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Statement by H.E. Dr. Aisha L. Abdullahi (Amb.) Commissioner for Political Affairs African Union Commission at the Opening Ceremony of the 54th Ordinary session of the African Commission on Human and Peoples’ Rights (ACHPR)

Statement by H.E. Dr. Aisha L. Abdullahi (Amb.) Commissioner for Political Affairs African Union Commission at the Opening Ceremony of the 54th Ordinary session of the African Commission on Human and Peoples’ Rights (ACHPR)

Dates: 
October 22, 2013
English

Statement of the Deputy Chairperson at the launch of IPSA Project Oversight Committee (IPOC), Johannesburg 21st October 2013

Statement of the Deputy Chairperson at the launch of IPSA Project Oversight Committee (IPOC), Johannesburg 21st October 2013
Your Excellencies,
President, Pan-African Parliament
President, African Court of Human and Peoples' Rights
Chairperson, African Commission on Human and Peoples' Rights
CEO, NEPAD Planning and Coordination Agency

It gives me great pleasure to welcome you to Johannesburg and to have this rare opportunity to meet you at this launch of the implementation phase of the International Public Sector accounting Standards within the AU.

As you will recall, in January this year, the Assembly of Heads of State and Government adopted the International Public Sector Accounting Standards (IPSAS) as a basis of accounting and financial reporting for the entire Union. The objective is to harmonize financial reporting practices, improve transparency, promote efficiency, and comparability of our financial statements.
I am sure; you also received my communication in July 2013, which constituted into the IPSAS Project Oversight Committee so that the processes of operationalizing the project are led at the highest levels within the AU.
Your Excellencies, let digress a bit into history.
The AUC processes improvement programme started with the Institutional Transformation Process (ITP), launched in 2005 with the dual objective of:

• Modernizing financing and accounting systems and introducing computerized MIS and knowledge management systems; and
• Strengthening the capacity of the AUC to manage and coordinate effective links with the different organs and stakeholders of the African Union

The ITP achieved some significant milestones, notably the introduction of a strategic planning process, the introduction of a results based planning and management system and the introduction of SAP-an Enterprise Resource Planning System.

Another initiative was the 5 Pillar Institutional Audit covering Accounting Standards, Internal Control Standards, Internal Audit Charter and reporting, procurement and grant awards procedures. I am happy to let you know that the AUC which started at the needs improvement level, is now rated “Satisfactory” on 4 of the five Pillars. We are working on the accounting standards to complete the exercise and this will happen when we are IPSAS compliant.

Why IPSAS?

As you know, most Governments and Public International organizations, including the United Nations (UN) and its Specialized Agencies have adopted and have either completed implemetation or are in the process of implementing IPSAS. Need I therefore stress that the Union should not to remain behind but be in tune with comparable organisations since we mobilise resources from the same sources?

IPSAS is composed of credible, high quality, independently produced accounting standards, underpinned by a strong due process and supported by governments, professional accounting bodies, and international development organizations. It is not just a list of standards but a critical tool to make credible partners for doing business with. IPSAS represent best practice for governments’ and international inter-governmental organizations and the AU systems can only overlook it its peril.

Benefits
I know our technical people will outline to us the key benefits of the adopting IPSAS which include:

a) Improved stewardship and transparency with respect to recording of all assets, liabilities, revenues and expenses;

b) Improved quality, comparability and credibility of AU financial statements to Member States, donors and staff, by enhancing accountability, transparency and good governance.

c) More comprehensive and consistent information about income and expenditures which better support Results Based Management, and

d) Improved consistency and comparability of financial statements over time and across different organizations.

Challenges
We should not under estimate the task, for the adoption of IPSAS involves considerable challenges and complexities, involving the review of Financial Rules and Regulations, accounting policies, review and improvement of information systems. Furthermore, it also entails a significant cultural change in the way management and staff understands and uses financial information. The successful transition to IPSAS therefore hinges on strong senior management support and engagement, dedicated intra-organ task forces and the adoption of a project management approach to implementation. This exactly explains why we need to lead the process from the front.

