African Union Summit: Guterres hails โ€˜shared values, mutual respect and common interestsโ€™ of UN partnership

African Union Summit: Guterres hails โ€˜shared values, mutual respect and common interestsโ€™ of UN partnership

Daniel Getachew/UN Photo
Secretary-General Antรณnio Guterres speaking at a High-Level Meeting on Gender Equality and Womenโ€™s Empowerment, at the 2020 African Union Summit in Addis Ababa.

8 February 2020

The UN chief on Saturdayย called onย the international community to recognize the need for African counter-terrorism operations, backed by the UN Security Council,ย  to tackle the growing threat of extremist violence across the continent, and โ€œpredictable funding, guaranteed by compulsory contributionsโ€.

Secretary-General Antรณnio Guterresย was speaking to reporters as the African Union (AU) Summit got underway in the Ethiopian capital, Addis Ababa, describing the relationship between the AU and the UN as โ€œone of the most important partnerships in the world โ€“ a partnership that is committed to responding to the anxieties and aspirations of the African people, and paving the way for a better future for us all.โ€

Counter-terrorism

He said the countries of the Sahel and Lake Chad faced โ€œa multitude of challenges, be it the climate crisis, economic despair and exclusion, or extremismโ€, saying that โ€œAfrican peace enforcementโ€ involving the AU, needed concrete support under Chapter VII of theย UN Charterย which authorizes the Security Council to use force against threats to peace, breaches of the peace and acts of aggression.

UN Spokesperson

โœ”@UN_Spokesperson

Speaking to the press at , @antonioguterres calls for African counter-terrorism forces in the Sahel and beyond, backed Security Council Chapter VII mandates and guaranteed predictable financing from the international community. Open remarks here: https://bit.ly/2tJtLy4ย 

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A new coalition needed to be built to defeat terrorism in Africa, Mr. Guterres told reporters, but this could only be done with enough funding and support.

โ€œIt must be said that terrorism in Africa is not a threat only to Africa, terrorism in Africa is a global threat and it is everyoneโ€™s duty to show effective solidarity with the African States that are on the front line of this fight.โ€

UN ready to host AU representatives in Libya

Noting that โ€œthe chaos in Libya is worseningโ€, the UN chief criticized the โ€œdirect complicityโ€ of some Member States in recent months who have fuelled violence across the oil-rich North African nation, and armed the main forces opposed to the UN-backed Government.

โ€œOnly a political solution will bring peaceโ€, and the UN Mission in Libya,ย UNSMIL, โ€œis ready to receive an African Union representation on its premises and we want the AU focal points to be able to participate on all the intra-Libyan working groupsโ€, he added, especially those put in place at the recent Berlin conference.

On the margins of the summit on Saturday, Mr. Guterres met the Libyan Minister of Foreign Affairs, reiterating the UNโ€™s commitment to working with all parties to secure peace.

โ€˜Silencing the Gunsโ€™ for peace and development

The UN chief said AU-UN strategic partnership was growing โ€œevery stronger and more dynamicโ€, especially on the AU signature initiative that is central to this yearโ€™s conference, โ€œSilencing the Gunsโ€, together with human rights, gender-equality, climate change, and sustainable development โ€“ which lie the heart of the AU-led Agenda 2063 plan for the continent.

The ambitious initiative is aimed at ending wars, civil conflicts, gender-based violence and genocide prevention across the continent.

โ€œWe need fair globalization, so that Africa no longer suffers from unfair trading and financial rules, subsidies and other policies and market distortions that perpetuate inequality and make it harder for Africa to compete and prosperโ€, said Mr. Guterres.

Climate, and locust swarms

The Secretary-General also highlighted the damaging impactย of the climate crisis onย African peace, prosperity and development, linking it to the current locust swarms which are plaguing Ethiopia and East Africa.

โ€œWarmer seas mean more cyclones generating the perfect breeding ground for locustsโ€, said noting the biblical scale of the crisis today with swarms the size of major cities:

โ€œTheย FAOย (Food and Agricultural Organization) tells us a swarm the size of Paris will consume, in one day, as much food as half the population of France.

โ€œI express my deep solidarity with the people and communities affected. The United Nations has issued an urgent appeal for assistance. I ask the international community to respond with speed and generosity to ensure an effective response and control the infestation while we still have the chance.โ€

Real signs of hope

Despite the challenges, Mr. Guterres notes the signs of hope which are everyone across Africa. He cited the first anniversary this week of an historic peace agreement in the Central African Republic, and elections in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Madagascar and Mali last year.

For Sudan, which a year ago was roiled by political and economic crisis on the streets that led to the ouster of Omar al Bashir after 30 years in power, he lauded the success so far of the transitional Government as a โ€œmajor achievementโ€, where the AU had played โ€œan essential mediating roleโ€ in a new Constitution.

โ€œAnd now we are working together to help this Government keep its commitmentsโ€, the Secretary-General said.

โ€œI reaffirm that it is time to remove Sudan from the list of States that support terrorism and to mobilize massive international support to enable Sudan to overcome its challenges.

