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Zmeselo
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Exclusive: A ‘mafia-style’ cartel is running the African Union, claim staff

Post by Zmeselo » 13 Mar 2020, 16:30



Exclusive: A ‘mafia-style’ cartel is running the African Union, claim staff

In a leaked memo, AU staff claim that commission chair Moussa Faki Mahamat is destroying the continental body

Simon Allison

https://mg.co.za/article/2020-03-12-exc ... ssion=true

12 Mar 2020


The Chairperson of the African Union, Moussa Faki Mahamat speaks during a briefing to the press, during the visit of the President of the European Commission in Addis Ababa, on December 7, 2019. (EDUARDO SOTERAS / AFP)

African Union staff have accused their boss of corruption, cronyism and a total collapse of leadership. They say that AU Commission chairperson Moussa Faki Mahamat is involved in a “mafia-style” cartel that operates with impunity at the highest levels of the institution.

The allegations were made in an interoffice memorandum that was leaked by multiple sources to the Mail & Guardian. The memorandum, dated March 6- 2020, was addressed to Chairperson Faki, and signed by Sabelo Mbokazi, the head of the AU Staff Association, on behalf of the association.

The memo was written in the wake of an extraordinary meeting of the AU Staff Association, which was held on February 28. The meeting was called to discuss long-running grievances about the working conditions of staff at the AU Commission, which functions as a secretariat for the continental body.

In particular, staff raised concerns about the fact that senior appointments are routinely made without following due process. They claim that the recent confirmation of Hamza Sahal as head of human resources management was unlawful.
By and large the appointment is regarded by the staff as the manifestation of glaring cronyism and the total collapse of leadership which member states continue to underscore,
the memo said.

The M&G contacted Sahal — a Sudanese national who has previously worked as a human resources manager for Merlin International, Plan International and Save the Children, according to his LinkedIn profile — for comment, but did not receive a response by the time of publication.

‘Chaos prevails’

The memo went on to outline more general problems with Moussa Faki’s leadership.
With you sitting at the helm of this organisation, the rules have been indiscriminately flouted and chaos prevails both at the headquarters and regional offices. The staff indicated that the moral fibre has decayed under your watch.
It added that
the confirmation of ‘cronies’ without qualifications, without interviews and without following due recruitment processes
has turned the AU Commission into
a den without rules, characterised by arbitrary administrative decisions and impunity, which is manipulated by mafia characters.
The staff cannot sit and watch [a] few individuals destroying and paralysing the commision,
the memo said.

Moussa Faki declined to answer specific questions from the M&G. His spokesperson, Ebba Kalondo, said:
The chairperson has always engaged on organisational issues. In fact, he is the one who instituted the forensic audit currently under way in the organisation, amid other actions.
In September 2019, a tender was issued https://au.int/en/bids/20190920/consult ... ican-union for a consulting firm to undertake a
forensic and performance audit
of the AU Commission.

The M&G requested comment from a spokesperson for President Cyril Ramaphosa, who currently holds the rotating chairpersonship of the AU. Ramaphosa did not respond.

Previous accusations

This is not the first time that people close to Faki have accused him and other senior leadership of corruption. In a November 2018 letter to the Ghanaian president — also leaked to the M&G https://mg.co.za/article/2019-02-07-exc ... eputy/?amp — his deputy, Thomas Kwesi-Quartey, accused Faki of nepotism for appointing an “old crony” to a plush ambassadorial post. This was “not good governance”, Kwesi-Qartey said.

In February 2018, a member of the AU’s advisory board on corruption resigned https://mg.co.za/article/2018-06-21-eno ... icial/?amp, claiming that no effort was being made to fight corruption at the heart of the organisation.

In late 2018, a panel of inquiry was established by the AU to investigate allegations of sexual harassment within the organisation (these allegations were first revealed https://mg.co.za/article/2018-05-04-00- ... moment?amp in a M&G investigation). The panel found that sexual harassment was rife within the organisation, but its findings went much further: it named at least 40 individuals who were implicated in serious allegations of fraud, corruption, nepotism, sexual assault and sexual harassment.

Neither the full text of the report, nor the identities of the named individuals, have been publicly released. The M&G has confirmed that Peace and Security Commissioner Smail Chergui was among those named https://mg.co.za/article/2020-02-07-au- ... -line/?amp, although it is unclear in relation to which offence. In an article in the M&G on May 17 last year https://mg.co.za/article/2019-05-17-00- ... abuse/?amp he denied any wrongdoing. The AU Commission has been accused of covering up the contents of the report.

