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Remarks by President William Samoei Ruto, PhD, C.G.H., President of the Republic of Kenya and Commander-in-Chief of the Defence Forces, at the 5th Mid-Year Coordination Meeting of the African Union

Remarks by President William Samoei Ruto, PhD, C.G.H., President of the Republic of Kenya and Commander-in-Chief of the Defence Forces, at the 5th Mid-Year Coordination Meeting of the African Union

July 16, 2023

H.E. Azali Assoumani, President of the Union of Comoros and Chairperson of the African Union,

Your Excellences, Heads of State and Government,

Your Excellency, Mr. Moussa Faki Mahamat: Chairperson of the African Union Commission,

Your Excellency, Mr. Issoufou Mahamadou, Champion of the AfCFTA, and Former President of the Republic of Niger,

Her Excellency Ms. Amina, Mohammed, Deputy Secretary General, United Nations,

Heads of the Organs and Institutions of the African Union, Regional Economic Communities and Regional Mechanisms,

Honourable Ministers,

Hon. Anne Waiguru, Chairperson of the Council of Governors,

Hon. Johnson Sakaja, Governor of Nairobi County, Honourable Members of Parliament,

Excellencies,

Distinguished Guests, Ladies and Gentlemen,

  1. I am greatly delighted and highly privileged to have this opportunity of welcoming you all to Nairobi, and to the Republic of Kenya. The opportunity to host this Summit, and your visit to our country does a tremendous honour to the people of our nation.
  1. I trust that you have experienced our famous hospitality and hope that you will find the time to sample the spectacular attractions and delightful charms that make a visit to Magical Kenya a memorable experience. On behalf of the government and the people of Kenya, I extend to

you a warm welcome and invite you to feel at home with us. Karibuni Kenya; welcome home.

  1. Excellencies, it is difficult to overstate the fundamental importance of this Summit and the momentous consequence of the transformative business we have assembled here to You will recall that as a continental political community, we resolved unanimously to pursue the integration agenda with greater vigour and focus. This commitment was underscored by the decision to formulate a suitable framework to effectively coordinate the diverse efforts undertaken through our 8 regional economic communities and various mechanisms.
  1. It is evident, from the variety of activity, enhanced efficacy and visibility of AU’s agenda and the undeniable increase of the AU Commission’s

administrative capacity and overall vigour of regional and Pan-African integration efforts, that the AU’s commitment was earnest, accompanied by demonstrable political will and a focused and effective implementation strategy.

  1. We are a busy continent that is going places; the young, clean, green continent of the future, and we are determined to lead our march into this future as a united, empowered contributor of sustainable solutions to global problems. We are reasoning together, generating effective solutions, implementing them, facing our challenges head-on, making progress and getting results. This is what has brought Africa’s implementation leadership to Nairobi, and the sum total of the agenda of the Fifth Mid-Year Coordination Meeting.
  1. For this, I want to celebrate all of you who are here today, not just for making time to be here, but also for the work you do every day in taking the Pan- African Unity project forward. For this is what the integration agenda is all about, whether we are talking about regional economic communities or mechanisms, or the broader continental effort, the unity of African peoples is our primary goal.
  1. I commend His Exellency Abdel Fattah Al-Sisi, president of the Arab Republic of Egypt, for successfully chairing the Heads of State and Government Orientation Committee, which has effectively steered AUDA NEPAD in its momentous breakthrough in achieving the Agenda 2063 aspiration of consolidating regional and continental integration. I also thank President El- Sisi for successfully hosting the African COP, or the Implementation COP, the last conference of state

parties to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change at Sharm-El- Sheikh, Egypt, in November last year. It was at this COP that Africa finally revealed to the world a new determination to project a clear, forceful and unified voice, and claim its opportunity to contribute to resolving humanity’s most serious existential threat: climate change.

  1. I salute with gratitude His Excellency Ali Bongo Ondimba, president of the Republic of Gabon in his capacity as the Chair of Economic Community of Central African States, for the progress he has made in stewarding collaboration among regional economic communities under the Inter-REC Cooperation As a result, the ECCAS and the Economic Community of West African States have made significant strides in strengthening maritime security cooperation.
  1. I also appreciate the work being done by His Excellency Ismail Omar Guelleh, president of the Republic of Djibouti, who chairs the Inter- Governmental Authority on Development, for his able leadership of IGAD’s contribution to the process towards agreement on cessation of hostilities in Ethiopia.
  1. Further I am cognisant of the animated activity and excellent work that has brought much progress in ongoing projects and initiatives being undertaken across many spheres, by the Economic Community of West African States under the able leadership of His Excellency president Bola Ahmed Tinubu of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, the Common Market of the East and Southern Africa led by His Excellency Hakainde Hichilema, president of the Republic of Zambia, Southern

Africa Development Community, chaired by His Excellency President Felix-Antoine Tshisekedi- Tshilombo of the Democratic Republic of the Congo, the Community of the Sahel-Saharan States under the stewardship of His Excellency president of Benin, Patrice Talon the Arabic Union of the Maghreb, led by His Excellency Tayeb Baccoush of Tunisia and the East African Community, under His Excellency president Evariste Ndashimiye of Burundi.

