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Amara Essy was appointed secretary-general of the Organisation of African Union (OAU) in July last year to oversee the body's crucial one-year transformation into the AU and the launching of the new organisation. OAU experts have now recommended that the transition period be extended - just two months ahead of the AU's scheduled launch in July. Essy told IRIN why the AU was critical to the continent's future development, and about the complexities and difficulties faced in the transition process.

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AFRICA: IRIN interview with OAU secretary-general

ADDIS ABABA, 13 May (IRIN) - Amara Essy was appointed secretary-general of
the Organisation of African Union (OAU) in July last year to oversee the
body's crucial one-year transformation into the AU and the launching of the
new organisation. OAU experts have now recommended that the transition
period be extended - just two months ahead of the AU's scheduled launch in
July. Essy told IRIN why the AU was critical to the continent's future
development, and about the complexities and difficulties faced in the
transition process.

QUESTION: Why is the OAU recommending that the transition period to African
Union be extended?

ANSWER: To transform the OAU into the African Union is not a simple matter.
I have tried to bring together all the brains of Africa to look and ponder
over the African Union. What do we need to launch the African Union? We need
the four main decision-making organs - the Assembly of the Union, the
Executive Council, the Committee of Permanent Representatives and the
Commission. When you have these organs, then you can launch the African
Union. Now we have to look at a time frame on whether we need - and the
heads of state will have to decide - on a kind of transitional period.

We have to set a time frame. We have to know what we are going to do in the
next two or three years. What are the urgent priority issues that have to be
taken up? What is the medium- and long-term work that has to be carried out?
So, we will have a timetable. We have to have a schedule, and then the heads
of state will have a clear vision of what kind of transition period we are
going to have, and then they will know the work that we will have to do.

There is no postponement of the launching or the transformation. There is a
difference between the launching of the Union and the transitional period
that will make operational the African Union. We have 17 organs in the
African Union that we have to establish. In the OAU there are only four
organs. But in the African Union we will have 17 organs like, for example,
the central bank of Africa. You cannot have it in one day or in one year.

On top of that we need the resources to be operating these organs. These
organs will cost money, because you need people to man these organs. There
is a kind of ambiguity. The launching of the African Union is scheduled to
take place in South Africa as the heads of state have decided. The various
organs, the various bodies that have been put together - they can express
their views, so we should not confuse between what is an advisory panel and
what is the official organ.

We are going to bring together the governors of the central banks of Africa
to try to see what they can look at in the financial and monetary areas.
Maybe one day in Africa you will have a single currency in the long term.
So, when you talk of the European Union, they have taken more than 50 years
to come where they are. And today, when you talk of the African Union, it
cannot be done overnight. We can make sure we can have a strong union that
can take up the destiny of the continent.

Q: What are shortcomings of the OAU that prompted the decision to set up the
AU?

A; Well, I am not going to say that the OAU is worse than the United
Nations. Everywhere where you have an agglomeration of human beings you have
divisions, you have oppositions, you have antagonism. Yes, we have had a lot
of problems in the OAU, but it is not different from other organisations.

With my predecessor [Salim Ahmed Salim] there have been problems between the
various collaborators. They have issued a private letter and made it public
about their problems, but what I have tried to do is [to stress that] we
cannot change somebody who is more than 40 years old... But what I said is
that despite our differences, despite our divergent views and backgrounds,
we have to work together.

The important role that we have here is to be able to contribute to the
African Union. For somebody who is an African, and African diplomat, I think
it will be a self-satisfactory result to say that I have contributed. Well,
those who were here in 1963 feel proud. They say: We are the ones who have
created the OAU. The same kind of motivation will be there when they will be
working for the African Union. So you cannot change people and mentalities
overnight. I think everywhere it is the same.

Q: How much in terms of finances does the AU need to function?

A: I cannot tell you an exact figure. In fact, we have put together a
working group that will deal with this. They are working on a strategy, a
plan on how to mobilise resources. I think the African Union will not be
able to depend only on the contributions of member states. It is not a
secret for anybody, because for the time being we have more than $50 million
dollars of arrears of contributions.

