Title: THE AFRICAN UNION
1- THE AFRICAN UNION
- AND
- NEPAD
- Department of Foreign Affairs
- June 2004
2THE STATUSOF THE AFRICAN UNION
3AFRICAN UNION HISTORICAL BACKGROUND
- OAU established 25 May 1963, Addis Ababa
- Since 1979 a need to streamline identified
- Charter amended by augmenting through ad hoc
decisions of Summit, eg Cairo Declaration - Need for greater efficiency/effectiveness of the
Organisation - Need to integrate political activities of OAU
with economic and development issues as
articulated in Abuja Treaty establishing the AEC.
4AFRICAN UNIONABUJA TREATY (AEC)
- OAU operated on basis of two legal instruments,
OAU Charter and Abuja Treaty/AEC - Creation of African Economic Community
- Co-ordination, harmonisation and progressive
integration of Regional Economic Communities -
the building blocks of the Continent and Union.
5AFRICAN UNIONEXTRAORDINARY SUMMIT IN SIRTE,
LIBYA,9 SEPTEMBER 1999
- Objective To amend OAU Charter to increase
effectiveness and efficiency - Concluded with Sirte Declaration
- Addressing social/political/economic realities of
Africa - Unity
- Revitalise to meet needs of the people
- Eliminate conflicts
- Meet global challenges
- Improve living conditions.
6AFRICAN UNIONBIRTH OF THE AU
- OAU/AEC Summit in Lomè, Togo in July 2000 adopted
the Constitutive Act of the African Union in
terms of the Sirte Declaration of 9 September
1999 - South Africa signed the Constitutive Act on 8
September 2000 - Instrument of Ratification deposited on 23 April
2001 - The Act came into force on 26 May 2001.
7AFRICAN UNIONOAU/AEC SUMMIT, LUSAKA, ZAMBIA,
JULY 2001
- Decisions pertaining to the transformation of the
OAU to AU - directed programme for the first two
to three years of the AU - Preparation of Draft Protocols and Rules of
Procedure relating to Organs and Institutions of
the Union.
8AFRICAN UNIONOBJECTIVES OF THE AU
- Unity/Solidarity in Africa
- Defend sovereignty/territorial integrity/independe
nce - Political/Socio-economic integration
- Common positions on issues of interest
- Encourage international co-operation
- Promote peace/security and stability
- Promote democratic principles/institutions,
popular participation and good governance - Promote/protect human rights (African Charter on
Human and Peoples Rights, and other instruments)
9AFRICAN UNIONOBJECTIVES OF THE AU CONT.
- Integration into global economy and co-ordinate
international negotiations - Sustainable development at the economic/social/cul
tural levels and integration of economies - Co-operation to raise living standards
- Co-ordinate/harmonise policies between RECs
- Research in all fields, particularly science and
technology (ICT, Centres of Excellence eg Kenya
on Agriculture) - International partnerships in eradication of
preventable diseases. (Malaria, Polio, TB)
10AFRICAN UNIONDURBAN SUMMIT, JULY 2002
- Launch of the AU
- Winding down the business of the OAU during this
Organisations 38th and last Session of the
Assembly of Heads of State and Government, - South Africa the first Chairperson of the African
Union.
11THE FIRST THREE YEARS
- The focus has been on two areas
- Putting structures in place which will be able to
deliver on the scope of the Constitutive Act - A concerted effort to give effect to all
decisions by the Assembly and the Executive
Council.
12AFRICAN UNIONSTRUCTURES
- Assembly of Heads of State and Government
Highest decision making organ of the AU - meets
at least once a year in Ordinary Sessions. No
limit on Extraordinary Sessions. - Executive Council of Ministers Primarily
Ministers of Foreign Affairs - meets at least
twice a year in regular sessions, and before
Extraordinary Sessions due to preparatory
responsibility. - Permanent Representatives Committee Ambassadors
and Permanent Representatives of Member States
stationed at the headquarters of the African
Union in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia - meets as
frequently as necessary, but at least once a
month.
