INTRODUCTION
In May 1963, the Organization of
African Unity (OAU) was established in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia by the then 37
independent African nations to promote unity and development, defend the
sovereignty and territorial integrity of members, eradicate all forms of
colonialism; promote international co-operation and co-ordinate members’
economic, diplomatic, educational, health, welfare, scientific and defense
policies.1 The OAU was at that time, the most significant result of
Pan-Africanism. The organization mediated several border and internal disputes
and was instrumental in bringing about majority rule and the end of apartheid
in South Africa, which in 1994 became the 53rd nation to be admitted to the
organization.2 It should be noted that national independence pre-dominate discussion
by members’ states during the early stage of the formation of OAU over
continental unity. For the majority, the OAU was created to defend rather than
to abolish member states. More than 43 years have passed since the Organization
of African Unity came into existence no appreciable progress has been made in
the area of peace and security because 1Africa continent is still ravage by
wars, conflicts, economic and social problems that are threatening the
continent.
The Assembly of Head of States and
Government of the Organization of African Unity (OAU) recently adopted the
Constitutive Act of the African Union (AU) to replace the Charter of the
Organization of African Unity. This was done during its thirty-sixth Ordinary
Session held in Lome Togo, from July 10th to July 12th, 2000. The formal
launching of the AU took place in Durban, South Africa from July 9th to 10th,
2002 which also coincided with the First Ordinary Session of the Assembly of
the Union. In the Durban Declaration, the Assembly paid tribute to the OAU as a
pioneer, a liberator, a unifier, an organizer and a soul of the African
continent and to the founding leaders of the OAU for their tenacious, resilience
and commitment to African Unity and for standing firm in the face of the decisive
manipulations of the detractors of Africa and fighting for the integrity of Africa
and the human dignity of all the people of the continent. The OAU Charter was
certainly overdue for a review as it had the feeble compromises of the late
1950s and 1960s which had consequently become an outdated instrument bearing
very little likeness to today’s reality. According to the founding members of
the Organization, the transformation of OAU to AU will provide a new and
dynamic forum for addressing the needs of Africa. The difference between AU and
OAU, they argued, is that AU will be people-oriented, it will encourage people
participation; has special focus on gender issues; and most importantly the
principle of non-intervention has been reversed to allow member states
intervene in other member-state affairs where there are gross violations of
human rights. In the new AU Charter, nine (9) Principal Organs were created
instead of four (4) provided in the previous OAU Charter with wider objectives
and provisions to protect human rights, address economic policy of the continent
and also development strategies.
TOPIC: THE ROLE OF AFRICAN UNION (A.U.) IN PROMOTING PEACE AND SECURITY IN AFRICA
Chapters: 1 - 5
Delivery: Email
Delivery: Email
Number of Pages: 82
Price: 3000 NGN
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