So we have to find other sources in order to make this African Union
function. And these are the financial experts. I cannot just give you a
figure like that, because there are so many things involved in order to
calculate the financial implications. It depends on how quickly we are able
to establish the various organs, the structures. In finance, I think we have
to be precise, and I don’t have the figure to give you here and now.

Q: When would you personally like to see a female chairperson of the African
Union?

A: As regards the chairman of the Union, I don’t know it depends on the
heads of state. The heads of state will decide on the basis of everything
that they will have as information, what they will have updated as regards
the restructures - the commission, the posts, the job descriptions, the
number of commissioners, the structure that is needed and, as I said, even
to be a candidate there is time [table] that you have to follow, there is a
time frame that is set, then you have to submit a candidate, then you have
elections etc.

I don’t know [when I like to see a female chairperson]... We have very
capable women today in the OAU. I think it depends on them. They can be
candidates if they wish to be. They will decide. I would like to see a woman
head as soon as possible. I have no problem.

Q: Why has African Union has not fired the imagination of the ordinary
African?

A: In Africa we have a saying that only a hunter kills an elephant and the
whole village cuts up the elephant and eats the meat. The idea of the
African Union is not over [something which was born] yesterday, and has not
come from [the Libyan leader,] Mr [Mu'ammar al-] Qadhafi if I have read all
the magazines and books. The idea of African Union in fact emanated from a
Haitian, and he was the one who gave birth to this.

It was a dream - a long-standing dream - and this is what motivated Mr
Qadhafi - that his country was under sanctions, and then all the African
countries decided to get together and [work] to lift the sanctions against
Libya and help the Libyan people, because everywhere when you have sanctions
it is not the government that suffers, it is the people of the country that
suffer. And then you realize that Africa united can be a force. And this is
what pushed him to bring to a concrete form this dream of African Union.

So let us say this dream of African Union was given a concrete and material
form. So this African Union must see the [light of] day. Who will benefit
afterwards? It is the whole of Africa, we the peoples of Africa, because if
we can have an Africa where you can have trade from the north of Africa to
the south of Africa, from one end of the continent to the other, instead of
depending on the stock exchange of New York as we ourselves we can trade our
commodities among ourselves.

Let's [consider], say, oil - instead of sending it somewhere else we can
sell it to our neighbour. There will be important development in Africa, and
who will benefit? It will be the African peoples. Well, [the] African
continent is very rich, and yet at the same time, paradoxically, it is the
poorest continent. A small country like Belgium today has trade that is more
important than the whole of Africa. I think the whole of Africa in the world
contributes only one per cent of trade. And no development can come from
outside.

Asia developed from within. You can have external support, but development
is an internal affair. Today, we have to develop infrastructures, because
without infrastructures - let's say without roads, without railroads,
without these transport facilities you cannot develop. So when you look at
the structure and all the issues we are dealing [with], we want to look at
the conditions we have to meet in order to develop the continent.

Q: Will you stand as a candidate as the head of the newly formed African
Union?

A: I don’t want to ask this question. I don’t even ask myself whether I am a
candidate or not. It will all depend on how things will evolve. It will
depend where I will find myself after the transition, because it is not easy
in nine months to do the work that we have been able do...

It is not only the transition we are dealing with; we are [also] dealing
with all the conflicts. I was in the Comoros. I was in Madagascar. You have
all the other conflicts that are there also. All these issues are being
dealt with on a daily basis. My only ambition today is to say: What can I do
for Africa?

I have had a lot of opportunities in my life: I went to school, I was a
diplomat and I have had the chance of occupying major posts. I was in New
York for 12 years as ambassador. I was the president of the [UN] General
Assembly. I was president of the Security Council. I am old, but not too
old. What I can say is what I have said: What can I contribute to Africa and
[with] all my experience, all my powers, to contribute to Africa? It is not
occupying a post for [the sake of] occupying a post.

As I have said, it is not the texts that will make [the] African Union, it
is the human beings - the men and women who believe in this African Union,
who make the African Union. Because you may have very good texts, but if you
do not have the people who can work as a team for a common objective you
cannot have an African Union...

[ENDS]

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