As Africa unites to fight the COVID-19 pandemic, we also pin our  hopes on the AU Peace Fund to silence the guns, Daily Maverick, by Naledi  Pandor, 4 February 2021 
        African countries agree that  the most important public health measure to prevent COVID-19 is the roll-out of  vaccines. Also key is that they are rolled out in a fair and equitable manner –  all countries must get them and get them speedily. 
        In the past year of South Africa’s chairing of the  African Union (AU), the continental organisation has been grappling with  managing the spread and impact of the COVID-19 pandemic while implementing one  of its flagship projects, the African Continental Free Trade Area Agreement  (AfCFTA). 
        The pandemic has had severe effects on AU member  countries, but it has also united them in a manner reminiscent of the  solidarity that the Organisation of African Unity, the AU’s predecessor, led  against apartheid South Africa. 
        African countries agree that the most important  public health measure to prevent COVID-19 is the roll-out of vaccines. For the  past year efforts have been under way to find vaccines that are safe,  affordable and effective. Also important is that vaccination be rolled out in a  fair and equitable manner. 
        All countries must get vaccines and must get them  speedily. It is vital to the global containment of COVID-19 that vaccination  takes place in all countries and among all populations. We are all aware of the  challenges of accessing vaccines for developing countries, particularly in  Africa. 
        South Africa, India and other like-minded countries  have called on the World Trade Organisation to temporarily waive specific  intellectual property obligations related to the prevention and treatment of  COVID-19 for a defined period and within defined parameters. 
        This would enable countries in Africa and elsewhere  to access active pharmaceutical ingredients and benefit from technology  transfer, including the know-how to manufacture vaccines in Africa at a cheaper  cost. 
        Notwithstanding the pandemic, we also had to ensure  the AU continues to execute its agreed reform agenda effectively. The  implementation phase of the AfCFTA began on 1 January 2021, making history as  Africa became the world’s largest free trade area. Through the AfCFTA, the  continent will eliminate trade barriers, enhance competitiveness and stimulate  investment, innovation and economic growth. 
        Also important for our chairing of the AU has been  the goal to silence guns on the continent. The financing of peace operations in  Africa has been a challenge for years. The civil society organisation Accord  said the AU’s reliance on foreign donors creates “a very strong interdependence  and a subordinate role for African countries in decision-making”. That is why,  in 2016, the AU Assembly of Heads of State and Government decided to establish  the AU Peace Fund. 
        The Peace Fund was established under Article 21 of  the protocol establishing the Peace and  Security Council of the AU to finance the AU’s peace and security operations.  The fund covers operational activities: mediation and preventive diplomacy,  institutional capacity and peace support operations. 
        AU member states have set themselves the target to  capitalise the Peace Fund up to $400-million in 2021. This will be a  demonstration of Africa’s commitment to ensuring predictable and sustainable  financing for peace and security activities. 
        As President Cyril Ramaphosa told an AU meeting recently,  the continent’s failure to implement its own decisions as a result of financial  inadequacies “diminish[es] our ability to consolidate peace, prevent the  recurrence of violent conflict, build social cohesion, deepen democracy and  advance economic development”. DM 
        https://www.dailymaverick.co.za/opinionista/2021-02-04-as-africa-unites-to-fight-the-covid-19-pandemic-we-also-pin-our-hopes-on-the-au-peace-fund-to-silence-the-guns/ 
 
           
   
 
        
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