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The Addis AU Summit in two acts

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By MUGAMBI KIAI  (email the author)
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Posted  Monday, February 8  2010 at  00:00

The 14th session of the Assembly of Heads of State and Government of the African Union convened in Addis Ababa from January 31 to February 2 made some significant decisions that will help Africa realise its vision of a united continent. But certain impediments cannot go unnoticed.

The theme of the assembly was Information and Communication Technologies in Africa: Challenges and Prospects for Development; but other key issues that cut across the continent such as peace, security and related matters — international justice, governance and human rights — were also discussed.

Indeed, these were big-ticket items at the 2009 AU summit in Tripoli, Libya which declared 2010 the Year for Peace and Security in Africa.

However, discussions on unconstitutional changes in government and the possibility of giving criminal jurisdiction to the African Court of Human Rights and Justice — in the context of the up coming review conference of the Rome Treaty from May 31-June 11 in Kampala and the recent indictment of Sudan’s President Omar Bashir — were pushed to the June 2010 Summit

Among the positive changes that took place in Addis was the election of Kenya as one of five members to serve three-year terms at the AU Peace and Security Council (PSC) — the standing decision-making organ of the African Union for the prevention, management and resolution of conflict — commencing March this year. The other countries are Equatorial Guinea, Libya, Zimbabwe and Nigeria.

Ironically, three of these countries — Kenya, Zimbabwe and Mauritania — have recently been accused of effecting unconstitutional changes in government.

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Historically, such changes are known to invariably catalyse conflict and endanger peace and security.

So how is it that these countries will now be decision-makers of these same issues?

Then there was bad news for Kenya at the 22nd meeting of the Heads of State and Government Implementation Committee — the highest decision-making authority of the African Peer Review Mechanism — which was happening concurrently.

Popularly called the APR Forum, the committee is currently presided over by Ethiopian Prime Minister Meles Zenawi.

APR session on January 30 witnessed the selection of the Africa Peer Review Panel of Eminent Persons with representatives from Nigeria, Algeria, Zambia, Congo-Brazzaville, Liberia, Cameroon and Rwanda admitted.

Graca Machel-Mandela, who was the lead APR panellist for Kenya, was removed.

Ms Machel-Mandela doubled up as a member of the Panel of Eminent Africans mediating the 2008 post-election crisis in Kenya.

This removal did not bode well for many Kenyans who viewed her as a firm, steady and sober voice around the country’s psychosis.

The APR Panel oversees the review process to ensure integrity, considers reports and makes recommendations to the APR Forum.

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