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The Organisation of African Unity (OAU) or Organisation de l'Unité Africaine (OUA) was established on 25 May 1963. It was disbanded on 9 July 2002 by its last chairperson, South African President Thabo Mbeki and replaced by the African Union.

Aims

The OAU had two primary aims:
  • Promote the unity and solidarity of the African states and act as a collective voice for the African continent. This was important to secure Africa's long-term economic and political future. Years of colonialism had weakened it socially, politically and economically.
  • The OAU was also dedicated to the eradication of all forms of colonialism, as, when it was established, there was still a number of states that hadn't yet won their independence or were minority-ruled. South Africa and Angola were two such countries. The OAU proposed two ways of ridding the continent of colonialism. Firstly, it would defend the interests of independent countries and help to pursue those of still-colonized ones. Secondly, it would remain neutral in terms of world affairs, preventing its members from being controlled once more by outside powers.
A Liberation Committee was established to aid independence movements and look after the interests of already-liberated states. The OAU also aimed to stay neutral in terms of global politics, which would prevent them from being controlled once more by outside forces – an especial danger with the Cold War. The OAU had other aims, too:
  • Ensure that all Africans enjoyed human rights.
  • Raise the living standards of all Africans.
  • Settle arguments and disputes between members – not through fighting but rather peaceful and diplomatic negotiation. Soon after achieving independence, a number of African states expressed a growing desire for more unity within the continent. Not everyone was agreed on how this unity could be achieved, however, and two opinionated groups emerged in this respect:
  • The Casablanca bloc, led by Kwame Nkrumah of Ghana, wanted a federation of all African countries. Aside from Ghana, it comprised also Algeria, Guinea, Morocco, Egypt, Mali and Libya. Founded in 1961, its members were described as "progressive states".
  • The Monrovian bloc, led by Senghor of Senegal, felt that unity should be achieved gradually, through economic cooperation. It didn't support the notion of a political federation. Its other members were Nigeria, Liberia, Ethiopia and most of the former French colonies. The dispute was eventually resolved when Ethiopian emperor Haile Selassie I invited the two groups to Addis Ababa, where the OAU and its headquarters were subsequently established. The Charter of the Organization was signed by 32 independent African states.
       At the time of the OAU's disbanding, 53 out of the 54 African states were members; Morocco left on 12 November 1984 following the admission of the Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic as the government of Western Sahara in 1982.
       The organization was widely derided as a bureaucratic "talking shop" with little power. It struggled to enforce its decisions, and its lack of armed force made intervention exceedingly difficult. Civil wars in Nigeria and Angola continued unabated for years, and the OAU could do nothing to stop them.
       The policy of non-interference in the affairs of member states also limited the effectiveness of the OAU. Thus, when human rights were violated, as in Uganda under Idi Amin in the 1970s, the OAU was powerless to stop them.
       The Organization was praised by Ghanaian former United Nations Secretary-General Kofi Annan for bringing Africans together. Nevertheless, in its 39 years of existence, critics argue that the OAU did little to protect the rights and liberties of African citizens from their own political leaders, often dubbing it as a "Dictators' Club"(External Link) or "Dictator's Trade Union"(External Link). However, the critics were mostly Westerners and their negative opinion about African Unity was expected. The OAU was, however, successful in some respects. Many of its members were members of the UN, too, and they stood together within the latter organization to safeguard African interests – especially in respect of lingering colonialism. Its pursuit of African unity, therefore, was in some ways successful.
       Total unity was difficult to achieve, however, as the OAU was largely divided. The former French colonies, still dependent on France, had formed the Monrovia Group, and there was a further split between those which supported the USA and those which supported the USSR in the Cold War of ideologies. The pro-Socialist faction was led by Kwame Nkrumah, while Félix Houphouët-Boigny of the Ivory Coast led the pro- capitalists. Because of these divisions, it was difficult for the OAU to take action against states involved in internal conflicts because it could rarely reach an agreement on what was to be done.
       The OAU did, however, play a pivotal role in eradicating colonialism and minority rule in Africa. It gave weapons, training and military bases to colonised nations fighting for independence or majority rule. Groups such as the ANC and PAC, fighting apartheid, and ZANU and ZAPU, fighting for the independence of Southern Rhodesia, were aided in their endeavors by the OAU. African harbours were closed to the South African government, and South African planes were prohibited from flying over the rest of the continent. The UN was convinced by the OAU to expel South Africa from bodies such as the World Health Organization.
       The OAU also worked with the UN to ease refugee problems. It set up the African Development Bank for economic projects intended to make Africa financially stronger. Although all African countries eventually won their independence, it remained difficult for them to become totally independent of their former colonizers. There was often continued reliance on the former colonial powers for economic aid, which often came with strings attached: loans had to be paid back at high interest-rates, and goods had to be sold to the aiders at low rates.
       The USA and USSR intervened in post-colonial Africa in pursuit of their own objectives. Help was sometimes provided in the form of technology and aid-workers. While useful, such external assistance was often perceived as not necessarily in the best interests of the former colonies.
       Autonomous specialized agencies, working under the auspices of the OAU, were:
  • Pan-African Telecommunications Union (PATU)
  • Pan-African Postal Union (PAPU)
  • Pan-African News Agency (PANA)
  • Union of African National Television and Radio Organizations (URTNA)
  • Union of African Railways (UAR)
  • Organization of African Trade Union Unity (OATUU)
  • Supreme Council for Sports in Africa