  1. I must also recognise and praise the good work that the AU Commission continues to do under the leadership of its chair, His Excellency Moussa Faki This summit has been made possible by his able stewardship.
  1. These AU-REC success stories establish without any doubt that a lot of great work is being done all

over our continent, and that in our time, African leadership is signalling urgency, focus, consistency and determination to sustainably manage and solve prevailing challenges and develop robust instruments to anticipate and pre-empt future crises. With such commitment, we now have confidence to pursue sustainable development and shared prosperity, and expect that Agenda 2063 is now firmly on course.

  1. The most compelling signal that African integration is unstoppable, and that it will open doors for unprecedented socioeconomic transformation, is the progress we have made in implementing the Africa Continental Free Trade Area. We must all be proud of this magnificent project, an historic achievement by and for ourselves, whose positive effects will reverberate throughout the world for a long time to I

am not exaggerating. Let us consider the bare facts of the matter.

  1. This single mechanism has inaugurated the world’s largest free-trade area. Under it, 54 countries have agreed to create a single market with a population of 4 billion and GDP of USD

3.4 trillion. The free trade area is projected to lift

30 million people out of extreme poverty and boost incomes by 7%, or USD 450 billion by 2035. As I have had occasion to remark before elsewhere, this is the magnitude of what typical Pan-African collective action can achieve, and we are only getting started.

  1. The progress we have made by collaborating with unprecedented firmness of purpose in different domains, including peace and security,

regional integration, investment, trade and development and climate change is of tremendous and positively transformative significance for us collectively.

  1. Agenda 2063 is our blueprint to deliver the Pan-African vision of an integrated, prosperous and peaceful Africa, driven by its own citizens, representing a dynamic force in the international arena. Therefore it is more critical now than ever before, that we marshall our collective consciousness, will power, solidarity and unity, to fulfil our fundamental generational mandate of introducing Africa as a new global power, ready and able to provide leadership towards a new industrial age that shall simultaneously usher in an era of inclusive development, shared prosperity and effective climate action.
  1. We must therefore capitalise on the institutional reform momentum at the AU to pursue the complete development of effective capacity to deliver Pan-African transformation. To do this, self-reliance is essential, and a fit-for- purpose institutional architecture is At the moment, over 60% of our programmes budget is financed by overseas partners. The demands of our challenging time require an AU that can pursue multiple urgent and critical interventions using internally mobilised resources. The Pan-African movement has always been about sovereignty and agency, first and foremost. Chronic dependence on well-meaning partners is starkly inconsistent with this aspiration.
  1. This is why we must make progress in exploring, developing and implementing solutions like the Kigali Decision (AU Decision 605 of 2016)
  1. Similarly, it is time to free up the African Union from structural and organisational constraints including duplication and other inefficiencies, thereby facilitating it to be effective on a greater scale. As a starting point, defining the roles and functions of different organs and instruments more clearly, is now unavoidable. The coordination, administrative and implementation mandate of the Commission, the legislative and oversight function of a strong Pan African Parliament, and the political leadership, ownership and broad policy direction of the Council, all need to be reflected more clearly through rational structural
  1. COP27 was a turning point of tremendous magnitude because it brought home to the peoples of Africa the imperative to reconfigure our model

of engagement with global and multilateral frameworks in general, and the urgency of projecting a new place, role and voice to define Africa’s contribution to global development and climate action.

  1. As we reflect and deliberate upon president El- Sisi’s account of his commendable use of COP27 to facilitate the emergence of a fresh Afro-centric perspective to climate change, it is vital that we resolve to do even better and go much farther at the forthcoming COP28 by taking on board a more robust position, and proposing a transformed and inclusive global approach to tackling the climate
  1. This is why it is important for us to pay special attention to the Africa Climate Summit (ACS), which takes place here in Nairobi between

September 4th and 6th. The Summit, coming after the Paris Summit where greater clarity emerged, will be a critical opportunity for us to accelerate global energy transition and deliver African solutions to the COP28 in Dubai, the United Arab Emirates.

  1. When you return to Nairobi in September, therefore, our sole business will be to mobilise and converge around a common position and advocate for global alignment on a green growth agenda complemented by a transformative global climate finance Your participation in this Summit must therefore anticipate your stronger participation at the ACS.
  1. I take this opportunity to once more appreciate the indispensable contributions made by the AU Commission, and the leadership of of its

chairman His Excellency Moussa Faki Mahamat, to all arrangements and the tremendous logistical undertaking required to prepare a successful summit. It is because of this partnership with the commission that we have made progress in laying ground for an event that will give our continent a platform from which to launch its agenda into global discourse. I am confident that the Summit will be successful in achieving all its objectives.

I thank you.

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