13AFRICAN UNIONSTRUCTURES
- Commission
- Secretariat of the AU
- Statutes governing function of Commission have
been adopted - Structure for Commission adopted
- Chair of the Commission, his Deputy and 8
Commissioners have been appointed (full gender
representivity) - 755 posts in total, 17 allocated to SA due to
quota system - Current staff will have to be reassessed and
re-appointed - Posts, incl. strategic ones are being advertised
in a piece-meal fashion - Appointments done on merit, while taking into
consideration quota system - DPSA and DFA working on secondment policy in
order to encourage quality SA applicants from
within government.
14AFRICAN UNIONSTRUCTURES
- Specialised Technical Committees(Meetings of
line-function Ministers) Not officially
constituted yet. Will be supported by the
individual Commissioners and their Directorates.
Composition based on the Abuja Treaty, but may be
re-evaluated.) - Rural Economy and Agricultural Matters
- Monetary and Financial Affairs
- Trade, Customs and Immigration Matters
- Industry, Science and Technology, Energy, Natural
Resources and Environment - Transport, Communications and Tourism
- Health, Labour and Social Affairs and
- Education, Culture and Human Resources.
15AFRICAN UNIONSTRUCTURES
- Peace and Security Council
- Standing decision-making organ for the
prevention, management and resolution of
conflicts - The Common African Defence and Security Policy,
in whose development SA has played a leading
role, will inform the activities of the PSC. - Protocol Establishing the PSC entered into force
26 December 2003. Inaugurated 25 May 2004. - 15 Members, 5 serving three-year terms and 10
serving two-year terms - Development of Common
African Defence and Security Policy - South Africa, Nigeria, Algeria, Ethiopia and
Gabon elected in March 2004 for three-year terms,
while Lesotho, Mozambique, Cameroon, Congo,
Kenya, Sudan, Libya, Ghana, Senegal and Togo were
elected for two-year terms - Chair rotates on monthly basis.
16AFRICAN UNIONSTRUCTURES
- PSC implementation structures are the African
Standby Force the Panel of the Wise, Early
Warning System as well as a Peace Fund - ASF will have five standby brigades. It will be
implemented over ten years and will be supported
by a Military Staff Command. SADC will act on
behalf of Southern Region and have started
discussions. - Panel of the Wise consist of five eminent persons
appointed by Chairperson of AU Commission -
awaiting announcement. Will have right to set
own agenda. - EWS under development - possibility of using UN
system with national to regional to continental
linkages. Makes use of open source information
and civil society reports. - Peace Fund through voluntary contributions.
Other sources of funding under investigation, eg
tax on arms trade, levies etc. (The EU has
established a Peace Facility for Africa with ACP
States who contributed from their national
programmes unallocated EU funds - 250 Million
Euro)
17AFRICAN UNIONSTRUCTURES
- Current Conflict and Post Conflict Areas under
discussion by the PSC - Angola
- Sierra Leone
- Comoros
- Ethiopia
- Eritrea
- Sudan
- Burundi
- DRC
- Central African Republic
- Liberia
- Somalia
- Côte dIvoire
18AFRICAN UNIONSTRUCTURES
- Pan African Parliament
- Peoples Organ - consisting of five
parliamentarians per member state (at least one
of whom must be women) - Will have advisory role for the first five years
of its existence, after which a decision will be
taken on whether this should change) - SA Parliament played leading role in development
of PAP Protocol - Launched in March 2004
- South Africa has offered to host PAP. (An IMC is
in place and is deliberating on a budget and
location)
19AFRICAN UNIONSTRUCTURES
- Economic, Social and Cultural Council (ECOSOCC)
- Meeting of civil society
- Established by means of Statutes
- Statutes possibly adopted by July 2004.
20AFRICAN UNIONSTRUCTURES
- African Court of Justice
- Adjudicates on the interpretation of the
Constitutive Act of the African Union - Protocol on the Court of Justice adopted at
Maputo Summit, July 2003 - (African Court on Human and Peoples Rights
adjudicates human rights cases, and is separate
from the Court of Justice for the time being the
Protocol est this Court has entered into force
and SA is in the process of appointing a judge).
