AfDB Lays Ground for AU Executive Council
(AllAfrica)--The Executive Council of the African Union (AU) began its fourteenth ordinary session in the Ethiopian capital, Addis Ababa, on Thursday with Infrastructure Development in Africa as its main theme.
Infrastructure Development in Africa is also the theme of the AU Summit of heads of State and Government that will follow from 1-3 February. The African Development Bank (AfDB) has played a key role in events leading to the two meetings. On Thursday, it took an important role in the Africa Infrastructure Day hosted by the African Union Commission at its headquarters in Addis Ababa to prepare for the Council and Summit meetings.
Its director of Infrastructure Department Gilbert Mbesherubusa and Alex Rugamba, head of Infrastructure Consortium for Africa, established during the G8 Summit in Gleneagles, Scotland, in 2005 made key presentations at the event. Officially titled an ‘Open Day Dedicated to Infrastructure in Africa’, the one day event featured discussions by African and non-African experts on a host of issues related to the development, financing and management of infrastructure projects in Africa.
Like the AfDB, the African Union Commission believes in the acceleration of infrastructure development on the continent and its critical role to the economic growth of Africa. The two institutions also share a history of cooperation in this field, which is mainly carried out through the New Partnership for Africa’s Development (NEPAD) whose strategic framework was formally adopted by the heads of State and Government of the Organisation of African Unity, the predecessor to the AU, at their summit in Maputo, Mozambique, in 2001.
Under NEPAD, the Bank was entrusted with a leading role in Africa’s infrastructure development. The Bank Group programs and projects have been designed and implemented with the aim of furthering this NEPAD mandate. A further attempt at prioritisation is underway and is led by a Task Force comprising the AfDB, the AU, NEPAD and the Development Bank of Southern Africa.
The Task Force held its first meeting on the fringes of the 2008 Infrastructure Consortium for Africa (ICA) annual meeting and agreed that the criteria for prioritisation would be essentially based primarily on the development impact and strategic alignment. The Task Force will complete its work by March 2009. The prioritisation exercise will be more robust upon completion of the Programme for Infrastructure Development in Africa (PIDA) study being co financed by the African Union Commission and the Bank.
The Commission said the summit would provide the African Union Commission and other African stakeholders a much-needed opportunity to promote appropriate policy for infrastructure development on the continent. Such policy, it added, would make an important contribution to poverty reduction and also help stimulate further social and economic development on the African continent.
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