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Integration at the core of Africa's development

By OTIATO OPALI in Nairobi, Kenya | China Daily Global | Updated: 2024-07-25 09:21
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African Heads of State pose for a group photograph before the opening ceremony of the 37th Ordinary Session of the Assembly of the African Union (AU) at the AU headquarters in Addis Ababa on Feb 17, 2024. [Photo/VCG]

African countries have resolved to strengthen their collaboration in the implementation of the African integration agenda, underscoring the role of member states in the allocation of adequate financial resources to ensure effective implementation of continental integration.

Moussa Faki Mahamat, chairman of the African Union Commission, said African countries can maximize the potential of integration avenues, like the African Continental Free Trade Agreement, by making it an engine of growth and diversification of the economies to increase trade within the continent.

Mahamat highlighted the need for member countries to present a united front in upcoming engagements with international partners. He also emphasized the importance of speaking with one voice at major global forums, including the G20, where the African Union now holds membership. He made the remarks on Sunday while speaking during the AU's sixth midyear coordination meeting in Ghana's capital Accra.

Ghana's President Nana Akufo-Addo said the urgency to consolidate the fragmented financial instruments to accelerate Africa's development agenda must be met if Africa is to achieve full integration.

"By consolidating our development funding instruments, we can create a more cohesive and effective financial framework that ensures resources are allocated where they are most needed. This consolidation will not only streamline our efforts, but will also improve our capacity to mobilize domestic and external resources efficiently," Akufo-Addo said.

Facilitating trade

Mohamed Ould Cheikh Ghazouani, Mauritania's president and current chair of the AU, said cooperation and integration would strengthen strategic planning and operationalization of critical continental infrastructure, such as regional power pools, digital and transport infrastructure. He urged member states to redouble efforts in trade facilitation through the simplification, standardization and harmonization of related procedures and information flows to boost intra-African trade.

Kidi Mwaga, a Kenyan law and governance expert, said Africa has no choice but to fast-track its integration process by overcoming political and historical hurdles that have stood in the way of its unification. In his view, opening up intra-Africa trade is the first critical step toward economic integration in Africa.

"Currently, when, for instance, Kenya wants to trade with Uganda, they first have to transact through the US in terms of buying dollars. We therefore must create a payment system that ensures that trade within Africa must first remain in Africa. In so doing, we will be able to alleviate poverty and suffering and give people a fair shot at upward social mobility," Mwaga said.

Despite the challenges facing Africa, Mwaga believes that the elusive idea of African integration is the silver bullet for Africans to find their way out of poverty, insecurity and violence as well as the way out of manipulation of Africa by the West.

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