21AFRICAN UNIONSTRUCTURES
- Financial Institutions
- Financial Institutions will include
- African Central Bank, (Libya, Togo, Ghana -
offered to host - the African Monetary Fund, (Namibia - offered to
host) - and the African Investment Bank (Botswana, Kenya,
Togo, Ghana, Tunisia - offered to host) - Work is expected to commence later on these.
22AFRICAN UNION CONTRIBUTUIONS
- New scale of assessment
- Two-tier floor, one of 0.25 and one of 0.75.
- Member states population size, level of
indebtedness and GDP, among other factors, will
be used to calculate their level of contribution.
- Ceiling of 8.25. Countries such as South
Africa, Egypt, Algeria and Nigeria will fall in
this category and will each be responsible for
8.25 of the total budget of the Union per year.
- The AU budget for 2004 stands at USD 43 million
of which SA paid US 3.368.475
23AFRICAN UNIONEVENTS 2004/05
- Mozambique current Chair of the AU until July
2004 (next AU Summit in Addis Ababa) - Focus shift to substance matters such as
implementation of NEPAD Programmes (e.g.
Extra-Ordinary Summits on Agriculture and on
Poverty) - Commission in planning phase (Vision and Mission
and Strategic Framework)
24AFRICAN UNIONEVENTS 2004/05
- Vision and Mission of the AU Commission
- Geographical and political overview
- Vision - Renascent Pan-Africanism
- Mission broken down into aspects of
- Coherence (relating to role of RECs and
integration of operational programmes) - Capacity-Building (Institutions, RECs and
national structures) - Reflection (Eg Common African Defence and
Security Policy comprehensive approach to Defence
and Security, beyond militaristic view) - Watchtower (Identify major trends and seeds of
change - Council on the Future concept) - Information (Communication Policy)
- Advocacy(Relationships on and outside the
continent involving all players) - Follow-up and Evaluation (ensuring implementation
of Decisions)
25AFRICAN UNIONEVENTS 2004/05
- Strategic Framework of the AU Commission contains
and analysis of major challenges and strategic
areas and identifies five Objectives - Est accountable and credible Commission
- Develop common African positions on issues of
strategic interest - Highlight African culture and sport
- Make integration momentum irreversible through
promotion of regional integration - Promote society based on Rule of Law and
responsible citizenship - Address poverty by contributing to economic and
social development
26- New Partnership for Africas Development (NEPAD)
27NEPAD1. PRIMARY OBJECTIVES
- To accelerate the eradication of poverty and
inequality in Africa - To place African countries, both individually and
collectively, on a path of sustainable growth and
development - To halt the marginalisation of Africa in the
globalisation process - To promote the empowerment and economic
integration of women.
28NEPAD 2. PRINCIPLES
- African ownership and leadership
- New partnerships within Africa and with the
international community - Accelerating and deepening of regional and
continental integration and cooperation - Creation of conducive conditions for economic
growth and sustainable development in order to
eradicate poverty - Creation of conditions that make African
countries preferred destinations for both
domestic and foreign investors - Comprehensive, holistic and integrated approach
to African development - Anchoring the development of the continent on the
resources and resourcefulness of the African
people - Commitment to achieving the Millennium
Development Goals.
29NEPAD 3. NEPAD STRUCTURES AND PROCESSES
- Heads of State and Government Implementation
Committee (HSGIC) NEPAD is the socio-economic
development programme of the AU and the HSGIC
reports annually to the AU Summit. HSGIC
determines policy, priorities and programme of
action. It consists of 20 states representing the
5 AU regions. - NEPAD Steering Committee comprised of Personal
Representatives of HSGIC leaders. Develops and
considers detailed programmes and oversees
Secretariat. - NEPAD Secretariat located in Midrand, SA.
Coordination and liaison function in developing
and implementing programmes.
