News / Africa
Loser Dlamini-Zuma to vie for AU top job again
31 Jan 2012 at 04:58hrs | Views
Addis Ababa - SA says Nkosazana Dlamaini Zuma will vie for the African Union's top job in the next election after she failed to secure two-thirds of votes needed to become commission chairperson of the bloc.
"Nothing stops us from fielding the same candidate because she has shown or proven to be a formidable candidate that the incumbent could not defeat," South Africa's International Relations Minister Maite Nkoane Mashabane said in a statement.
Meanwhile, the African Union on Tuesday extended the mandate of its top official Jean Ping.
"We have decided to prolong the mandate of the current commission until the next summit in Lilongwe Malawi" in June, bloc chairperson, Benin's president Thomas Boni Yayi, said at the end of a two-day summit in Addis Ababa.
Intense campaigns had preceded the vote for commission chief which dominated the AU summit in the Ethiopia capital, where leaders gathered to discuss broadening trade within Africa and tackling conflict hot spots.
Gabon's Ping, 69, who has headed the African Union Commission since 2008, sought a new term but was unable to obtain the required two-thirds majority in a tight race with Dlamini-Zuma, ex-wife of South African President Jacob Zuma.
"We went for an election and none of the two candidates emerged as a winner," Zambian President Michael Sata told reporters after the vote.
Criticism
Analysts say the vote for the AU agenda-setting position has exposed political fault lines between English- and French-speaking Africa, as well as between different geographic regions.
"The result has shown up divides in the continent," Jakkie Cilliers, executive director of the Institute for Security Studies (ISS) in Pretoria, told AFP at the summit. "South Africa worked hard to reduce Ping's support base."
But Boni Yayi insisted: "The continent is united and there is hope that it will continue to be united."
Ping led Dlamini-Zuma in the first three rounds with 28 votes to 25, 27 to 26 and 29 to 24, AU sources said.
Dlamini-Zuma was then forced under AU rules to pull out, leaving Ping to face a fourth round on his own, but he still failed to muster the necessary votes.
Ahead of the vote, sources said Ping had been confident of re-election, counting on support from French-speaking West and Central Africa countries.
However, he has appeared to have fallen foul of criticism that he performed poorly in recent crises on the continent, after a year that saw a post-election conflict in Ivory Coast as well as the Arab Spring revolutions.
The AU was holding its first summit since the death of Libya's Muammar Gaddafi, a key financier of the bloc, but who had allies mainly in French-speaking West Africa.
Tough campaign
Dlamini-Zuma had launched a tough campaign and had the backing of the 15-member Southern African Development Community, as Pretoria lobbied hard across Africa to drum up support.
South African delegates broke into song and dance after the stalemate vote conducted at the summit in the new ultra-modern AU headquarters built by the Chinese and unveiled at the weekend.
But Cilliers warned that while Dlamini-Zuma supporters were celebrating, her failure to win suggested many might oppose South Africa for the post too.
"Importantly, this result may mean that Africans don't want a key country such as South Africa in the position of chair," he said.
No woman has held the post.
"It's a good sign for gender politics in AU that a woman came so close for the vote to such a position," said Cheryl Hendricks of the ISS thinktank.
On Sunday, the 54-member African Union elected Yayi as its new chairman, a rotating post held for one year.
On the sidelines of the summit, protracted disputes between South Sudan and Sudan over oil and borders brought a warning from UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon Sunday that they threatened regional security.
"The situation in Sudan and South Sudan has reached a critical point, it has become a major threat to peace and security across the region," Ban told reporters.
"Nothing stops us from fielding the same candidate because she has shown or proven to be a formidable candidate that the incumbent could not defeat," South Africa's International Relations Minister Maite Nkoane Mashabane said in a statement.
Meanwhile, the African Union on Tuesday extended the mandate of its top official Jean Ping.
"We have decided to prolong the mandate of the current commission until the next summit in Lilongwe Malawi" in June, bloc chairperson, Benin's president Thomas Boni Yayi, said at the end of a two-day summit in Addis Ababa.
Intense campaigns had preceded the vote for commission chief which dominated the AU summit in the Ethiopia capital, where leaders gathered to discuss broadening trade within Africa and tackling conflict hot spots.
Gabon's Ping, 69, who has headed the African Union Commission since 2008, sought a new term but was unable to obtain the required two-thirds majority in a tight race with Dlamini-Zuma, ex-wife of South African President Jacob Zuma.
"We went for an election and none of the two candidates emerged as a winner," Zambian President Michael Sata told reporters after the vote.
Criticism
Analysts say the vote for the AU agenda-setting position has exposed political fault lines between English- and French-speaking Africa, as well as between different geographic regions.
"The result has shown up divides in the continent," Jakkie Cilliers, executive director of the Institute for Security Studies (ISS) in Pretoria, told AFP at the summit. "South Africa worked hard to reduce Ping's support base."
But Boni Yayi insisted: "The continent is united and there is hope that it will continue to be united."
Ping led Dlamini-Zuma in the first three rounds with 28 votes to 25, 27 to 26 and 29 to 24, AU sources said.
Dlamini-Zuma was then forced under AU rules to pull out, leaving Ping to face a fourth round on his own, but he still failed to muster the necessary votes.
However, he has appeared to have fallen foul of criticism that he performed poorly in recent crises on the continent, after a year that saw a post-election conflict in Ivory Coast as well as the Arab Spring revolutions.
The AU was holding its first summit since the death of Libya's Muammar Gaddafi, a key financier of the bloc, but who had allies mainly in French-speaking West Africa.
Tough campaign
Dlamini-Zuma had launched a tough campaign and had the backing of the 15-member Southern African Development Community, as Pretoria lobbied hard across Africa to drum up support.
South African delegates broke into song and dance after the stalemate vote conducted at the summit in the new ultra-modern AU headquarters built by the Chinese and unveiled at the weekend.
But Cilliers warned that while Dlamini-Zuma supporters were celebrating, her failure to win suggested many might oppose South Africa for the post too.
"Importantly, this result may mean that Africans don't want a key country such as South Africa in the position of chair," he said.
No woman has held the post.
"It's a good sign for gender politics in AU that a woman came so close for the vote to such a position," said Cheryl Hendricks of the ISS thinktank.
On Sunday, the 54-member African Union elected Yayi as its new chairman, a rotating post held for one year.
On the sidelines of the summit, protracted disputes between South Sudan and Sudan over oil and borders brought a warning from UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon Sunday that they threatened regional security.
"The situation in Sudan and South Sudan has reached a critical point, it has become a major threat to peace and security across the region," Ban told reporters.
Source - Sapa