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From: VC <[email protected]>
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Date: Sun, 15 Jul 2012 23:02:28 
To: <[email protected]>
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Subject: [YCLSA Discussion] The new AU Commission chief - Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma


Business Day


*Dlamini-Zuma is new AU Commission chief*


*Staff Writer, Business Day, Johannesburg, 15 October 2012*

ADDIS ABABA --- Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma, South Africa's minister of home 
affairs, was on Sunday elected as the first female head of the African 
Union Commission.

Ms Dlamini-Zuma, who received 37 votes in the last round of voting, 
needing 34 to win, defeated incumbent and rival Jean Ping of Gabon, who 
had headed the steering body of the 54-member organisation since 2008.

A failure by the AU to resolve the leadership contest between candidates 
from rival English- and French-speaking blocs at its summit in Addis 
Ababa, Ethiopia, would have divided the continental body and undermined 
its credibility in the world.

The internal battle to head the AU's main steering body and voice 
outside Africa had dragged on since last year when Ms Dlamini-Zuma had 
challenged Mr Ping of Gabon, a former foreign minister, for the post.

A vote at a summit in January ended in stalemate, splitting the 
continent between its French-speaking bloc of states, which broadly 
backed Mr Ping, and English-speaking member states, especially the 
southern group, which largely swung behind the ex-wife of President 
Jacob Zuma .

Lobbying by both Mr Ping's and Ms Dlamini-Zuma's supporters had 
intensified ahead of the vote this weekend. The winner required 60% of 
votes to be elected.

Benin President Boni Yayi, the current holder of the AU's rotating 
chairmanship, told the summit ahead of the leadership election that the 
body would suffer if the vote was once again inconclusive. "Last January 
we failed. At this summit, we don't have the right to fail any more," he 
said in a speech.

Critics say the AU showed itself hesitant and slow-moving in its 
response to the conflicts last year in Libya and Côte d'Ivoire, allowing 
Western governments to take lead roles.

"A new failure will signify the division of the continent," Mr Yayi 
warned, urging the heads of state to use the vote to show Africa's 
ability to work together and find consensus.

*'Not like the United Nations'*

Ms Dlamini-Zuma earlier rejected suggestions that the rivalry risked 
tearing the continental body apart.

"I think the continent is stronger than to allow itself to just be 
fractured by elections involving two people," she said, adding that all 
of the AU's 54 members states should support whoever emerged as the winner.

Some smaller countries had argued that Ms Dlamini-Zuma's candidacy broke 
an unwritten rule that Africa's dominant states should not contest the 
AU leadership. South Africa is the largest economy on the world's 
poorest continent.

But Ms Dlamini-Zuma said this tacit rule was not fair as the AU's 
constituent charter viewed all member states as equals.

"It's not like the United Nations," she said, referring to the veto 
power held in the world body by the five member states of the UN 
Security Council.

Seeking to deflect fears that South Africa might seek to use the AU post 
to try to dominate the continent, Ms Dlamini-Zuma argued that she was 
standing "as an AU candidate, not as a representative of South Africa".

*Re-election campaign*

Mr Ping was this week criticised by southern African countries for a 
statement he issued accusing the South African media of trying to 
tarnish his image and derail his re-election campaign.

Speculation in weekend papers that Mr Ping would withdraw from the race 
prompted him to issue a statement on the AU website earlier this week 
refuting the claims.

South African International Relations Minister Maite Nkoana-Mashabane 
said on Thursday in a radio interview that Mr Ping had abused AU 
resources, the organisation's website and its letterhead for "personal 
campaigns".

Ms Nkoana-Mashabane concurred with Botswana's Foreign Minister Phandu 
Skelemani, who had raised the matter at the summit and said Mr Ping's 
conduct violated the "provisions and spirit of the statutes of the AU 
Commission".

He also accused Mr Ping of potentially sowing division in the 
organisation, adding that the statement amounted to a "direct attack" on 
South Africa.

"In this regard, the conduct by the chairperson of the AU, namely abuse 
of AU resources, attack on and divulging information of a member state 
is unprecedented, and can bring disrepute to the integrity of the AU," 
Mr Skelemani said. "This therefore calls for an apology on his part, and 
retraction of the statement through the same medium used."

Ms Nkoana-Mashabane also moved to dispel "myths" that South Africa was 
party to a "gentlemen's agreement" taken by the five large African 
countries --- Nigeria, South Africa, Egypt, Algeria and Libya --- that 
they would not hold leadership positions in the AU.

"That agreement does not exist. If it did, countries like Nigeria would 
not have had an opportunity to go in," she said. Nigeria held the 
position for three years, for an "interim" term.

Ms Nkoana-Mashabane said that "to prove the humility of South Africa, we 
have been a free nation for the past 18 years, we have not contested for 
any of the positions here".

She said when smaller states from the southern African region had tried 
to secure the position, they were rejected because they were viewed as 
"small" and "not too strong". Now that the Southern African Development 
Community agreed on a candidate, however, it was time to take the helm.

With Reuters and Natasha Marrian

*From: http://www.businessday.co.za/articles/Content.aspx?id=176300*
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