, the Arab League voted to recognise the anti-Gaddafi National Transitional Council as the legitimate government of the country pending elections,[128] yet although the council has been recognised by several AU member states, including two countries that are also members of the Arab League,[129][130] the AU Peace and Security Council voted on 26 August 2011 not to recognise it, insisting that a ceasefire be agreed to and a national unity government be formed by both sides in the civil war.[131] A number of AU member states led by EthiopiaNigeria, and Rwanda requested that the AU recognise the NTC as Libya’s interim governing authority,[132][133] and several other AU member states have recognised the NTC regardless of the Peace and Security Council’s decision.[134][135] However, AU member states Algeria[136] and Zimbabwe[137] have indicated they will not recognise the NTC, and South Africa has expressed reservations as well.[138]

On 20 September 2011, the African Union officially recognised the National Transitional Council as the legitimate representative of Libya.[139]

In post-Gaddafi Libya, the African Union believes it still has an important responsibility to the country despite its failure to contribute to the conflict when it originated. The AU is essentially fighting an uphill battle though because of their failure to support the Libyan rebels. Although the African Union is there to keep peace, it is not a long term solution. The goal, as stated by the AU, is to establish a Libyan government that is sustainable to ensuring the peace in Libya. To achieve some level of peace in Libya, the AU has to moderate peace talks which are aimed at achieving compromises and power sharing accommodations as well.[121]

Military[edit]

Togo[edit]

In response to the death of Gnassingbé Eyadéma, President of Togo, on 5 February 2005, AU leaders described the naming of his son Faure Gnassingbé the successor as a military coup.[140] Togo’s constitution calls for the speaker of parliament to succeed the president in the event of his death. By law, the parliament speaker must call national elections to choose a new president within sixty days. The AU’s protest forced Gnassingbé to hold elections. Under heavy allegations of election fraud, he was officially elected President on 4 May 2005.

Mauritania[edit]

On 3 August 2005, a coup in Mauritania led the African Union to suspend the country from all organisational activities. The Military Council that took control of Mauritania promised to hold elections within two years.[citation needed] These were held in early 2007, the first time that the country had held elections that were generally agreed to be of an acceptable standard. Following the elections, Mauritania’s membership of the AU was restored. However, on 6 August 2008, a fresh coup overthrew the government elected in 2007. The AU once again suspended Mauritania from the continental body.[141] The suspension was once again lifted in 2009 after the military junta agreed with the opposition to organise elections.[142]

Mali[edit]

In March 2012, a military coup was staged in Mali, when an alliance of Touareg and Islamist forces conquered the north, resulting in a coming to power of the Islamists. This resulted in the deaths of hundreds of Malian soldiers and the loss of control over their camps and positions.[143] After a military intervention with help from French troops, the region was in control of the Malian army. To reinstall local authorities, the AU helped to form a caretaker government, supporting it and holding presidential elections in Mali in July 2013.[144] In 2013, a summit for the African Union was held and it was decided that the African Union was going to enlarge their military presence in Mali. The AU decided to do this because of increasing tensions between al-Qaeda forces and the Mali army. There have been several rebel groups that are vying for control of parts of Mali. These rebel groups include the National Movement for the Liberation of Azawad (MNLA), the National Front for the Liberation of Azawad (FLNA), Ganda Koy, Ganda Izo, Ansar ad-Din, and Al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM). AU forces have been tasked with counterinsurgency missions in Mali as well as governing presidential elections to ensure as smooth a transition of power as possible.[145]

Regional conflicts and peacekeeping[edit]

One of the objectives of the AU is to “promote peace, security, and stability on the continent”.[146] Among its principles is “Peaceful resolution of conflicts among Member States of the Union through such appropriate means as may be decided upon by the Assembly”.[147] The primary body charged with implementing these objectives and principles is the Peace and Security Council. The PSC has the power, among other things, to authorise peace support missions, to impose sanctions in case of unconstitutional change of government, and to “take initiatives and action it deems appropriate” in response to potential or actual conflicts. The PSC is a decision-making body in its own right, and its decisions are binding on member states.

Article 4(h) of the Constitutive Act, repeated in article 4 of the Protocol to the Constitutive Act on the PSC, also recognises the right of the Union to intervene in member state in circumstances of war crimes, genocide and crimes against humanity. Any decision to intervene in a member state under article 4 of the Constitutive Act will be made by the Assembly on the recommendation of the PSC.

Since it first met in 2004, the PSC has been active in relation to the crises in Darfur, Comoros, Somalia, Democratic Republic of Congo, Burundi, Côte d’Ivoire and other countries. It has adopted resolutions creating the AU peacekeeping operations in Somalia and Darfur, and imposing sanctions against persons undermining peace and security (such as travel bans and asset freezes against the leaders of the rebellion in Comoros). The Council is in the process of overseeing the establishment of a “standby force” to serve as a permanent African peacekeeping force.[citation needed] Institute for Security Studies, South Africa, March 2008.