30NEPAD 4. PROGRAMME OF ACTION
- CONDITIONS FOR DEVELOPMENT Peace, Security and
Stability (incl. Conflict prevention, management
and resolution) Political, Economic and
Corporate Governance (incl. APRM) Regional
Integration and Cooperation - SECTORAL PRIORITIES Infrastructure (Transport,
Energy, ICT and Water Sanitation) Agriculture
and Food Security Human Resource Development
(incl. Education and Health) Environment
Tourism Science Technology - MOBILISING RESOURCES Capital Flows (Domestic
resources, Public Resource Management, ODA, FDI,
Debt) Market Access, Product Diversification
Beneficiation, and Intra-Africa trade - CROSS-CUTTING Capacity Building (incl. Centres
of Excellence) Gender.
31NEPAD 5. EXAMPLES OF FLAGSHIP PROJECTS
- Short-term Action Plan on Infrastructure
- Studies
- Greater Inga Integrator Study - Continental
involving RECs - Trans-Maghreb Railway Study - Country to Country
involving UMA - Power interconnections in East, Central and West
Africa - Regional involving 3 RECs - Study to improve Financing Mechanism for
Development of the Water Sector - All RECs
32NEPAD 5. Examples of Flagship Projects
(Continued)
- Investment Projects
- West Africa Gas Pipeline -ECOWAS Project
- Kenya-Uganda Oil Pipeline - Country to Country
involving the East African Community (EAC) - COMTEL - Country to Country involving COMESA
- Mombasa Port Container Facilities - Country to
Country involving EAC - Mepanda Uncua Power Project - Country to Country
involving SADC - Fougamou-Doussala Road Project - Country to
Country involving ECCAS
33NEPAD 5. Examples of Flagship Projects
(Continued)
- Kati-Saraya Road Project - Country to Country
involving ECOWAS - EAC Northern Corridor Road Project - EAC Project
- Mamfe-Enugu Road Project - Country to Country
involving ECOWAS
34NEPAD 5. Examples of Flagship Projects
(Continued)
- Comprehensive Africa Agriculture Development
Programme - Extending the area under sustainable land
management and reliable water control systems - Irrigation Development and Water Management
Project (SADC) - Rural infrastructure and trade related capacities
for improved market access - Promoting Regional Agricultural Trade and
Harmonising SMS Standards (SADC) - Increasing food supply and reducing hunger
- Strategic Food Reserve Facility (SADC)
35NEPAD 5. Examples of Flagship Projects
(Continued)
- Agricultural research, technology dissemination
and adoption - Agricultural Research and Technology Transfer for
Strategic Crops (Tissue Culture Banana, Nerica
Rice, Pigeon Peas, Cassava, Sweet Potatoes
(ECOWAS, ECCAS, SADC, COMESA)
36NEPAD 6. IMPLEMENTATION ROLES
- Role of National Governments (national structures
for coordination, engagement and implementation
align national development strategies/Poverty
Reduction Strategy Papers with NEPAD priorities
and objectives) - Role of the Regional Economic Communities (align
regional strategic development strategies with
NEPAD ensure capacity to drive implementation) - Role of continental institutions organs of the
AU, African Development Bank, Economic Commission
for Africa, African Capacity Building Foundation - Role of Parliaments (Pan African Parliament and
Parliamentary Forums)
37NEPAD 6. IMPLEMENTATION ROLES (Continued)
- Role of civil society (Economic, Social and
Cultural Council) - Role of the private sector (NEPAD Business Group,
ESKOM, Development Bank of Southern Africa,
Industrial Development Corporation etc.).
38NEPAD 7. OPERATIONALISING THE APRM
- Instrument to monitor performance, share best
practice and knowledge, promote peer learning and
provide assistance - Key Policy documents, Accession document and
Operational Guidelines completed and adopted
(March 2003 July 2003 AU Maputo Summit) - 19 countries signed MOU to join APRM (SA signed
March 2003) - Panel of Eminent Persons appointed (28 May 2003)
and operational (Mde Savane (Chair) Mr Kiplagat,
Mde Machel, Mr Adedeji, Dr Stals, Ms Njeuma and
Mr Medelci) - APRM Secretariat appointed and operational in
Midrand, SA - First APR Forum held on 13 February 2004 in
Kigali, Rwanda - Country guidelines and Questionnaires sent to
participating states and first set of country
reviews and visits to begin shortly (Ghana,
Rwanda, Kenya and Mauritius). SA review in first
quarter 2005.