It is therefore critical that we move in unison for leaving behind anyone of us will affect the rest. Moreover, the Assembly decision covers all the Organs of the African Union. It must be a joint project into which we all have a stake. Just as we shall work together at the oversight level, our personnel must do the same at the implementation level so that we meet our target of being fully compliant end of 2014.

Excellencies, let me now draw this Committee’s attention to the proposed revisions to the Financial Rules and Regulations to support the adoption of IPSAS. These proposed revisions, accompanied by explanations of the proposed changes, will be submitted to the PRC for consideration later this year and for approval during the January 2014 summit. I understand that the draft have been circulated to all organs for comments. The proposed changes are the outcome of a collaborative effort led by the IPSAS Implementation task Force and supported multi-disciplinary team on administrative policies to ensure that it reflects a union-wide document.

Let us carry out our oversight role with complete commitment and dedication which will require that we constantly monitor progress and ask the following questions:

a. Have all IPSAS issues been identified and IPSAS-compliant policies formalized within our various systems?
b. Have our procedures been fully integrated and made IPSAS-compliant?
c. Have our systems been tested, integrated and made IPSAS-compliant?
d. Have structures been set up to provide ongoing support to everybody involved in these processes?
e. Have all stakeholders been informed, prepared, trained and equipped for IPSAS adoption?
f. Is there a robust framework to support staff, management and our field offices during data collection and clean-up?
g. Have all impacts on the Financial Rules and Regulations (FR&R) been considered?
h. Have all policy decisions been supported by the Board of Auditors as well as the PRC?

Conclusion
In conclusion, let me draw you to the documentation the outlining the responsibilities of the IPSAS Project Oversight Committee, please read them and always keep them at the back of your mind as we embark on this work. While acknowledging that there will be challenges, we have to remain committed to the full implement IPSAS by end of 2014.

I thank you once more for attending this important meeting.
LET US GET DOWN TO WORK.

Dates: 
October 24, 2013
English

Statement by the H.E. Dr. Aisha L. Abdullahi Commissioner for Political Affairs African Union Commission Delivered on her Behalf by the AU Permanent Representative to the United Nations in New York at the Open Debate of the Security Council

Statement by the H.E. Dr. Aisha L. Abdullahi Commissioner for Political Affairs African Union Commission Delivered on her Behalf by the AU Permanent Representative to the United Nations in New York at the Open Debate of the Security Council, October 2013 Women, Peace and Security “WOMEN, RULE OF LAW AND TRANSITIONAL JUSTICE IN CONFLICT- AFFECTED SITUATIONS”
New York On 18 Oct. 2013

Dates: 
October 18, 2013
English

Statement by H.E. Dr. Aisha L. Abdullahi (Amb.) Commissioner for Political Affairs, African Union Commission at the Commemoration of Africa Human Rights Day

Statement by H.E. Dr. Aisha L. Abdullahi (Amb.) Commissioner for Political Affairs, African Union Commission at the Commemoration of Africa Human Rights Day Under the Theme: “The Promotion and Protection of Human and Peoples’ Rights is Our Collective Responsibility” 21 October 2013 Addis Ababa - Ethiopia

Dates: 
October 21, 2013
English

Opening Statement of AU Commission Chairperson, H.E Dr. Nkosazana Dlamini Zuma to the 3rd African Forum Dialogue on the 50th Anniversary of the Founding of the OAU/AU Geneva, 16 October 2013

Opening Statement of AU Commission Chairperson, H.E Dr. Nkosazana Dlamini Zuma to the 3rd African Forum Dialogue on the 50th Anniversary of the Founding of the OAU/AU Geneva, 16 October 2013

Dates: 
October 16, 2013
English

Welcome Remarks of the African Union Commission Chairperson, HE Dr. Nkosazana Dlamini Zuma to the Extraordinary Session of the Assembly of Heads of State and Government