Zmeselo
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Posts: 37343
Joined: 30 Jul 2010, 20:43

Re: Exclusive: A ‘mafia-style’ cartel is running the African Union, claim staff

Post by Zmeselo » 13 Mar 2020, 20:41



NEWS/ZIMBABWE

Zimbabwe gets back iconic bird statues stolen during colonialism

Africa's former colonial powers have recently come under pressure to send looted artefacts back to their home countries.

https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2020/03/ ... ce=twitter

4 hours ago


One of the iconic Zimbabwe bird statues pictured at the National Sports Stadium in the capital, Harare [File: Jekesai Njikizana/AFP]

They figure on Zimbabwe's https://www.aljazeera.com/topics/country/zimbabwe.html national flag, banknotes and official documents: stone statues representing birds taken away by the European colonialists more than a century ago.

The eight original sculptures hold great spiritual value for people of the southern African nation, and have been made into national emblems.

Six of the large carvings were stolen from the ruins of Great Zimbabwe, an imposing stone complex built between the 11th and 13th centuries and attributed to pre-colonial King Munhumutapa.

The palatial enclosures are now a United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) World Heritage Site situated in the southeast of Zimbabwe, 25 kilometres (16 miles) from the present-day city of Masvingo

'Connect present with past

Almost all of the prized green-grey soapstone birds that were looted have now been returned to the country.

Only one remains in South Africa, where it is kept in the house of 19th-century British mining magnate and imperialist, Cecil Rhodes.

In a rare move last month, four of the statues were temporarily set on the original plinths from where they were stolen at the Great Zimbabwe monument.

The heavy figurines, some standing at about 1.5 metres (4.9 feet), were moved from an on-site museum and placed outdoors on pedestals for a photoshoot.

Their pictures were taken for a book on ancient African art - Zimbabwe: Art, Symbols and Meaning - to be published in September. The country marks the 40th anniversary of independence from Britain next month.

The book will be co-authored by a Zimbabwe-born duo and mother and son - Gillian Atherstone and Duncan Wylie - who now respectively live in Britain and France.
The birds are among the most symbolic cultural objects of our time,
the head of Zimbabwe's national museums, Godfrey Mahachi, told AFP news agency.
They connect the present with our past.
'Troubled existence'

Great Zimbabwe ruins curator Munyaradzi Sagiya said the statues are kept inside the museum for security reasons.
Not everyone who visits a museum is there to admire the displays,
he said.

Africa's former colonial powers have recently come under pressure to send looted artefacts back to their home countries.

Germany returned the chopped-off pedestal of one of the birds in 2003.

Zimbabwe's late ex-president Robert Mugabe said at the time that the piece had
a very eventful if not troubled existence during its almost 100 years in exile.
South Africa returned five other birds in 1981, one year after Zimbabwe's independence.

Retrieving that statue could be complicated as Rhodes left his estate to the South African government after his death, Sagiya said.

SOURCE: AFP NEWS AGENCY

Justice Seeker
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Re: Exclusive: A ‘mafia-style’ cartel is running the African Union, claim staff

Post by Justice Seeker » 13 Mar 2020, 20:46

:mrgreen: :mrgreen: :mrgreen: :mrgreen:

እቶም ወለድኹም ንኢትዮጵያ፡ ሱዳንን ኡጋንዳን እንዳኣምጻኹም ስድራኹም ትርእዩ (ክትርእዩ መደብ ዘለኩም) እዚ ናይ ቻይና ጉልሓይ ክሳብ ዝሓልፍ ኣብ ገዝኦም ክጸንሑ ዓቕሊ እንተገበርኩም ይምረጽ።


Zmeselo
Senior Member+
Posts: 37343
Joined: 30 Jul 2010, 20:43

Re: Exclusive: A ‘mafia-style’ cartel is running the African Union, claim staff

Post by Zmeselo » 13 Mar 2020, 22:59


Great pleasure meeting @UNDPUganda AccLab team, learning about their journey in establishing their AccLab; as tools of facilitating homegrown solutions to dev't challenges. Special thanks to @ElsieAttafuah & @SheilaNgatia for the warm reception & walking us through their program.
(MEHRETAB MEDHANIE: @EriPrism)


Justice Seeker wrote:
13 Mar 2020, 20:46
:mrgreen: :mrgreen: :mrgreen: :mrgreen:

እቶም ወለድኹም ንኢትዮጵያ፡ ሱዳንን ኡጋንዳን እንዳኣምጻኹም ስድራኹም ትርእዩ (ክትርእዩ መደብ ዘለኩም) እዚ ናይ ቻይና ጉልሓይ ክሳብ ዝሓልፍ ኣብ ገዝኦም ክጸንሑ ዓቕሊ እንተገበርኩም ይምረጽ።


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