The Economist February 12th 2022 Middle East & Africa 41
TheAfricanUnion
Older and less wise
I
t was a birthday commemorated in
style.IntheheartofEthiopia’scapital,
AddisAbaba,theseatoftheAfricanUnion
(au),waterfountainseruptedandcham
pagneglassesclinkedasheadsofstateand
assorteddignitaries tucked into a four
coursemealtothesoundofsultryjazz.
The partymarked 20 years sincethe
au’sfounding.Itcoincidedwiththeau’s
annualsummit,whichtookplaceonFeb
ruary5thand6th.AbiyAhmed,theprime
ministerofEthiopia,seizedtheopportuni
tytothankhisfellowAfricanleaders.They
hadstoodby hisgovernmentthrougha
challengingyear,hesaid,confirmingthe
principleofAfricansolidarityuponwhich
theauwasbuilt.It wasa veiledreferenceto
hiscountry’scivilwar,whichcontinuesto
ragea fewhundredkilometresfromtheci
ty.Neitherhenortheotherleadersmade
anymentionofhistactics,whichinclude
starvingintosubmissionthe5mpeopleof
Tigray,a rebelliousprovince.Thatwould
haveruinedthefestivemood.
Yetit issuchhorrorsthatkeepthought
fulAfricanofficialsupatnight.Theau,
whichreplacedits discreditedpredeces
sor, the Organisation of African Unity
(oau),in2002,issupposedtoresolvethe
continent’s wars, ease theflowof trade
acrossitsbordersandhelpAfricatospeak
with one voice in world affairs. Thabo
Mbeki,a formerpresidentofSouthAfrica
andoneoftheau’sarchitects,promiseda
“continentofdemocracy” inwhich“the
peopleparticipateandtheruleoflawisup
held”.Twodecadeson,itsrecordismixed.
The African Continental Free Trade
Area,whichtookeffectlastyear,isa genu
ine(ifincomplete)achievement.Sotooare
someofthe au’s early effortsat peace
keepingandupholdingdemocracy.Unlike
theoau, whichrefusedtointerfereinthe
affairsofitsmembers,theauhasthepow
ertointervene,withoutconsent,tostopa
bloodbath.In 2004 itsentAfricantroops
intoDarfurtohalta genocide.Threeyears
lateritestablisheda missiontocombata
jihadistinsurgencyinSomalia.Andforal
mosttwodecades putscheshad become
muchrarer,thanksinparttotheau’s strict
nocoupspolicy.
Inotherrespects,though,theauhas
cometoresemblethetalkingshopitsup
planted.Ateachsummitit approvesadmi
rablesoundingschemes.Toofewgoany
where. In 2017 Paul Kagame, Rwanda’s
presidentandsoontobechairmanofthe
au, spokeofa “crisisofimplementation”.
AccordingtoBruceByiersoftheEuropean
Centre for Development Policy Manage
ment,a thinktank,“thegapbetweenthe
numberofcontinentalinitiativesandtheir
entryintoforce”haswidenedovertime.
MrKagamewarnedofa “dysfunctionalor
ganisation in which member states see
limited value...and our citizenshave no
trust”.AccordingtoAfrobaromoter,a poll
ingfirm,morethana thirdofAfricansei
ther think theauisuselessorhave no
opinionofit atall.
Theau’s ambitiontoendconflictonthe
continent(originallyby2020,nowpushed
back to 2030) has rarely seemed more
daunting.InadditiontothewarinEthio
pia, jihadistssill runamokacrosslarge
partsofSomaliaandmuchoftheSahel.
Mozambiqueisstrugglingtoquella bloody
insurgency in its impoverished north.
EasternCongoseetheswithrebelmilitias.
Coupsarealsomakinga comeback:inthe
pastyeartheauhassuspendedfourcoun
tries(BurkinaFaso,Guinea,MaliandSu
dan)becauseofputsches.SolomonDersso
ofAmani, athinktank in Addis Ababa,
fretsthattherehasbeena “puncturing” of
thedemocraticnormsthattheauhadbeen
tryingtoenforce.
Otherslamentinaction.Theau’s peace
andsecuritycouncil, a 15memberpanel
modelledontheunSecurityCouncil,has
“lostsomeofitsenergyandzeal”,says a
formerauofficial.Itchosenotto expel
ChadwhenthesonofIdrissDéby,Chad’s
late dictator, seized power after his father’s
death last year. (The ausaid the takeover
was not a coup.) Pragmatism as well as dip
lomatic sensitivities partly explain this:
Chad’s army plays an important role fight
ing jihadists in the Sahel, and Moussa Faki,
a former Chadian foreign minister, is cur
rently chairman of the au‘s commission,
its executive arm. Nonetheless, “this will
constitute a precedent,” warns Mohamed
Diatta of the Institute of Security Studies,
another thinktank in Addis Ababa.
The commission’s dream of becoming
something like the executive branch of the
European Union has faded. Unlike the
European Commission, it has no meaning
ful powers to enforce treaties or craft regu
lations. “It might be called a commission,
but it is becoming more like a secretariat,”
says a Western diplomat.
Game of phones
Paul Williams, an academic at George
Washington University who has studied
the au, argues that African governments
have also learnt how to game it. “At first the
commission ran the show, and a lot of the
member states didn’t know how to push
back,” he says. “But as they have gained ex
pertise and knowledge they have begun to
exert themselves much more forcefully.”
Ethiopia is a prime example. For more
than a year it has kiboshed a strong aure
sponse to its civil war. aumediators dis
patched at the outset of the conflict were
soon rebuffed. It took almost another year
for the peace and security council to meet
expressly to discuss the crisis (the fact that
rebels were then threatening to storm Ad
dis Ababa no doubt focused minds). An
other mediation effort was established in
August. It is led by Olusegun Obasanjo, a
former Nigerian president who, happily
for Abiy, chaired the auelectoral observa
tion mission that endorsed Ethiopia’s
questionable polls last year. Almost six
months into the job, Mr Obasanjo is only
now hiring staff.
Even if it were more willing to be firm,
the auhas little by way of sticks or carrots
to enforce its decisions. Countries, big or
small, can thumb their nose at it. When the
peace and security council voted to send
troops to quell violence in Burundi in 2015
the Burundians “basically told them to
bugger off”, says Mr Williams. Few are bet
ter at this than Ethiopia. Its government
can lean on audiplomats who displease it,
or expel them altogether. But Mr Faki, in a
candid address on February 5th, warned
that cries of sovereignty were being used
by African states as an “iron wall” against
any intervention, and that expressions of
solidarity were no substitute for action
when “neighbouring houses [are set]
ablaze”. It was a tacit admissionthatthe
task of building a union greater thanthe
sum of its parts remains unfinished.n
A DDIS ABABA
Africa’s regional club is less effective at 20 than it was at two
Shouting coup in a crowded theatre