African
Heads of State pose for a group photo ahead of the start of the 28th African
Union summit in Addis Ababa on January 30, 2017 ©Zacharias Abubeker (AFP)
|
The African Union decided
Monday to allow Morocco back in the fold after a 33-year absence, despite stiff
resistance from some member states over the status of Western Sahara.
AFP
report continues:
After
an emotional and tense debate, member states decided by consensus to leave the
question of the disputed territory of Western Sahara for another day, and
resolve it with Morocco "back in the family."
"From
the moment that Morocco did not impose conditions ... we take their word for it
and accept that Morocco be admitted to the African Union," said Mohamed
Salem Ould Salek, foreign minister of the Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic
(SADR), which claims sovereignty over the entire territory of Western Sahara.
Morocco
quit the then Organization of African Unity (OAU) in 1984 after the bloc
admitted the former Western Sahara as a separate member.
Some
had feared Morocco would demand the expulsion of the SADR as a precondition for
its own return to the AU.
Morocco
maintains that the former Spanish colony under its control is an integral part
of the kingdom, while the Polisario Front, which campaigns for the territory's
independence, demands a referendum on self-determination.
Salek
said that having Morocco in the same room would allow the SADR to pressure them
into fulfilling their obligations and allowing a referendum in accordance with
a 1975 decision by the International Court of Justice.
"Now
(if) Morocco is blocking (it) will be questioned by the head of states: why are
you afraid of a referendum? "Why don't you allow the Sahrawi to choose
their future freely?"
-
Family solutions -
Delegates
attending the summit in the Ethiopian capital described an emotional and tense
discussion, with heavyweights like Algeria and South Africa against the
re-admission of Morocco.
"Morocco
is now a full member of the African Union. There was a very long debate but 39
of our 54 states approved the return of Morocco, even if the Western Sahara
question remains," Senegalese President Macky Sall told journalists.
"As
we have said, if the family grows bigger, we can find solutions as a
family," he added.
Morocco
has been angling to return to the AU for several years and King Mohammed VI
formally announced his intention to do so in July last year. Since then he has
criss-crossed the continent lobbying for support.
Morocco
is increasingly looking southwards to expand its economy and has realised it
cannot drive an agenda on the continent without being in the AU, observers say.
The
membership of affluent Morocco -- the sixth biggest economy in Africa -- could
be a boon for the African Union, which lost a key financier in late Libyan
dictator Moamer Kadhafi and is working on ways to become financially
independent.
-
Chad takes helm -
The
28th African Union summit began with the swift election of Chadian Foreign
Minister Moussa Faki Mahamat, 56, as the new chairperson of the AU Commission,
beating four other candidates.
Faki
won in a final battle against his Kenyan counterpart Amina Mohamed after seven
rounds of voting, the Kenyan government said in a statement.
Faki,
a former prime minister, has been at the forefront of the fight against
Islamists in Nigeria, Mali and the Sahel and has promised "development and
security" will be top of his agenda as chief of the 54-member continental
bloc.
Meanwhile
Algerian diplomat Smail Chergui was re-elected to the key post of peace and
security commissioner.
Faki
takes over from South Africa's Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma who is credited with
advancing women's issues and moulding the ambitious Agenda 2063, but is seen to
have dropped the ball on peace and security.
-
'Turbulent times' -
The
choice of a new leader is crucial for the future of a bloc which is undergoing
deep introspection on how to reform to become more relevant and better respond
to crises on the continent.
Tasked
with leading the reforms, Rwanda's President Paul Kagame delivered a
"biting" report to heads of state on Sunday, according to a statement
from the Kenyan government.
He criticized "chronic failure to see through African Union decisions (which)
had resulted in a crisis of implementation and a perception that the AU was not
relevant to Africans".
Kagame
also slammed "over-dependence on (donor) funding" which accounts from
70 percent of the AU budget, according to the Institute for Security Studies.
The
AU is also grappling with its relationship with US President Donald Trump's
administration, sounding the alarm over an immigration ban affecting three
African nations.
"The
very country (where) our people were taken as slaves... has now decided to ban
refugees from some of our countries," outgoing AU Commission chair
Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma told some 37 heads of state and leaders from across the
continent.
"It is clear that
globally we are entering very turbulent times," she added.
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