Wade
says Africa Union government
relevant
News - Africa news
Accra, Ghana -
An
African Union government is
still relevant as it is the
panacea to the continent's
underdevelopment and continuous
dependency on foreign
assistance, Senegalese President
Abdoulaye Wade said on Monday.
African countries, he added, had no
choice but to have a union
government as championed by Ghana's
first president and pan-Africanist,
Dr. Kwame Nkrumah.
Speaking at a colloquium in Accra,
organised by the Ghana government
and the African Union (AU) on the
centenary of Dr .Nkrumah, Wade said
the union government was the only
way African countries could develop
their economies and have a heavy
presence and influence in
international affairs.
"We really do not have the choice,"
he said. "Our diversity does not
preclude that we feel and act
differently. But we should have the
feeling of Africa because we share
the same history of slavery in the
past and colonialism."
The three-day colloquium which ended
on Tuesday was on the theme
"Contemporary relevance of Kwame
Nkrumah's contribution to Pan-Africanism
and internationalism."
It is part of a year-long centenary
celebration of Dr. Nkrumah who was
born in 1909.
The fiery leftist won independence
for Ghana in 1957 but was ousted in
a bloody coup instigated by the US
Central Intelligence Agency in
February 1966.
President Wade said individual
African countries were not strong
economically, and that no matter how
each of them developed, they could
"not go anywhere".
Ghana's president John Evans Atta
Mills, at a meeting with several
African dignitaries attending the
colloquium, assured member States of
AU of Ghana's commitment to the
ideals of unity, cooperation and
strong bilateral ties to improve the
living standards of Africans.
At the meetings were President Wade,
Dr. Kenneth Kaunda, Former President
of Zambia, Mr. Erasmus Mwecha,
Deputy Chairperson of AU, and Dr.
Henry Odein Ajumogobia, Nigerian
Minister of Foreign Affairs, who
represented Nigerian President
Goodluck Jonathan.
Accra - Pana 26/05/2010