African leaders to UN: We’ll fight for our own identity


UN Secretary-General, Ban Ki-Moon with African Heads of States and Presidents in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia at the 26th Ordinary Session of the African Union. PHOTO CREDITS: www.au.int
African leaders have told the United Nations (UN) that the continent will fight for its own identity, integrity and personality.
They emphatically called on the United Nations to reform the Security Council by making African nations its permanent members.
The chairman of the AU, Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe, made the call Saturday in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, at the commencement of the 26th Ordinary Session of the Assembly of the Heads of State and Government of the African Union, with the theme “2016: African Year of Human Rights, with Particular Focus on the Rights of Women”.
Mugabe specifically told the UN Secretary-General, Ban Ki Moon, that African nations were independent and were supposed to be free.
He declared that African countries would certainly decide one day that they could not continue to be “artificial members” of the United Nations.
He also maintained that if the United Nations must survive, African countries must be equal members of the global organization, stressing that “There should be real uniformity in the UN Security Council”.
Mugabe, whose speech ignited a round of thunderous applause from his colleagues, asked Ki Moon to tell the United Nations that Africans are not ghosts, but humans who also belong to the world.
In a veiled reference to Ki-Moon’s call on African leaders to respect constitutional term limits, Mugabe, who had been ruling Zimbabwe since 1980, said the only thing “the imperialists” were persistently preaching to Africa was regime change.
Mugabe decried that the imperialists were still everywhere in Africa “if not physically, but through spies and pretenders who come to us and say they are our friends. What else is coming from them? Regime change!”
He said: “Mr Ban Ki Moon, we are independent nations and we are supposed to be free. We go to the UN General Assembly every September. We pay a lot of money to the UN year in year out, but the body in the Security Council says we shall never have the power they have. Reform the Security Council! I want to tell you, Mr Ban Ki Moon, that you are a good man, but of course, we can make you a fighter. We shall fight a fight for our own identity, integrity and personality as Africans. If we decide, as we shall certainly do one day, that we cannot continue to be artificial members of the United Nations…
“If the UN must survive, we must be equal members of it…We have said we have to be permanent members (of the UN Security Council) with a veto power, if the veto must be retained. Mr Ban Ki Moon, tell them (the UN) that we are also humans and not ghosts. We also belong to the world. Africa shall no longer tolerate slavery by any means; by denial of rights…I hope you will hear from us on the issue of the United Nations reform. You’re a good man, you’ve visited our countries where diseases have visited and where calamities and terrorism have taken place. We say thank you. That distinguishes you from others. We know where you come from” Mugabe said.
He thanked other African leaders for supporting him throughout his reign as chairman of the African Union.
 Don’t use legal loopholes to occupy office – Ki Moon
 Earlier, Ki Moon had warned African leaders against exploring unconstitutional means and legal loopholes to cling to power.
Ki Moon, who noted that 17 African countries would be going into elections this year,  urged the leaders to emulate those who committed to stepping aside by respecting constitutional term limits.


Check the Daily Trust newspaper for the full story.



Comments

Popular posts from this blog

10 World Most Eloquent People

St. Finbaar’s College, Akoka wins the annual Helmbridge Science Challenge for secondary schools in Lagos State.

BIAFRA: IPOB, MASSOB shut down markets, Uwazuruike expelled