โ€œThese advances show that it is possible to act and must be relentlessly supported by the international community.โ€

South Sudan leaders: โ€˜Think about your peopleโ€™

Talking questions from reporters, the UN chief made a powerful plea to the leaders of war-torn South Sudan, where a deadline is fast approaching for President Salva Kiir and his former deputy, Riek Machar, to agree terms for a new unity government.

โ€œThe South Sudanese people’s suffering is something that I feel very deeply and very emotionallyโ€, said Mr. Guterres, highlighting his own experience travelling to the worldโ€™s youngest nation, where the euphoria of independence in 2011 has given way to brutal conflict, displacement and mass rights violations.

โ€œSo, I have one with one simple message to the leaders of the country: think about your people. Respect your peopleโ€, he said.

โ€œYou have not the right to continue a confrontation when your people are suffering so much. It is your moral and political responsibility to put an end to this and to find the agreements that are necessary…It is for me totally unacceptable, that we are still again, close to the deadline of a new period that was declared, that there is no agreement on a number of issues.โ€

He concluded saying it was time for South Sudanese leaders โ€œto agree to cooperate and to deserve the wonderful people they have.โ€

Poverty in Africaย โ€˜still has a womanโ€™s faceโ€™

Addressing a High Level Meeting on Gender Equality and Womenโ€™s Empowerment at the AU Summit,ย the UN chief saidย that the reality in Africa, and the rest of the world, is thatย poverty โ€œstill has a womanโ€™s face.โ€

Antรณnio Guterres

โœ”@antonioguterres

Iโ€™m worried about male dominance in high-tech sectors, as we can see in Silicon Valley.

If we donโ€™t reverse this trend, all of our global efforts for gender equality will be undermined.

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For every 100 men aged 25-34 living in extreme poverty in sub-Saharan Africa, there are 127 women, he noted.

Women are often concentrated in precarious jobs and they carry a disproportionate share of unpaid care and domestic work, while violence against women remains pervasive.

As head of the UN refugee agency,ย UNHCR, โ€œI have seen with my own eyes how women and girls are the main victims of conflict, the main victims of displacement and the main victims of in terms of instability in any part of the worldโ€, he said.

โ€œAs the world recommits to achieving irreversible progress towards gender equality, I encourage African States, in partnership with civil society and other stakeholders, to contribute to the Beijing+25 Action Coalitions…The United Nations stands alongside the African Union in working to overcome the peace and security, development and human rights challenges that continue to limit African women and girls.โ€

He called on States to enhance womenโ€™sย social, economic and financial inclusion.

โ€œIt means providing true protection against violence โ€“ in conflict and in peacetime, on the streets and in the home. And it means making sure women and girls are encouraged to develop scientific skills and ensuring that they have access to innovation and technologyโ€, he added.

Chauvinism in Silicon Valley

Looked westwards to the billionaire enclaves of northern California, he said it was โ€œrather strange that the area where we see more male chauvinism in the economy, is exactly in some of the more high-tech places, namely Silicon Valley. This is a battle we must winโ€, otherwise we risk reversingย all the trends for gender equality of the last few decades, he added.

โ€œLet us ensure that the needs and perspectives of Africaโ€™s women and girls are fully integrated in our efforts to build peaceful, just and inclusive societiesโ€, he concluded.

UN Photo
The United Nations Secretary General, Antonio Guterres at the launch of the book โ€œShe Stands for Peace: 20 years, 20 journeysโ€, at the AU Summit in 2020.

โ€˜She stands for peaceโ€™: pathfinders and pioneering women

On Saturday night, the UN chief joined dignitaries attending the AU Summit for the launch of a book jointly produced by the two organizations called She Stands for Peace: 20 years, 20 journeys.

It captures the stories of outstanding African women and women-led organizations who have worked tirelessly towards building a lasting peace on the continent.

Mr. Guterresย told the launchย that despite the landmark Security Council resolution 1325 on Women, Peace and Security, to empower women in their own right, the โ€œpositive trendโ€ in recent years towards consideration of the gender pespective in conflict resolution had gone into reverse.

โ€œThis is essentially a question of power. This demonstrates that men are not so easy in leaving power…Power is not easily granted. Power needs to be taken.โ€

The book has been published in close cooperation with the African Union Commission, he said, โ€œand features an enormous variety of women: from rural villages and cities; from privileged upbringings and from humble backgrounds.

โ€œWhat these remarkable women have in common is their work to promote peace and mediate conflicts in communitiesโ€, added the Secretary-General, โ€œoften without recognition or payment, and sometimes at great personal risk. They are pathfinders, leaders; pioneers and courageous innovators.โ€

He noted that more thanย anything, the women in the book โ€œwant less talk about women, peace and security, and more action. The women in this book are counting of us, the international community, and on their leaders and the leaders of other nations to do more than make speeches about them. They want actual investment in them as equal stakeholders who care about the future of their communities and nations. They know in intimate detail โ€“ equal to their male counterparts โ€“ the logistics, tactics, violence and human cost of war.โ€

We need to do much more to ensure womenโ€™s equal participation in peace processes said Mr. Guterres, โ€œand to put survivors at the heart of our approach to sexual and gender-based violence in conflict.โ€

FROM THE UN WEBSITE

 

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