‘Africa
should have one president’-Mugabe
January 16, 2013 in National, News, Politics
PRESIDENT Robert
Mugabe yesterday said the forthcoming African Union (AU) summit should discuss
the appointment of a President of Africa to foster unity among Africans and
ensure that member states adhere to the founding principles of the continental
body.
Report by Everson Mushava
Mugabe was addressing journalists at State
House after a two-hour meeting with President Thomas Boni Yayi of the Benin
Republic, who is also the outgoing AU chairman, in Harare. Yayi said he was in
Zimbabwe to discuss the challenges Africa was facing as a continent and to get
advice on ways to end conflict, in countries like the Democratic Republic of
Congo, Mali and Central African Republic, among others.
The proposal to set up a United States of
Africa was first made by the slain Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi in 1999 as a
way of ending the continent’s conflicts, but it failed to secure enough support
from his African counterparts with some suspecting Gaddafi wanted to rule
Africa. But Mugabe yesterday emphasised Africa should have one president who
would help fight divisions and move Africa to a continental power from the
regional shell he claimed it was today.
“Yes, we need a President for Africa,” Mugabe
said. “That is what we are going to discuss at the AU summit. Africa is not a
united continent. We are not at the stage our founding fathers wanted us to be
when the organ was formed.”
Mugabe said the AU had failed to integrate
Africans, with some seen in the context of Anglophones and others Francophones.
Mugabe said he was pleased that even though Zimbabweans had political
differences, they had realised they were guided by the same destiny and hoped
the forthcoming elections would be peaceful.
Yayi, who yesterday defended the move to
request Nato forces to end the conflict in Mali and stop the Islamic rebels
from seizing the Malian capital Bamako, said he had fruitful discussions with
Mugabe.
“For Mali, we had to invite Nato because the
situation was critical. It was an issue of religious intolerance and a matter
of terrorism,” he said.
Yayi left Harare yesterday.
http://www.newsday.co.zw/2013/01/16/africa-should-have-one-president-mugabe/

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