Calling for sweeping reforms of global institutions, UN Secretary-General António Guterres told African leaders on Saturday that the absence of permanent African seats on the Security Council is “indefensible,” declaring: “This is 2026 – not 1946.”
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35th African Union summit opens in Addis Ababa

The 35th Ordinary Session of the AU Assembly of Heads of State and government opened on Saturday in Ethiopia’s capital, Addis Ababa.
Last year’s summit was held virtually due to the Covid-19 pandemic but this year’s event has brought together the African leaders for an in-person event.
The 55-member union is holding this summit for the next two days on theme “Building Resilience in Nutrition and Food Security on the African Continent: Strengthen Agriculture, Accelerate the Human Capital, Social and Economic Development.”
The summit was earlier presided over by outgoing DR Congo President, Felix Tshisekedi whose role has been assumed by Senegalese President, Macky Sall at the end of the summit.
The heads of state will also be considering different reports, under its three sessions: Session on Peace, Security and Governance, Session on African Citizen Well-Being: Health, Nutrition and Food Security, and Session on Regional Integration through A Green Inclusive and Resilient Economic Recovery.
[Live] Floor Language Opening Ceremony of the 35th ordinary Session of the AU Assembly https://t.co/sqKXERAuGV
— African Union (@_AfricanUnion) February 5, 2022
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The Assembly will also consider other items on its agenda including: the Annual Report of the Union and its Organs Including the Specific Thematic Issues by the Heads of States, Champions, the Decision of Granting Israel an Observer Status to the African Union, and the draft Legal Instruments.
Additionally, the session will appoint the following on the AU organs: A Female Vice President of the Pan African University Council, fifteen (15) Members of the PSC, a female Member of the AUABC from the Northern Region, Members of the Panel of the Wise, and the CEO of AUDA-NEPAD.
Source: Africafeeds.com
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34th African Union summit opened virtually on Saturday

The 34th African Union summit opened virtually on Saturday as African leaders discuss very critical issues affecting the continent.
The 55-member union will be holding this summit for the next two days on theme “Arts, Culture and Heritage: Levers for Building the Africa We Want.”
The summit is taking place at the time the continent and the world is battling the Coronavirus Pandemic.
The continent of Africa has so far recorded 3.5% of global virus cases and 4% of global deaths, according to the Africa Centres for Disease Control and Prevention (Africa CDC).
African leaders will be discussing Africa’s response to the pandemic and how economies can overcome the damage.
Many African countries are yet to vaccinate their populations against the pandemic and accessing vaccines has been a challenge.
South African President Cyril Ramaphosa will deliver a pandemic response update during the closed portion of the summit on Saturday.
The Democratic Republic of Congo’s President Felix Tshisekedi has taken over from South African President Cyril Ramaphosa as chairman of the African Union for the next one year.
Issues of security relating to the Sahel, Libya, South Sudan and Somalia will also be on the agenda for discussion.
The election of an African Union Commission chairperson and six other commissioners will also take place at this weekend’s summit.
Incumbent chairperson Moussa Faki Mahamat is standing for re-election for a second and last four-year term without any challenge.
U.S President Joe Biden sent a message to participants of this year’s African Union summit, pledging to work with the AU to advance a “shared vision of a better future.”
The Biden-Harris Administration is committed to working with the African Union to advance our shared vision of a better future.
Watch President Biden’s Message to African Union Summit Participants: pic.twitter.com/tXFX4Tp9PD
— The White House (@WhiteHouse) February 5, 2021
Rwanda ranks best in managing Covid-19 pandemic in Africa
Source: Africafeeds.com
African leaders to focus on Covid-19 and conflicts at AU summit

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African leaders are expected to focus on the continent’s COVID-19 response at a virtual summit this weekend, as well as pressing security crises that have gone overlooked during the pandemic.
The two-day African Union summit comes almost exactly one year after Egypt recorded the first case of COVID-19 in Africa, prompting widespread fears that member states’ weak health systems would quickly be overwhelmed.
But despite early doomsday predictions, the continent has so far been hit less hard than other regions, recording 3.5% of global virus cases and 4% of global deaths, according to the Africa Centres for Disease Control and Prevention (Africa CDC).
Today, though, many African countries are battling damaging second waves while straining to procure sufficient vaccine doses.
“The developed North, which has substantial financial resources, has purchased the largest stocks, while we in Africa are still struggling to get our fair share,” South African foreign minister Naledi Pandor said Wednesday in remarks opening a pre-summit meeting of AU foreign ministers.
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Member states will also hold internal elections to lead a restructured executive body – the results of which will shape how the AU responds to the pandemic and a host of economic and security challenges.
Security crises, meanwhile, include a three-month-old conflict in the AU’s host country Ethiopia and longer-running quagmires in the Sahel and elsewhere.
“We hope that the summit will present an opportunity for African leaders to refocus their attention on a number of conflicts and crises that have had attention diverted away from them, due to the logical focus on Covid in the last year,” said Imogen Hooper, AU analyst for the International Crisis Group (ICG).
‘VACINAATION NATIONALISM’
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South African President Cyril Ramaphosa will deliver a pandemic response update during the closed portion of the summit Saturday, according to a draft programme seen by AFP.
As outgoing AU chairman, Ramaphosa has spent the past year overseeing efforts to scale up testing and source vaccines, all while grappling with 1.5 million detected infections in his own country – roughly 40% of the continent’s total.
This week South Africa received one million doses of the Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccine, and Ramaphosa’s government plans to inoculate 67% of its population by year’s end.
Continent-wide targets are less ambitious, with the WHO describing an end-of-year goal of around 30% as more “realistic”.
African leaders are speaking out against hoarding by rich countries at the expense of poorer ones.
“There is a vaccine nationalism on the rise, with other rich countries jumping the queue, some even pre-ordering more than they require,” said Moussa Faki Mahamat, chairman of the AU’s executive body, the African Union Commission, in a recent interview the AU posted online.
ELECTIONS AND CRISES
Faki, a former prime minister of Chad, is running unopposed for a second four-year term as commission chief.
He still needs to get two-thirds of the vote, overcoming accusations – which he denies – of “a culture of sexual harassment, bribery, corruption and bullying within the commission,” ICG wrote in a briefing this week.
In a separate race, Nigerian Bankole Adeoye is favoured to head the AU’s newly-merged political affairs and peace and security departments, diplomats say, though AU rules dividing top positions among Africa’s sub-regions could lead to a surprise result.
Whoever wins could play a critical role, along with Faki, in addressing crises the AU is accused of overlooking.
In the online interview, Faki touted his focus on conflict prevention, saying he was “pleased to note there are no conflicts between states”.
But there are multiple internal crises the AU has done little to resolve.
Its Peace and Security Council has failed to hold meetings on the conflict between government forces and anglophone separatists in Cameroon, for example, as well as rising Islamist militancy in Mozambique.
The conflict in Ethiopia, pitting Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed’s government against the former ruling party of the northern Tigray region, has proved especially sensitive.
Faki called for a cessation of hostilities a week after the fighting started in early November.
But Abiy has rejected appeals from high-level AU envoys for talks with Tigrayan leaders, sticking to his line that the conflict is a limited “law and order” operation.
It’s an example of how the AU’s sway can be limited regardless of who is in charge.
“Whenever a member state has insisted that a conflict is internal,” the ICG’s Hooper said, “the AU has struggled to get involved.”
Source: AFP