Chadian
President Idriss Deby Thursday courted Tanzania to break a regional
pledge to support Kenya’s Amina Mohamed for the next African Union (AU)
Commission chairmanship.
During an unprecedented visit to Dar es salaam, President Deby is said
to have asked his counterpart and host John Pombe Magufuli to back
Chad's Foreign minister Moussa Faki Mahamat for Africa’s top political
job. Mr Mahamat was in the delegation.
Source told The EastAfrican that Presidents Deby and Magufuli
discussed a range of issues including the AU Commission vacancy which is
to be filled in two months by a vote of each of the 54 African Union
member states.
Tanzania’s options are quite broad because apart from being a member of
the East African Community which has endorsed Ms Mohamed, a Kenyan, for
the job, it is also a member of the Southern African Development Community
(SADC) which is fronting Botswana’s Foreign Affairs minister Pelonomi
Venson-Moitoi. The other candidate is Senegalese diplomat Abdoulaye
Bathily.
Mindi Kasiga, Tanzania’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs, East Africa,
Regional and International Cooperation spokesperson confirmed to The EastAfrican that the two presidents held confidential talks but could not reveal what they discussed.
President Deby, who is the current chairman of the AU, paid an official
visit at the time when Tanzania is also hosting Zambian President Edgar
Lungu – a visit that was announced just a day prior.
AU vote
Four candidates are vying to succeed South Africa’s Nkosazana
Dlamini-Zuma, who is stepping down, in an election to be held during the
28th Ordinary Session of the Assembly of Heads of State and Government
scheduled for January 30-31, 2017 at the AU headquarters in Addis Ababa,
Ethiopia.
The election of the members of the AUC in Kigali, Rwanda, in July 2016
was suspended as none of the three contenders for the position of the
chairperson of the Commission obtained the required two-thirds majority,
after seven rounds of voting.
Kenya’s Amina Mohamed is likely to get backing from its East African
peers with recent reports also indicating more support from the Common
Market for Eastern and Southern Africa (Comesa) member states.
Source: The East African
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