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Nsongurua J. Udombana
excerpted from: Nsongurua J. Udombana, the
Unfinished Business: Conflicts, the African Union and the New
Partnership for Africa's Development, 35 George Washington International
Law Review 55 - 106, 55-58,106-106 (2003) (319 Footnotes Omitted)
[T]here are moments when I feel that we are all trapped in a mammoth
factory known as the African continent, where all the machinery appears
to have gone out of control all at once. No sooner do you fix the levers
than the pistons turn hyperactive in another part of the factory, then
the conveyor belt snaps and knocks out the foreman, the boiler erupts
and next the whirling blades of the cooling fans lose one of their
members which flies off and decapitate the leader of the team of
would-be investors--the last hope of resuscitating the works. That,
alas, is the story of our human factory on this continent.
I. Introduction
The Organization of African Unity (OAU or Organization) is dead. The
final rites of passage were performed at the last summit of the Assembly
of Heads of State and Government of the OAU in South Africa from July
9-10, 2002. Another baby has been born to take the OAU's place--the
African Union (AU). A vague anticipation in 1999 gave way to a startling
sense of possibility and reality in July 2000, when the Assembly of the
OAU adopted the Constitutive Act of the AU in Lome, Togo. The Act
replaces the Charter of the OAU. The AU has a sister, born on October
23, 2001 in Abuja, Nigeria--the New Partnership for Africa's Development
(NEPAD). NEPAD is:
a pledge by African leaders, based on a common vision and a firm and
shared conviction, that they have a pressing duty to eradicate poverty
and to place their countries, both individually and collectively, on a
path of sustainable economic growth and development, and, at the same
time, to participate actively in the world economy and body politic.
The AU Act, together with NEPAD, intends to extend and deepen
Africa's regional commitment towards democracy, human rights, economic
and political integration, sustainable development, and peace and
security. It is, however, not yet clear if the AU is a mere
reincarnation of the OAU or an entirely new plan for African
development; although the OAU Secretary-General has given an assurance
that it is a new entity.
To the effect of making a brief eulogy, the OAU's contributions
towards the restoration of political independence in all of Africa
undoubtedly tops its list of achievements. The Organization strengthened
the anti-colonial lobby in the United Nations (U.N.) and gave material
and diplomatic support to the liberation movements. FN10] This
"represents concrete achievement of the pan-African movement."
Although slightly overstated, the OAU sums up its achievements in the
following words: "Through huge sacrifices and heroic struggles,
Africa has broken the colonial yoke, regained its freedom and embarked
upon the task of nation-building." There were, however, many
shopping lists of tasks that the OAU could not complete. The reserve
domain doctrine, the policy of non-interference--a doctrine that
succeeded in making African leaders accessories before, during, and
after state criminality--largely facilitated the OAU's failures. The OAU
became largely a club whose members entertained intensive social
relations among themselves and tended to show a sort of group solidarity
towards the outside world.
There is no point in moping and sulking about the past and, in
particular, on the failures of the OAU. It is the duty of every age to
strive to find its own truth. As Mammo Muchie puts it, "[w]hat the
OAU was able to do, it has done. What was beyond it has to pass on to
the African Union." Certainly, the avalanche of unresolved
conflicts in the continent and the new ones that brew up from time to
time are part of the unfinished business of the OAU that the leaders of
the AU and NEPAD will have to urgently address. Conflict resolution and
the peace, security, and stability were no doubt major concerns of the
OAU from the beginning. The Organizationdeployed tremendous efforts
towards a search for peaceful resolution of conflicts in Africa, but the
rewards were not always commensurate with the efforts invested. Indeed,
Africa, a continent that has not known peace, is still defined by crises
because it is perpetually plagued by conflicts, famine, and disease.
