Yahoo – AFP,
Karim Lebhour, Tristan McConnell, 30 Jan 2015
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African
Union Commission chair Dr Nkosazana Dlamini Zuma says terrorism, in
particular
Boko Haram, is a threat to Africa's collective safety, security and
development
(AFP Photo/Pius Utomi Ekpei)
|
Addis Ababa
(AFP) - The African Union called Friday for a regional five-nation force of
7,500 troops to defeat the "horrendous" rise of Nigeria's Boko Haram
Islamist militants.
The call
for collective action came as leaders of the 54-member bloc opened their
two-day annual summit in the Ethiopian capital Addis Ababa, where they were
addressing a string of crises across the continent.
"Terrorism,
in particular the brutality of Boko Haram against our people, (is) a threat to
our collective safety, security and development. This has now spread to the
region beyond Nigeria and requires a collective, effective and decisive
response," AU commission chair Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma said in a speech
opening the summit.
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African
Union soldiers walk through the
al-Shabab stronghold of Barawe in the Lower
Shabelle region of Somalia (AFP Photo/
Tobin Jones)
|
The AU
Peace and Security Council called for a regional five-nation force of 7,500
troops to stop the "horrendous" rise of the insurgents.
The
proposed force will have the backing of the AU, and will ask for expected UN
Security Council approval, plus a "Trust Fund" to pay for it,
Dlamini-Zuma said.
More than
13,000 people have been killed and more than one million made homeless by Boko
Haram violence since 2009.
UN
Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon told African leaders that Boko Haram was "a
clear danger to national, regional and international peace and security".
African
leaders also named Zimbabwe's President Robert Mugabe to the bloc's one-year
rotating chair, replacing Mauritania's President Mohamed Ould Abdel Aziz.
Mugabe, a
former liberation war hero who aged 90 is Africa's oldest president and the
third-longest serving leader, is viewed with deep respect by many on the
continent -- but he is also subject to travel bans from both the United States
and European Union in protest at political violence and intimidation of opponents.
He recalled
attending the founding of the AU's predecessor, the Organisation of African
Unity in 1963, also in Addis Ababa.
"Africa
has come a long way since then," he said
Ebola,
risky elections
The leaders
gathered in Ethiopia will also discuss the economic recovery of countries
affected by the Ebola virus, setting up a "solidarity fund" and
planning a proposed African Centre for Disease Control.
The worst
outbreak of the virus in history has seen nearly 9,000 deaths in a year --
almost all of them in the west African nations of Liberia, Guinea and Sierra
Leone -- and sparked a major health scare worldwide.
With over a
dozen elections due to take place this year across Africa, the focus at the
talks will also be on how to ensure peaceful polls -- likely leaving little time
for discussions on the official summit theme of women's empowerment.
The
Institute for Security Studies, an African think-tank, warns that many of these
elections "are being held in a context that increases the risk of
political violence".
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Medecins
Sans Frontieres, MSF agents work to dismantle tents on January 27, 2015
after
the first section of the ELWA III Ebola Management Center in Monrovia was
decomissioned (AFP Photo/Zoom Dosso)
|
Ban Ki-moon
also told African leaders they "cannot afford" to ignore the wishes
of their citizens.
"People
around the world have expressed their concern about leaders who refuse to leave
office when their terms end. I share those concerns. Undemocratic constitutional
changes and legal loopholes should never be used to cling to power," Ban
said.
South
Sudan's warring parties met on the sidelines of the AU talks on Thursday, in
the latest push for a lasting peace deal. Six previous ceasefire commitments,
however, have failed to end the 13-month-old civil war in the world's youngest
nation.
The South
Sudan talks, which are being brokered by the regional East African bloc IGAD,
are due to resume on Saturday.
Also
topping the agenda is the question of financing regional forces, amid broader
debates on funding the AU, a thorny issue for the bloc, once heavily bankrolled
by toppled Libyan strongman Moamer Kadhafi.
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