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Politics

Egypt's el-Sissi: One year heading the AU

February 7, 2020

Egypt's President Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi is ending a one-year term as chairman of the African Union amid praise for reforming the body. But a rights group tells DW Egypt used the position to thwart human rights efforts.

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Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi shaking hands with Nigerian President Mahamadou Issoufou
Image: picture-alliance/Xinhua/Z. Yangzi

When he assumed the one-year rotating chair of the African Union in February 2019, Egypt's President Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi was already a controversial figure.

He had led a coup against democratically elected leader Mohamed Morsi in 2013, causing the AU to kick Egypt out of the pan-African body – although the country was readmitted a year later when el-Sissi won presidential elections. 

Read more: Opinion: Why the African Union must not ignore Cameroon

El-Sissi's appointment as AU chairperson was also criticized by human rights organizations, who feared his authoritarian tendencies could harm the bloc's human rights record.

His rule in Egypt has been marked by the use of "torture and enforced disappearances" against dissidents from all backgrounds, a recent report by Human Rights Watch found.

Read more: Guest commentary: Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi — No beacon of hope, no bridge builder

Egypt at the AU

When Egypt took over the AU, it outlined six priority areas – economic and regional integration, building bridges among Africa's peoples, cooperating with partners, economic and social development, institutional and financial reform of the AU, and peace and security.

In terms of economic integration, el-Sissi helped advance Africa's continental free trade area during his chairmanship, says Mohamed Diatta, a researcher at the Institute for Security Studies.

Egypt announced in May 2019 that the African Continental Free Frade Area (AfCFTA) had come into force after being ratified by 22 countries on the continent, including Egypt.

Talking free trade in Africa

AfCFTA "will reinforce our negotiating position on the international stage. It will represent an important step," el-Sissi told leaders attending the July 2019 African Union summit held in Niger.

Egypt, the continent's third-biggest economy, currently has limited trade relationships with other African nations. Its decision to be part of the free-trade agreement shows the country's commitment to the continent, Diatta told DW in a telephone interview.

Read more: When will the guns in Africa be silenced?

He also praised Egypt for its organizational work at the African Union Commission during its one-year presidency, including setting up twice-weekly meetings of the permanent representatives' committee in Addis Ababa and ensuring that minutes were kept.

"Many people [at the Commission] have commended Egypt's chairmanship … in running the affairs of the permanent representatives and ensuring that the commission, along with the permanent representatives, work together on some of the burning issues of the continent," Diatta said.

Read more: Opinion: Egypt's suffering has reached its limits

Repairing African relationships

For Amr Emam, an editor at the Egyptian Gazette, an English-language daily close to the government, a major el-Sissi achievement is repairing the country's relationship with other African nations.

"When he took over as Egypt's president, Egypt's relations with other African countries were very bad. Egypt was kicked out of the African Union although it was one of its founding members," Emam told DW.

"So over this year … he brought Egypt back to the African continent and strengthened his relations with other African countries."

However, el-Sissi has also been criticized for driving tensions with Ethiopia over sharing the Nile. The two countries have been at odds over Ethiopia's building of a giant hydroelectric plant upstream on the Nile, which provides some 90% of Egypt's water.

Ethiopia says it needs the dam to provide electricity to millions of people in mostly rural areas, while Egypt, already facing water instability, says the dam endangers its water supply.

Read more: Passage through Egypt: From Aswan to Luxor by boat 

View of the Nile
Sharing the valuable resource of the Nile River has caused tensions between Egypt and EthiopiaImage: DW/M. Gerth-Niculescu

Africa's security threats

In terms of security, the results of el-Sissi's one-year AU chairmanship are mixed.

El-Sissi was the chair when the AU suspended Sudan in June 2019, days after the military violently dispersed a protest camp in the capital, Khartoum. The AU said it wouldn't lift the suspension until the "effective establishment of a civilian-led transitional authority".

The AU was praised for this decision, which put further pressure on Sudan's Transitional Military Council that had taken over Sudan after the ousting of Omar al-Bashir.

El-Sissi, however, had originally been against the suspension but was "astute enough to avoid formally overstepping its boundaries [as] AU chair," as the Institute for Security Studies puts it in a policy briefing.

The AU has also struggled to take a strong line on the Libyan crisis during el-Sissi's chairmanship.

Human rights not a focus

Egypt's priority list for the AU chairmanship made no mention of human rights and governance.

"El-Sissi has implicitly made it clear that his tenure will markedly ignore both domestic and regional pressures for the advancement of fundamental rights," wrote African Union analyst and law professor Babatunde Fagbayibo in an opinion piece for the website Africa Portal at the beginning of the Egyptian president's chairmanship.

Looking back at his year heading the AU, Amnesty International said Egypt did "little to uphold the values and principles of the organization relating to human rights."

"Instead, it used this position to undermine human rights and the independence of regional human rights mechanisms," Japhet Biegon, Africa regional advocacy coordinator for Amnesty International, told DW.

The post of AU chairperson rotates between the five regions of the continent. El-Sissi will hand over to South Africa's Cyril Ramaphosa at the 33rd African Union Summit being held in Addis Ababa from February 9-10.

(kh/abj)

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