Welcome Remarks of the African Union Commission Chairperson, HE Dr. Nkosazana Dlamini Zuma to the Extraordinary Session of the Assembly of Heads of State and Government
Addis Ababa, 12 October 2013


Your Excellency Ato Hailemariam Dessalegn, Prime Minister of the Federal Democratic Republic of Ethiopia and Chairperson of the African Union

Your Excellencies, Heads of State and Government

Excellency Deputy Chairperson Mwencha and fellow Commissioners

Honourable Ministers and Members of the Executive Council

Honourable Heads of Delegations and Representatives of the RECs and the UNECA

Your Excellencies, Members of the Permanent Representative Committee

Ladies and Gentlemen

I am pleased to warmly welcome you back to Addis Ababa and to thank you for your positive response to our invitation to take part in this Extraordinary Summit.

The holding of this Extraordinary session is a testimony to the importance of the matter that the Assembly has been seized with for a long time.

The Assembly is also seized with the task of electing a new Commissioner for Peace and Security, following the appointment of HE Ambassador Lamamra to the position of Foreign Minister of Algeria. On behalf of the Commission, we thank him for the tireless work in pursuit of our collective peace and security, in the true spirit of Pan Africanism.

The Extraordinary Summit also takes place as we bow our heads in memory of the victims of the terrorist attacks in Kenya and Nigeria last month, and of the Africans who perished off the coast of the Lampedusa Island when their boat sank on the 3rd of October.

Excellencies

When the Assembly adopted the Constitutive Act in 2002, it was mindful of the fact that the scourge of conflicts constitutes a major impediment to the socio-economic development of the continent.

As we therefore transformed from the OAU to the African Union, we moved from a policy of non-interference to the policy of non-indifference; the unequivocal rejection of impunity; and the promotion and protection of human and people’s rights in accordance with the African Charter of Human and People’s Rights.

It was these principles that saw many Member States initiating reviews of their Constitutions to align it with the relevant provisions of the AU Constitutive Act. In addition, the majority of AU Member States, thirty four (34) in total, are parties to the Rome Statutes, a clear testimony to the commitment of Africa to an international justice system set up to combat impunity and to seek redress for victims of human rights abuses.

The African Union remains of the view that the promotion of international justice, the rejection of impunity and the fight against violations of human rights must go hand in hand with the promotion of peace, security, democracy, reconciliation, inclusion and stability.

As we therefore reflect on our long and arduous struggle for a peaceful Africa, as we continue to seek African solutions to African problems, we are reminded of the words of Nelson Mandela, when he said
“..solutions can be found even to conflicts that have come to seem intractable and that such solutions emerge when those who have been divided reach out to find the common ground.”

Excellencies,

The violence that erupted in Kenya after the elections in 2007 deeply saddened our continent.

In the spirit and letter of non-indifference, the African Union intervened through the Eminent Persons panel to assist Kenya to bring together all stakeholders to find common ground, and to set it on the path where the people of Kenya could begin to address the underlying causes of these tragic events.

Following the National Accord that resulted from Kenya’s National Dialogue and Reconciliation Process, the country made progress in transforming its police and judiciary, promoting peaceful resolution of conflicts amongst local communities, and introduced a new Constitution that allows greater inclusion in the context of Kenya’s diversity. Both President Kenyatta and Vice President Ruto, along with the leadership from all sectors of Kenyan society, played a critical role in bringing together contending groups to find common ground.

In addition, based on the reports presented to the 15th Extraordinary Executive Council by the Kenyan delegation, work is ongoing on investigations and prosecutions of the 2007/2008 post-elections violence and on resettlement of the thousands of Kenyans displaced by the violence.

The peaceful elections that Kenya held in March 2013, with high participation of the populace and the commitment by all parties to resolve disputes through the legal system, is testimony that the country has indeed come a long way since the tragic events of 2007/2008.

There is no question that much more needs to be done to consolidate reconciliation, inclusion, human rights and social justice in Kenya, but we are of the view that the country is on the right track.