    List of Secretaries-general of the Organisation of African Unity (OAU) and African Union (AU) Chairs of the Commission

    Secretaries-general of the OAU
    Name Beginning of Term End of Term Country
    Kifle Wodajo (acting) 25 May 1963 21 July 1964 Ethiopia
    Diallo Telli 21 July 1964 15 June 1972 Guinea
    Nzo Ekangaki 15 June 1972 16 June 1974 Cameroon
    William Eteki 16 June 1974 21 July 1978 Cameroon
    Edem Kodjo 21 July 1978 12 June 1983 Togo
    Peter Onu (acting) 12 June 1983 20 July 1985 Nigeria
    Ide Oumarou 20 July 1985 19 September 1989 Niger
    Salim Ahmed Salim 19 September 1989 17 September 2001 Tanzania
    Amara Essy 17 September 2001 9 July 2002 Côte d'Ivoire
    AU Chairs of the Commission
    Amara Essy (interim) 9 July 2002 16 September 2003 Côte d'Ivoire
    Alpha Oumar Konaré 16 September 2003 Present Mali

    List of Chairs of the Organisation of African Unity (OAU) & African Union (AU)

    Organisation of African Unity
    Name Beginning of Term End of Term Country
    Haile Selassie 25 May 1963 17 July 1964 Ethiopia
    Gamal Abdel Nasser 17 July 1964 21 October 1965 Egypt
    Kwame Nkrumah 21 October 1965 24 February 1966 Ghana
    Joseph Arthur Ankrah 24 February 1966 5 November 1966 Ghana
    Haile Selassie 5 November 1966 11 September 1967 Ethiopia
    Joseph-Désiré Mobutu 11 September 1967 13 September 1968 Congo (Kinshasa)
    Houari Boumedienne 13 September 1968 6 September 1969 Algeria
    Ahmadou Ahidjo 6 September 1969 1 September 1970 Cameroon
    Kenneth Kaunda 1 September 1970 21 June 1971 Zambia
    Moktar Ould Daddah 21 June 1971 12 June 1972 Mauritania
    Hassan II 12 June 1972 27 May 1973 Morocco
    Yakubu Gowon 27 May 1973 12 June 1974 Nigeria
    Muhammad Siad Barre 12 June 1974 28 July 1975 Somalia
    Idi Amin 28 July 1975 2 July 1976 Uganda
    Seewoosagur Ramgoolam 2 July 1976 2 July 1977 Mauritius
    Omar Bongo 2 July 1977 18 July 1978 Gabon
    Gaafar Nimeiry 18 July 1978 12 July 1979 Sudan
    William R. Tolbert, Jr. 12 July 1979 12 April 1980 Liberia
    Léopold Sédar Senghor (acting) 28 April 1980 1 July 1980 Senegal
    Siaka Stevens 1 July 1980 24 June 1981 Sierra Leone
    Daniel arap Moi 24 June 1981 6 June 1983 Kenya
    Mengistu Haile Mariam 6 June 1983 12 November 1984 Ethiopia
    Julius Nyerere 12 November 1984 18 July 1985 Tanzania
    Abdou Diouf 18 July 1985 28 July 1986 Senegal
    Denis Sassou-Nguesso 28 July 1986 27 July 1987 Congo (Brazzaville)
    Kenneth Kaunda 27 July 1987 25 May 1988 Zambia
    Moussa Traoré 25 May 1988 24 July 1989 Mali
    Hosni Mubarak 24 July 1989 9 July 1990 Egypt
    Yoweri Museveni 9 July 1990 3 June 1991 Uganda
    Ibrahim Babangida 3 June 1991 29 June 1992 Nigeria
    Abdou Diouf 29 June 1992 28 June 1993 Senegal
    Hosni Mubarak 28 June 1993 13 June 1994 Egypt
    Zine El Abidine Ben Ali 13 June 1994 26 June 1995 Tunisia
    Meles Zenawi 26 June 1995 8 July 1996 Ethiopia
    Paul Biya 8 July 1996 2 June 1997 Cameroon
    Robert Mugabe 2 June 1997 8 June 1998 Zimbabwe
    Blaise Compaoré 8 June 1998 12 July 1999 Burkina Faso
    Abdelaziz Bouteflika 12 July 1999 10 July 2000 Algeria
    Gnassingbé Eyadéma 10 July 2000 9 July 2001 Togo
    Frederick Chiluba 9 July 2001 2 January 2002 Zambia
    Levy Mwanawasa 2 January 2002 9 July 2002 Zambia
    African Union
    Name Beginning of Term End of Term Country
    Thabo Mbeki 9 July 2002 10 July 2003 South Africa
    Joaquim Chissano 10 July 2003 6 July 2004 Mozambique
    Olusegun Obasanjo 6 July 2004 24 January 2006 Nigeria
    Denis Sassou-Nguesso 24 January 2006 24 January 2007 Republic of Congo
    John Kofi Agyekum Kufuor 30 January 2007 Present Ghana