The founding treaty of the AU also called for the establishment of the African Peace and Security Architecture (APSA), including the African Standby Force (ASF), which is to be deployed in emergencies. That means, in cases of genocide or other serious human-rights violations, an ASF mission can be launched even against the wishes of the government of the country concerned, as long as it is approved by the AU General Assembly. In the past AU peacekeeping missions, the concept was not yet applied, forces had to be mobilised from member states. The AU is planning on putting the concept into practise by 2015 at the earliest.[144][needs update]

Darfur, Sudan[edit]

In response to the ongoing Darfur conflict in Sudan, the AU has deployed 7,000 peacekeepers, many from Rwanda and Nigeria, to Darfur. While a donor’s conference in Addis Ababa in 2005 helped raise funds to sustain the peacekeepers through that year and into 2006, in July 2006 the AU said it would pull out at the end of September when its mandate expires.[148] Critics of the AU peacekeepers, including Dr. Eric Reeves, have said these forces are largely ineffective due to lack of funds, personnel, and expertise. Monitoring an area roughly the size of France has made it even more difficult to sustain an effective mission. In June 2006, the United States Congress appropriated US$173 million for the AU force. Some, such as the Genocide Intervention Network, have called for UN or NATO intervention to augment and/or replace the AU peacekeepers. The UN has considered deploying a force, though it would not likely enter the country until at least October 2007.[149] The under-funded and badly equipped AU mission was set to expire on 31 December 2006 but was extended to 30 June 2007 and merged with the United Nations African Union Mission in Darfur in October 2007. In July 2009 the African Union ceased cooperation with the International Criminal Court, refusing to recognise the international arrest warrant it had issued against Sudan’s leader, Omar al-Bashir, who was indicted in 2008 for war crimes.[150]

The AU struggled to have a strategic role in the independence talks and the reconciliation process of South Sudan, due to overwhelming interests of African and non-African powers, its influence is still limited and not consistent.[151]

Somalia[edit]

From the early 1990s up until 2000, Somalia was without a functioning central government. A peace agreement aimed at ending the civil war that broke out following the collapse of the Siad Barre regime was signed in 2006 after many years of peace talks. However, the new government was almost immediately threatened by further violence. In February 2007, the African Union (AU) and European Union (EU) worked together to establish the African Union Mission in Somalia (AMISOM). The purpose of AMISOM was to create a foundation that would hopefully provide aid to some of Somalia’s most vulnerable and keep the peace in the region. They are tasked with everything from protecting federal institutions to facilitating humanitarian relief operations. Much of the AU’s opposition comes from an Islamic extremist group named al-Shabaab.[152] To temporarily shore up the government’s military base, starting in March 2007, AU soldiers began arriving in Mogadishu as part of a peacekeeping force that was intended by the AU to eventually be 8,000 strong.[153] Eritrea recalled its ambassadors to the African Union on 20 November 2009[154] after the African Union called on the United Nations Security Council to impose sanctions on them due to their alleged support of Somali Islamists attempting to topple the Transitional Federal Government of Somalia, the internationally recognised government of Somalia which holds Somalia’s seat on the African Union.[155] On 22 December 2009, the United Nations Security Council passed UNSCR 1907, which imposed an arms embargo on Eritrea, travel bans on Eritrean leaders, and asset freezes on Eritrean officials. Eritrea strongly criticised the resolution. In January 2011, Eritrea reestablished their mission to the AU in Addis Ababa.[156]

In the fall of 2011, AMISOM forces, along with Kenyan and Ethiopian forces launched a set of offensive attacks on the al-Shabaab. In these attacks, AMISOM forces were able to reclaim key cities including the Somali capital of Mogadishu. In September 2013, Ethan Bueno de Mesquita, a political scientist, argued that with the help of AMISOM forces, they had made it “nearly impossible for al-Shabaab to hold territory even in its former strongholds in southern Somalia”. Although lots of progress has been made towards peace in the region, it should still be noted that African Union forces’ still get attacked regularly. Despite AMISOM being effective, it is vastly underfunded and many forces lack the resources required. Funding for humanitarian relief and the formation of armies tends to be vastly undercut.[152]

Anjouan, Comoros[edit]

A successful 2008 invasion of Anjouan by AU and Comoros forces to stop self-declared president Mohamed Bacar, whose 2007 re-election was declared illegal.[157] Prior to the invasion, France helped transport Tanzanian troops but their position in the disagreement was questioned when a French police helicopter was suspected of attempting to sneak Bacar into French exile.[158] The first wave of troops landed on Anjouan Bay on 25 March and soon took over the airfield in Ouani, ultimately aiming to locate and remove Bacar from office.[157] On the same day, the airport, capital, and second city were overrun and the presidential palace was deserted.[159] Bacar escaped and sought asylum in France and the government of Comoros demanded they return him so they may determine his consequence.[160] Many of Bacar’s primary supporters were arrested by the end of March, including Caabi El-Yachroutu Mohamed and Ibrahim Halidi. His asylum request was rejected in 15 May as France agreed to cooperate with the Comoran governments demand.[161] His presidential position was then occupied by Moussa Toybou after winning the election in 29 June.[162]

See also[edit]

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