Excellencies,

The security situation in Kenya remains fragile, as seen in some parts where instability is of ongoing concern, and as experienced with the recent terrorist attack in Nairobi.

We should therefore not allow Kenya to slide back for any reason and the AU is keen to see stability and an improved security situation in Kenya.

This requires the undivided attention of its leadership, to consolidate and create conditions for lasting peace, security and reconciliation. Given the challenges remaining in the country outlined above and the security threats it continues to face, the elected leadership of Kenya must be allowed to serve their term as mandated by the people of the country.

They must be allowed to lead the country in the consolidation of peace, reconciliation, reconstruction, democracy and development as per the will of the Kenyan people, expressed in elections in March this year.

As a Member State, Kenya plays an important role in the promotion of peace and security on the continent in general, and in the Horn of Africa in particular.

Excellencies,

Our continent and the African Union remain committed to the system of international justice and action against impunity. African states played an important role in the adoption of the Rome Statutes and the establishment of the ICC, in recognition of the importance of transitional justice in the promotion of peace and security.

Kenya, as a State Party to the Rome Statutes, throughout this difficult period has also in word and deed expressed its willingness to cooperate with the International Criminal Court (ICC), even after the elections of President Uhuru Kenyatta and Vice President William Ruto to office.

This is despite national and international customary laws, including in many Western countries, which guarantee sitting Heads of State and Government immunity from prosecution during their tenure of office, more especially when they are democratically elected.

Excellencies, communication between the ICC and the AU has been ongoing. Since the May Summit, we send two letters co-signed by the Chairpersons of the AU and the AU Commission to the ICC, an AU delegation led by the Chairperson of the Executive Council met the President and Prosecutor of the Court in The Hague and the Chairperson of the Commission met the ICC Prosecutor earlier this week.

We would therefore like the United Nations Security Council and the ICC to work with us to ensure that the process of stability, reconciliation, security and peace in Kenya is consolidated.

The UN Security Council and the ICC should work with us to enable the elected leadership of Kenya to fulfill their constitutional obligations, by urgently considering deferment of the ICC proceedings against the President and Vice President of Kenya, in accordance with Article 16 of the Rome Statutes.

This will also allow the leadership of Kenya to ensure that the country does not slide back into violence and instability.

In our view, this will further give the State Parties time and space to place matters that are of concern to Africa on the agenda of the coming Assembly of State Parties to the Rome Statutes, and to discuss the approach and role of the ICC dispassionately and calmly.

It is critical that we remain within the legal framework of the Rome Statutes.

Excellencies,

The Assembly decision in May this year also undertook to “seek ways of strengthening African mechanisms to deal with African challenges and problems.” Although more needs to be done, we are recording progress in implementing the African Peace and Security Architecture (APSA) and the African Governance Architecture, at national and continental levels.

We should however do more to strengthen the integrity and capacity of our national and continental Judicial system, including the African Court on Human and People’s Rights, so that the ICC indeed becomes the court of last instance, as intended in the Rome Statutes and in pursuit of African people’s demand for justice, reconciliation and respect of their human rights and dignity.

Finally, as we mourn the senseless deaths of Africans who perished off the coast of the Lampedusa Island, and countless other similar deaths, we must scale up our investment in Africa’s young men and women, so that they do not have to face such perilous journeys, leaving our shores in search of illusive green pastures.

In this, the year of the 50th Anniversary of the OAU and African Union, we must accelerate Africa’s renaissance by speeding up infrastructure and agricultural development; deepen industrialization and integration; and by investing in the health, education and skilling of our people, especially youth and women.

I wish you fruitful deliberations and outcomes.

