AFRICAN-ADDISABABA-The African Union has welcomed Morocco back
into the continental body after more than three decades away. Even though the
transition may not be smooth, African leaders say a united Africa is more
important than ever in an increasingly complex and fast-changing world. That’s
because the dispute that led Morocco to leave the AU decades ago has yet to be
resolved. Morocco quit in 1984 because the AU recognised the independence of
the disputed Western Sahara territory. Morocco continues to claim Western
Sahara, and Western Sahara remains an AU member.
Leaders brushed off concerns that this would
lead to fissures in the now 55-member body. “If the family grows bigger, we can
find solutions as a family," Senegal's President Macky Sall said after the
decision was announced late Monday. Morocco’s decision to return to the union
without imposing preconditions, such as the return of Western Sahara, could
signal that Morocco’s government would like a smooth return.
African leaders say in the end, the decision
to allow Morocco back was a choice between unity and harmony. Unity won, when
39 of 54 AU members supported the move for Morocco to return. The nation’s king
warmly accepted the decision, and addressed the body at the closing ceremony. "It
is a beautiful day when one returns home after too long of an absence, said
King Mohammed VI. “Africa is my continent and my home.”
Egypt’s assistant foreign minister for
African affairs, Mohamed Edrees, told VOA the move is about strengthening the
continent as a whole and stressing common interests to find a way through the
impasse. “The general conviction within the union, and this was Egypt’s
position as well, is that at the end, we have to have the African house
together,” he said. “So it is important to find a way forward, not a divisive
way forward, but to move forward on our common African interest, common African
spirit so that we, like many other sister African countries, welcome the
comeback of Morocco and we look forward that this comeback will be a step
forward to find a smooth navigation on these problematic issues which have been
lingering for quite some time.”
Western Sahara’s delegation disagrees, and
accuses Morocco of “colonizing” the large seaside territory. Ambassador-at-large
Sidi Omar says allowing Morocco to enter without settling the Western Sahara
dispute violates the AU’s strong stance against colonialism. The delegation
wants a clear commitment from Morocco that it will abandon its claim to the
territory. He says Western Sahara won’t leave the AU, though.
He says the AU decision has wider
consequences. “It does not only concern Western Sahara or the Sahara Republic,
it does concern Africa as a whole,” he said. “If this principle of borders is
not respected, Africa will be doomed to chaos and back to ages which were rife,
fraught with conflicts.” Delegates and diplomats told VOA on the summit
sidelines that there may be something to the idea that Africa needs to stick
together. A number of summit delegates publicly and, more forcefully privately,
aired concerns about recent, sudden changes in U.S. policies, not just on
immigration, but also on foreign relations and climate change.
Kenya’s Cabinet secretary for Environment
Judi Wakhungu told VOA the AU conversations about sticking to the Paris Agreement
on climate change were overshadowed by the U.S. administration’s recent
indication that it would pull out of the deal. She then praised China for
adhering to its climate change commitments.
“It affects all of us,” she said after
emerging from a meeting with about a dozen African heads of state. “The largest
committers, of course are the United States and China. Those are the largest
committers. So we’re seeing on the one hand that China is trying to reduce its
carbon footprint, that China is committing to its national determined
contribution, showing leadership in solar energy commitments for example. But
then on the other hand, we are then seeing pronunciations that the new U.S.
administration is going to actually roll back on the commitments that have been
made. As I said, it’s only January, and we hope that reason will prevail,
because we're all in the same boat.”
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