This Article looks at conflicts in Africa in the light of the
refurbished continental organization, the AU, and the new development
agenda, NEPAD. Against the background of reiterated failure and
incessant peril, it asks what these new bodies have to offer in tackling
the problem of conflicts in Africa. The Article examines the current
mechanisms for dealing with conflicts in Africa and offers some
suggestions towards strengthening them. It advises the leaders of these
new creatures to put the problem of conflicts on the front burner of
their continental development agenda, because peace and security are the
keys to the restoration of the continent's greatness and glory. It may
be boldly, but truthfully, asserted that there will always be economic
and social development anywhere that there is internal and external
peace and security.
First, the Article examines how conflicts retard Africa in terms of
both human and economic costs. Second, the Article looks at the current
normative and institutional agendas for dealing with conflicts in
Africa. This includes highlights of the relevant provisions of the AU
Act and NEPAD on conflicts, peace, and security as well as the
institutional framework for conflict prevention, management, and
resolution in Africa. Third, the Article points to areas requiring
rethinking, focusing on the root causes of the problem rather than on
pious irrelevancies and sanctimonious trivialities of the past. It
argues that more will need to be done, and quickly, in order to
establish a climate of peace and security that will usher in
socio-economic development in the continent. Finally, the Article
concludes that Africa's development agenda will be a mirage unless
pragmatic solutions are found to intractable intra- and inter-state
conflicts in the continent. Nothing is more likely to disrupt the unity
of African States and their economies than internecine disputes and bad
relations among them. Any effective method for tackling the challenges
of the new era has to be one that integrates both the requirements of
economic development and the demands for peace and security.
* * *
V. Conclusion
It is true that colonization of Africa, like slavery, impacted
negatively on its development, a position forcefully canvassed by the
dependency theory. It "subverted hitherto traditional structures,
institutions and values or made them subservient to the economic and
political needs of the imperial powers. It also retarded the development
of an entrepreneurial class, as well as middle class with skills and
managerial capacity." It is no longer tenable or attractive,
however, to justify Africa's current development plight on colonialism.
Africa need not look too far to find the reasons for its current
economic, political, and social quandaries, one of which is the
avalanche of armed conflicts besieging the continent--mostly by those
countries that could least afford them. The festering conflicts of
today, like the ravages of poverty, threaten the many modest
achievements in health and education that African governments, the
international community, and local citizens have laboured for long
decades to attain. The dependency theory no longer suffices as an
explanation for underdevelopment, as the remarkable economic growth of
Taiwan demonstrates.
As a vital first step, African countries should cut down on their
defence spending and other white elephant projects. This is the only way
the industrialized world is going to take Africa's campaign for debt
relief and cancellation seriously. NEPAD may be a plan "of
extraordinary vision and immense realism," as the Canadian Prime
Minister, Jean Chretien reportedly said. African leaders will first need
to put their houses in order to engender the political will for massive
debt relief by creditors and ensure better management of their economies
to minimise the debt problem. It is therefore vitally important for
African governments to dedicate a larger proportion of their national
budgets to the revitalisation of social services, in particular health
and education.
Meanwhile, Africa must articulate a new approach to conflict
resolution, since the time for flogging dead paradigms is past. It must
be one that will involve not just the leaders but the African people as
well. More importantly, "it must be based on indigenous solutions
to reconstructing the African state in all its dimensions." Africa
has had its fair share of conflicts. If we assume that life is worth
living and that man has a right to survival, then an alternative must be
found to conflicts in Africa. Although some men in our time still feel
that war is the answer to the problems of the world, wisdom, born out of
experience, tells us that war is obsolete. "There may have been a
time," says Martin Luther King Jr., "when war served as a
negative good--by preventing the spread and growth of an evil force--but
the destructive power of modern weapons eliminates the possibility that
war may serve as a negative good." The continent's leaders and
peoples must find peace with all men and brotherhood, without which no
sustainable development can take place.
[a1]. Senior Lecturer, the Department of Jurisprudence and
International Law, University of Lagos, Nigeria; former visiting
Research Fellow, The Danish Centre for Human Rights, Copenhagen,
Denmark; Member of the Nigerian Bar; LL.M., LL.B. (Lagos); |