39NEPAD 8. IRPS CLUSTER PRIORITIES Consolidation
of the African Agenda
- Sustainable Development and Poverty Alleviation
through NEPAD - Continue to build and harness the capacity and
political support for the implementation of NEPAD
Programmes - Facilitate implementation of the five NEPAD
priority areas (infrastructure, agriculture, ICT,
health and human resources) - Support the development of a NEPAD Tourism Action
Plan, and support existing sectoral plans (e.g.
Agriculture, Science and Technology, Health) - Ensure member states support the establishment of
a strong NEPAD co-ordination capacity in the SADC
Secretariat - Strengthen SAs NEPAD co-ordination
- Prepare SA for APRM process scheduled for 1st
quarter of 2005.
40NEPAD 9. SA STRUCTURES FOR ENGAGEMENT WITH
NEPAD/APRM PROCESS
- NEPAD
- President
- 2 Ministers (DFA, the dti)
- Quartet 2
- African Renaissance Committee (IRPS Cluster)
- DFA
- NEPAD Business Group (SA), ECOSOCC (SA), NEDLAC
etc. - APRM
- The Presidency
- DPSA
41 NEPAD 10. NEW PARTNERSHIP WITH THE
INTERNATIONAL COMMUNITY
- UN November 2002 Resolution, Monterrey, WSSD
- G8 Africa Action Plan
- EU Cairo Action Plan, Cotonou, Capacity
building - OECD and multilateral institutions (IMF, World
Bank) Africa Partnership Forum - Bilateral, eg USA (AGOA, Millennium Challenge
Account, HIV/AIDS) - Tokyo International Conference on Africas
Development, Asia-Africa Sub-Regional
Organisations Conference, Sino-Africa, NAM,
Commonwealth etc. - The South (India, Brazil, Malaysia, ASEAN,
MERCOSUR etc.) - African Diaspora, international civil society and
international private sector.
42NEPAD 11. PHASES OF THE NEPAD PROCESS
- FIRST PHASE Development of the base strategic
framework document accepted at the Lusaka OAU/AU
Summit (July 2001). - SECOND PHASE Development of detailed, concrete
implementation plans for the various priority
sectors Initial Action Plan for Implementation
accepted at the Durban AU Summit (July 2002). - THIRD PHASE Implementation Decisions of the
Maputo AU Summit (July 2003) re Agriculture,
Health, Environment, Capacity Building and
Integration with the AU.
43NEPAD 12. ACHIEVEMENTS
- Conflict resolution (DRC, Burundi, Angola, Sudan
etc.) - Peace Support Operations Plan (AU/NEPAD/G8)
- Operationalisation of the APRM
- Comprehensive Africa Agriculture Development
Programme - Short-Term Action Plan on Infrastructure
- Health strategy
- Environment strategy
- Establishment of international partnership with
NEPAD as framework (eg Reversal of decline in ODA
from 17,73 billion in 2001 to 18,62 billion in
2002) - Engagement of all stakeholders
- Addressing Afro-pessimism.
44NEPAD 13. CHALLENGES
- Strengthening human, financial, technical and
institutional capacity of African states,
organisations and institutions to deliver on
implementation mandate, especially the RECs. - Broadening of ownership and engagement with key
stakeholders in Africa. - Integration of NEPAD principles, priorities and
objectives in national and regional development
plans. - Strengthening and enhancing international
partnerships with a view to maintaining focus on
Africa. - Increasing resource flows to scale up and
accelerate implementation. - Broadening and strengthening political
leadership.
45NEPAD 13. CHALLENGES (Continued)
- Building national, regional and continental
structures and processes to ensure concrete
delivery and to foster coordination and outreach. - Align national and regional development plans
with NEPAD objectives, priorities and programmes.
46NEPAD 14. CONCLUSION
- NEPAD is a long-term development programme
(approximately 20 years). - Good progress is being made but much more needs
to be done. - Trust, respect, dialogue and cooperation are
being strengthened. - Critical success factors are enhanced political
leadership, ownership by the people,
strengthening the institutional, human and
financial capacity of national, regional and
continental development institutions, and
increased support by the international community.