Africa

Kikwete unmasks what it means to be AU chairman

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Tanzania's President and outgoing Chairman of the African Union Jakaya Mrisho Kikwete (front) speaks to the media upon arrival at Bole international airport in preparation for the African Union Summit in Addis Ababa January 31, 2009. Photo/REUTERS 

By HENRY OWUOR in ADDIS ABABA
Posted  Monday, February 2  2009 at  16:15

In Summary

Mr Kikwete who has since been replaced by Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi as AU chairman, told of a post whose occupant did not have clear tasks except opening and closing meetings and handing over to the new chairman once his or her term ends.

ADDIS ABABA, Monday

Tanzanian President Jakaya Kikwete today opened the 12th summit of the African Union with a grim message on what he underwent as chairman during his term that started early last year.

At a session that was also addressed by UN Secretary-general Ban Ki-moon, AU Commission chairman Jean Ping and Arab League Secretary-General Amr Moussa, Mr Kikwete told of a post whose occupant did not have clear tasks except opening and closing meetings and handing over to the new chairman once his or her term ends.

He also told of a chairman who had no budget and who met his expenses whenever he went on missions on behalf of the African Union.

Mr Kikwete, who served during one of the most turbulent periods and who played a key role in mediating an end to the post-election crisis in Kenya besides the attending to the Zimbabwe election crisis, said that the chairman of the AU did not even have a seat on Africa Peace and Security Council and called for changes that would ensure that any country that held the chairmanship of the AU would get an automatic seat on the council.

Mr Kikwete also called for creation of a ‘’troika’’ system where the chairman can consult with two other member states in case of a crisis.

As he began his speech, Mr Kikwete who has since been replaced by Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi, called for a minute’s silence in memory of two African leaders who died since the AU held its last summit: Zambia’s Levi Mwanawasa and Guinea’s Lansana Conte.

At the same time, Mr Kikwete welcomed three new leaders: Zambia’s Rupiah Banda, South Africa’s Kgalema Motlanthe and Somalia’s Sheikh Sharif Ahmed who won wide applause at the summit for his rise to the club of the head of state.

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To an observer, the post of chairman of the AU looks glamorous but what many don’t know is the fact that the occupant may be spending his own salary or his country’s resources as he/she attends numerous meetings on behalf of the continent.

Today’s opening session saw lengthy speeches from Mr Ban, Mr Ping and Mr Moussa touching mainly on Africa’s many crises in particular Somalia, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Zimbabwe, Madagascar and the global financial crisis.

The arrest of Congolese warlord Laurent Nkunda was cited by Mr Ping as ‘’heralding promising prospects with regard to return of peace in the region.’’

What happened was that all the speakers touched on just the same issues, among them the fact that the AU is against plans by the Hague-based International Criminal Court (ICC) to charge Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir with war crimes over the Darfur crisis.

Said Mr Ping: “AU urges suspension of ICC charges on President Bashir for 12 months but, the AU urges an end to the problem of impunity in Darfur.’’

Mr Ping also told of AU anger over the “abusive utilisation’’ of the principle of universal jurisdiction under which African leaders are charged in European courts, or any other courts.

The AU commission chairman also told of a growing problem in West Africa with regard to drug trafficking.

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Add a comment (1 comments so far)

  1. Submitted by naliweliwalo

    Thank you Kikwete for your frank assessment! An AU leader with no funds for travel and no expenditure is just a figurehead!

    Posted  February 03, 2009 02:06 AM