    OAU Summits

    It includes ordinary and extraordinary summits.
  • Addis Ababa (Ethiopia) : 22-25 May 1961.
  • Cairo(Egypt) : 17-21 July 1964.
  • Accra (Ghana) : 21-26 October 1965.
  • Addis Ababa (Ethiopia) : 5-9 November 1966.
  • Kinshasa (Democratic Republic of the Congo, formerly Zaire) : 11-14 September 1967.
  • Algiers (Algeria) : 13-16 September 1968.
  • Addis Ababa (Ethiopia) : 6-10 September 1969.
  • Addis Ababa (Ethiopia) : 1-3 September 1970.
  • Addis Ababa (Ethiopia) : 21-23 June 1971.
  • Rabat (Morocco) : 12-15 June 1972.
  • Addis Ababa (Ethiopia) : 27-28 May 1973.
  • Kampala (Uganda) : 28 July. - 1 August 1975.
  • Port Louis (Mauritius) : 2-6 July 1976.
  • Libreville (Gabon) : 2-5 July 1977.
  • Khartoum (Sudan) : 18-22 July 1978.
  • Monrovia (Liberia) : 17-20 July 1979.
  • Freetown (Sierra Leone) : 1-4 July 1980.
  • Nairobi (Kenya) : 24-27 June.1981.
  • Addis Ababa (Ethiopia) : 6-12 June 1983.
  • Addis Ababa (Ethiopia) : 12-15 November 1984.
  • Addis Ababa (Ethiopia) : 18-20 July 1985.
  • Addis Ababa (Ethiopia) : 28-30 July 1986.
  • Addis Ababa (Ethiopia) : 27-29 July.1987.
  • Addis Ababa (Ethiopia), Extraordinary Summit : Oct. 1987 .
  • Addis Ababa (Ethiopia) : 25-28 May 1988.
  • Addis Ababa (Ethiopia) : 24-26 July 1989.
  • Addis Ababa (Ethiopia) : 9-11 July 1990.
  • Abuja (Nigeria) : 3-5 July 1991.
  • Dakar (Senegal) : 29 June. - 1 July 1992.
  • Cairo (Egypt) : 28-30 June 1993.
  • Tunis (Tunisia) : 13-15 June 1994.
  • Addis Ababa (Ethiopia) : 26-28 June 1995.
  • Yaoundé (Cameroon) : 8-10 June 1996.
  • Harare (Zimbabwe) : 2-4 June 1997.
  • Ouagadougou (Burkina Faso) : 8-10 June 1998.
  • Algiers (Algeria) : 12-14 July 1999.
  • Sirt (Libya), Extraordinary Summit : 6-9 September 1999.
  • Lomé (Togo) : 10-12 July 2000.
  • Lusaka (Zambia) : 9-11 July 2001, It is the last summit of OAU.

    OAU members by date of admission (53 states)

  • 25 May 1963 : » Algeria, Burundi, Cameroon, Central African Republic, Chad, Congo (Brazzaville), Congo (Léopoldville). Dahomey, Egypt, Ethiopia, Gabon, Ghana, Guinea, Ivory Coast, Liberia, Libya, Madagascar, Mali, Mauritania, Morocco, Niger, Nigeria, Rwanda, Senegal, Sierra Leone, Somalia, The Sudan, Tanganyika, Togo, Tunisia, Uganda, Upper Volta, Zanzibar

  • 13 December 1963 : » Kenya

  • 13 July 1964 : » Malawi

  • 16 December 1964 : » Zambia

  • Oct 1965 : » The Gambia

  • 31 October 1966 : » Botswana, Lesotho

  • Aug 1968 : » Mauritius

  • 24 September 1968 : » Swaziland

  • 12 October 1968 : » Equatorial Guinea

  • 19 November 1973 : » Guinea-Bissau

  • 11 February 1975 : » Angola

  • 18 July 1975 : » Cape Verde, Comoros, Mozambique, São Tomé and Príncipe

  • 29 June 1976 : » Seychelles

  • 27 June 1977 : » Djibouti

  • Jun 1980 : » Zimbabwe

  • 22 February 1982 : » Saharan Arab Democratic Republic (Western Sahara)

  • Jun 1990 : » Namibia

  • 24 May 1993 : » Eritrea

  • 6 June 1994 : » South Africa

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