Africa Day: 50 yrs on, where is Nkrumah’s US of Africa?
To survive and compete with clout in a
rather realist and emulous world Africa has little choice but to unite. It is home
truth and a verdict very few political and economic analysts disagree with. For
the Pan-Africanist, African unity is much more than plain common sense, it is
an article of faith informed by acute intellect and driven by home grown
ideological fervour.
It has always been the Pan-African
gospel espoused by those convinced that African people are one nation and that Africa
is better served united than balkanised along same old colonial and arbitrary dividing
lines. “We all want a united Africa, united not only in our concept of what
unity connotes, but united in our common desire to move forward together ...” was
how Osagyefo Dr Kwame Nkrumah of blessed memory summed up this Pan-African
gospel of African unity whilst attending that historic summit in Ethiopia where
the Organisation of African Unity (OAU) was given birth to in May 1963 to
breathe oxygen into the unity momentum.
In those early ‘60s, African
unity really provoked quantum passion and flurry of propositions throughout
Africa even as the newly independent countries were euphoric of national
independence and liked to parade their sovereign pride in national flags, anthems,
coats of arms and motorcades. For a continent that was emerging from colonial
exploitation replete with deprivation and non-infrastructural and institutional
development Nkrumah and his radical Casablanca bloc were the most compelling
against the status quo.
The only bright
future Nkrumah envisioned in Africa was one in which the entire continent
agreed to a common market, a single currency, an African Central bank, a common
foreign policy, a common defence system and a common citizenship amongst others.
Anything short of the above was a recipe for further exploitation, decadence
and a futureless people with hardly any potential for appreciable development
and international actorness.
Unable to stand up to
the self evident vision boldly and eloquently articulated by Nkrumah, sceptical
peers known for their cold feet and back paddling ducked into comfort zones and
made a structural case for moderation and gradualism. Known collectively as the
Monrovia bloc for their conservative approach to unity, they won as the OAU that
was established as a result fell far short of the United States of Africa
Nkrumah called for, and any potential for unity was seriously eroded by a self-defeatist
principle of “Non-interference in the internal affairs of Sates.”
And thus, Mwalimu Julius
Nyerere, one of the organisation’s founding fathers and sterling advocates of
the unity cause, would later look back and lament that the OAU was nothing more
than a "trade union of the African
heads-of-state”. Nothing surprising there since the constituent document of the
OAU was never a “we, the people of Africa” charter but rather one of “we, the
Heads of African States and Governments”.
What
is probably amazing was Nyerere’s other admission that Nkrumah had “underestimated the
degree of suspicion and animosity which his crusading passion had created among
a substantial number of his fellow heads of state” too many of whom had a
vested cause in keeping the continent balkanised. This admission came in 1997
when the European Union (EU) was being celebrated as the most successful
example of a continental union with such clear benefits the motives of Robert
Schuman and other founding fathers have never been suspect, at least not to the
extent of deliberately derailing efforts at unity.
Yet, as Africans
celebrate Africa Day in 2013 on the 50th anniversary of the OAU, now known as
the African Union (AU), the reality of African unity on the ground suggests the
gradualist view and those vested interests still hold sway. With the
independence of South Sudan in 2011, Africa today is a continent of fifty four
sovereign countries, each with profound attachment to individual state
nationalism and strict regimes of border controls where Africans are still
deemed foreign or even illegal immigrants in African countries other than those
of their birth and citizenship.
While an African
being labelled an immigrant anywhere in Africa is at odds with a continent that
has talked unity for fifty years, the real travesty is the oft report of
deportations and/or targeted victimisations of fellow Africans resident in
other African countries. Much worse and patently scandalous are ethnocentric
complexes of superiority within countries that sometimes degenerate to points
of entrenched prejudice or civil conflict. The sum total effect on African
unity is one that suggests the AU is some distant project in Addis Ababa far
removed from the rights of African people to equal opportunity and dignity and
their collective dreams and aspirations to freely move and trade labour, goods,
services and capital as in pre-colonial times of old or as in the present coeval
EU.
Nonetheless, the
continental infrastructure for unity has had its day in the sun too. The
sunshine was all the more glorious when in 1994 Africans finally triumphed over
apartheid in South Africa. In effect decolonisation remains one of, if not, the
greatest achievement of a concerted effort of a continent seeking to free her
people from bondage in the land of their forebears. This is no mean record for
the OAU. For the AU the admission and eventual acceptance that there is no
alternative to development progress and international actorness other than that
of the unity blueprint is palpably the most auspicious this far.
The Sirte declaration
that enacted the AU adapted a common peacekeeping force, agreed to have an
African Central Bank, resolved to work towards achieving a single currency and
strive to accelerate economic and political integration. In the area of
security alone this new resolve is beginning to yield dividends as the AU is
able to synergise resources from amongst member countries to keep the peace in
troubled parts of the continent such as Darfur, Somalia and Mali. Finally,
albeit still too slowly, the continent is beginning to wake up to the Pan-African
aphorism that African problems are best solved by
Africans themselves.
But for the AU to be
able to cultivate “a united Africa, united not only in our concept of what
unity connotes, but united in our common desire to move forward together ...” it
will have to first grow teeth of steel. For
that to happen, the constituents of the AU would have to quickly rehearse
singing from the same page on international affairs. To achieve this, national
governments have to be keenly wary of the divide and rule tactics subjectively
employed by external hands such as from former colonial capitals in furtherance
of their own national interests. And the poverty gap between countries often
trumpeted as a barrier to unity is one of those cause and effect arguments that
will not go away until African leaders bite the bullet decisively.
The symbolism of celebrating
Africa Day on 25th May every year is certainly laudable but arguably
isolated and possibly insufficient in promoting and keeping the Pan-African
ideal of unity alive and attractive. The AU has to agree a curriculum that clarifies
and outlines what constitutes Pan-Africanism or African unity, and have it
taught in schools and colleges throughout the continent. It should constitute a
significant criteria in the African Peer Review Mechanism, further to which all
African countries that fly their flags at the AU headquarters in Addis Ababa
should also fly the AU flag everywhere their own national flags are hoisted.
This will serve notice of a shared commitment to unity and conjointly give
instant visibility to the AU in the eyes of Africans and across the globe
through the many African embassies doted all over the world.
Kofi Annan is on record as having said
at the launch of the AU in 2011 that "To build a successful union ... will
require great stamina and iron political will.” It is that great stamina and
iron will that will ultimately draw a line between the OAU and the current AU. Hence,
governments of the fifty three member countries of the AU will have to concede
those reflexes that instinctively inure them to self survival over and above
the success of a continental super structure.
And there is no better therapy of
eschewing narrow nationalism in favour of progressive African unity than
consciously applying will power and selfless leadership to making the resolutions
of the Sirte declaration work now. Africa can get there and should get there, not
because Nkrumah once said so but because the alternative of failing to unite suggests
continued pauperisation of its people and vulnerability of fifty four
non-viable countries manifestly expressed in pathetic debility whilst competing
among much better positioned international actors in the global arena.
Samwin Banienuba
International
Spokesperson for Humanitas Afrika
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