2015-01-30 08:03
Addis Ababa - African leaders meet Friday for their annual summit
with conflict topping the agenda, especially Nigeria's Boko Haram
insurgents, as well as efforts to stem Ebola.
While the official
theme of the African Union meeting will be women's empowerment, leaders
from the 54-member bloc will once again be beset by a string of crises
across the continent.
Preparatory talks this week ahead of the
two-day meeting at the AU headquarters in the Ethiopian capital have
seen promises by AU chief Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma to drum up "collective
African efforts" to tackle the Islamists.
Late Thursday, the AU
Peace and Security Council called for regional five-nation force of
7,500 troops to deploy to stop the "horrendous" rise of the insurgents.
More than 13,000 people have been killed and more than one million made homeless by Boko Haram violence since 2009.
Leaders
are also expected to elect Zimbabwe's President Robert Mugabe to the
organisation'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.
- Elections and Ebola -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.
The
Institute for Security Studies, an African think-tank, warns that "many
of these are being held in a context that increases the risk of
political violence".
Wars in South Sudan and the Central African
Republic -- both nations scheduled to hold elections -- as well as in
Libya are also due to draw debate.
South Sudan's warring parties
met Thursday in the latest push for a lasting peace deal, with six
previous ceasefire commitments never holding for more than a few days --
and sometime just hours -- on the ground.
Tens of thousands of
people have been killed in more than a year of civil war, with peace
talks led by the regional East African bloc IGAD due following the
summit.
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.
African leaders 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 three west African countries of
Liberia, Guinea and Sierra Leone -- and sparked a major health scare
worldwide.
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