Merci beaucoup

Dates: 
October 12, 2013
English

Welcome Remarks of African Union Commission Chairperson, HE Dr. Nkosazana Dlamini Zuma to the 15th Extraordinary Session of the Executive Council

Welcome Remarks of African Union Commission Chairperson, HE Dr. Nkosazana Dlamini Zuma to the 15th Extraordinary Session of the Executive Council

Dates: 
October 11, 2013
English

Remarks by the Chairperson of the Commission on the 7th consultative meeting between the members of the United Nations Security Council and the Peace and Security Council of the African Union

Remarks by the Chairperson of the Commission on the 7th consultative meeting between the members of the United Nations Security Council and the Peace and Security Council of the African Union

Members of the Peace and Security Council of the African Union,
Members of the United Nations Security Council,
Ladies and gentlemen,
It gives me a pleasure to address this joint consultative meeting between the African Union Peace and Security Council and the United Nations Security Council. This gathering is a further testimony of the growing partnership between the African Union and the United Nations. I have no doubt that your meeting will agree on further steps aimed at enhancing the relationship between the two organs. Indeed, our capacity to meet the ever complex and changing peace and security challenges confronting the African continent is contingent upon our commitment to work together and the judicious combination of our respective comparative advantages.

In welcoming you in Addis Ababa, I would like to express our gratitude to the Security Council for its support to African endeavors. Over the years, our partnership has enabled us to make strides in our quest for lasting solutions to the conflicts and crises that continue to afflict the continent. I can point to the significant gains recorded in Somalia thanks to the invaluable support extended by the UN, in the relations between Sudan and South Sudan, in the Great Lakes region and in Mali.
Today's meeting provides an opportunity to exchange views on all these situations, and to discuss how best to consolidate the progress achieved. Indeed, we cannot relent, as the path towards lasting peace and stability requires a long-term investment to address the root causes of violence. We should continue to urge the concerned stakeholders to persevere in their efforts and continue to demonstrate the necessary resolve and political commitment. We should ensure that peace dividends swiftly materialize to provide further incentive for peace. We should be firm with spoilers to prevent the reversal of hard-won gains and the relapse into violence.
While the progress made is undeniable, Africa continues nonetheless to grapple with serious peace and security challenges. These range from inter-State conflicts, some of which have so far defied all attempts at peacemaking, to internal crises, many of which are linked to governance problems, to organized crime and terrorism, as so tragically highlighted by the cowardly attack against the west gate shopping mall in Nairobi.
Overcoming these challenges would require more sustained efforts from the continent and its political leaders, concrete steps to improve compliance with relevant instruments of the AU, and addressing the developmental needs of our people, a greater willingness to compromise from the parties involved, and an enhanced partnership with the rest of the international community in support of African-led initiatives.
I am glad that the issue of the enhancement of the partnership between the African Union and the United Nations features on your agenda. It my earnest hope that your discussions will mark another step forward in the building of an innovative and flexible relationship based on a creative reading of the provisions of Chapter VIII of the United Nations Charter. Two weeks ago, the Peace and Security Council, meeting in New York at the level of the Heads of State and Government, reviewed in-depth the African Union-United Nations partnership. It formulated a number of proposals on the way forward. On my part, I note with satisfaction that the Peace and Security Council intends to convene regular meetings in Addis Ababa with the Security Council members to exchange on issues of common concern. I look forward to the early implementation of this decision.
As we meet here, nowhere on the continent is the need for a forward looking partnership more relevant than in the Central African Republic. The dire security and humanitarian situation prevailing in that country for a swift and coordinated United Nations response, notably through flexible, predictable and sustainable support to AFISM-CAR, to enable the early deployment of the Mission and the creation of the required conditions for a follow on United Nations operation.. In this respect, we look forward to the early adoption by the Security Council of the resolution on the matter submitted by France.
I thank you and wish you successful deliberations.

Dates: 
October 08, 2013
English

Statement by H.E. Erastus Mwencha, Deputy Chairperson of the African Union Commission at the Opening of the International Conference on Population and Development

Statement by H.E. Erastus Mwencha, Deputy Chairperson of the African Union Commission at the Opening of the International Conference on Population and Development

Dates: 
October 03, 2013
English

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