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Gambia Leads the Way

Yahya_Jammeh(WSJ) - To be taken seriously in diplomatic circles, the African Union must first escape Gadhafi's shadow.
Last week Gambia became the first African nation to recognize Libya's Transitional National Council as the legitimate representative of the Libyan people. Simultaneously, Gambian authorities froze Moammar Gadhafi's investments in their country while denouncing his human rights abuses.
This development is largely symbolic, but meaningful nonetheless. Tiny Gambia has long been one of Gadhafi's closest allies in West Africa. Since his rise to power in 1994, Gambian President Yahya Jammeh has looked to Gadhafi as a benefactor and mentor, even claiming inspiration from Gadhafi's Green Book.
If Gambia can switch its allegiance to a rebel-led Libya, why are others on the continent so reluctant to do so? One reason is that Gadhafi's ouster wouldYahya_Jammeh mean a major shift in Libya's strategic and financial relationships with sub-Saharan Africa. Gadhafi represents a Libya that has distributed its patronage southward over the last 20 years, while the rebels would almost certainly turn their attention and future petrol dollars to the north and east. Additionally, many of Africa's strongmen fear encouraging a precedent that could lead to uprisings and international intervention in their own countries. Others are justifiably hesitant to take an overtly anti-Gadhafi stance while their own migrant workers are essentially trapped in Libya.
Therefore, most of the African Union's member states would be risking certain short-term interests in recognizing the Libyan rebels. But they would also be taking a step towards the long-term payoff of ending Gadhafi's meddling in their societies, and bringing the AU greater legitimacy in diplomatic circles. This helps explain the murky "neutrality" that the AU has sought to project regarding Libya. Its mediation mission to Tripoli this month docilely fulfilled Gadhafi's bidding, casting him as a "man of peace" while attempting to portray the rebels as warmongers by deliberately offering them a "peace plan" they could not accept.
This was all the more disappointing after the AU's dramatic falling-out with Gadhafi in January 2010, when the Libyan leader attempted to run for an unprecedented second term as AU president. That, followed by the events of the last few months, led some observers to expect that the AU was finally ripe to overcome its members' divergent interests and make an emphatic anti-Gadhafi turn.
But its "mediation" in Libya earlier this month only underscored the AU's impotence. It appears that the AU delegation did not even decide to intervene until it was invited by Gadhafi. The AU delegates then fulfilled the role he assigned them, proclaiming that Gadhafi had accepted their "road map" to peace before they even presented it to the rebel side.
Particularly puzzling was South Africa's involvement in this charade. Although Gadhafi's support for Nelson Mandela and the African National Congress was essential to their success in the 1990s, South African President Jacob Zuma cannot be described as a Gadhafi stooge. South Africa voted in favor of the U.N. Security Council Resolution that called for a humanitarian no-fly zone in Libya. That Mr. Zuma left the AU mission prior to its conclusion may show that he realized that the mediation would come to naught, and didn't want to be overly associated with its failure.
Yesterday the AU initiated a new round of talks in Addis Ababa, promising to meet with both rebel and regime representatives, and to try and bridge their demands. The AU's track record in conflict resolution—from the Ivory Coast to Madagascar to Somalia—has not been promising so far. Nonetheless, the AU could conceivably make a real breakthrough in Libya, particularly if it would leverage its institutional connections to mediate an exile arrangement for Gadhafi and his family.
Before that can happen though, more African states would need to publicly call for Gadhafi to go, and follow the Gambian example by recognizing the rebels. South Africa could play a key role in this process by hardening its stance on Gadhafi and attempting to rally other potentially receptive African nations, such as Nigeria and Gabon—both of which also voted in favor of the U.N. no-fly zone in Libya.
The upheavals in Libya and across North Africa represent a golden opportunity for the AU to inaugurate a new era of institutional clout. The Arab League's early calls for a no-fly zone breathed new life into that once-moribund organization. Both Africa and the world would benefit from a more internationally respected AU that could advocate for Africa on issues ranging from agricultural subsidies to peacekeeping. But for the AU to find a new role on the world stage, it must first decisively escape Gadhafi's long shadow.
Mr. Pack researches Libya at St. Antony's College, Oxford University.

Comments  

 
0 #8 2011-04-29 14:12
Quoting Mike Scales:
Patriot..when you can learn to read and digest what people say...then you may learn to think and comment with intelligence and perspecive.

Or in a language you can understand..

Make sure your brain is in gear before you engage your mouth.

Abdou's observation about the "average" Gambian was almost right.

I think if I were your Mother...I'd be investing in your education and not your time in the internet cafe.


A VERY LOUD APPLAUSE, Mike
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0 #7 2011-04-29 10:27
Patriot..when you can learn to read and digest what people say...then you may learn to think and comment with intelligence and perspecive.

Or in a language you can understand..

Make sure your brain is in gear before you engage your mouth.

Abdou's observation about the "average" Gambian was almost right.

I think if I were your Mother...I'd be investing in your education and not your time in the internet cafe.
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+1 #6 2011-04-28 18:49
gambia leads the way what!. gambia is leading no where. and shut up mr scales. jammeh ahead of what game?.
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+1 #5 2011-04-27 18:46
Ghadafi was indeed his last friend, mentor and protector on the African continent. I therefore hope that when all is said and done [and the nefarious regime of Ghadafi is no more], the present Libyan rebels will take good note of Jammeh collusion with their former oppressor. In fact, and I do also hope that the present rebels will consequently contribute to further isolate the lying tyrant Jammeh so as to precipitate the fall of his murderous regime in the Gambia as well.
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-1 #4 2011-04-27 18:45
The guy [Jammeh] is the worse kind of opportunists I have ever seen: Sensing the impending demise of Ghahadafi's regime, he calculated that it was better [if only financially] to allign himself with the rebels [for whom he has had in reality no genuine sympathy.] Indeed, Jammeh is the guy who [during the worse atrocities committed on the Libyan people by Ghadafi] remained mute and even in friendship with the Libyan tyrant. And all these steps he is taking now against Ghadafi is for fear that he might get further isolated [both financially and politically once the rebels accede to power]. Jammeh simply has no friends left but the misguided HUGO CHAVEZ.]
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-6 #3 2011-04-26 23:53
I asked the question...I did not write it...my dear

Essa...is a true King.

So of democracy...

A position taken by a majority to exhault a minority.

Think on that one?
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+2 #2 2011-04-26 21:24
Try harder Mike,I will leave you with wise words of Essa.
"Political pests" like Yahya Jammeh are a chronic STIGMA on the plateau of African politics. They must be scraped if we as Africans and friends of Africa are serious towards building democratic institutions within the continent which has so far suffered enough."by Essa Sey.
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-5 #1 2011-04-26 15:49
Interesting point of view?

I wonder how many viewers would applaud

this..."Gambia leads the way" ?

Good article Jollof News.

Is Jammeh well ahead of the game?
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