Peace and Security Council

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The Peace and Security Council (PSC) is the organ of the African Union in charge of enforcing union decisions. It is patterned somewhat after the United Nations Security Council. The PSC is also the main pillar of the African Peace and Security Architecture (APSA), and works with other pillars of the APSA in order to promote "peace, security and stability in Africa". [1] The specific goal of the Peace and Security Council (PSC) is the "prevention, management and resolution of conflicts". [1] To achieve these goals, it involves subsidiary organizations such as the Military Staff Committee and the Committee of Experts.

Contents

Members are elected by the African Union Executive Council and endorsed by the Assembly of the African Union so as to reflect regional balance within Africa, as well as a variety of other criteria, including capacity to contribute militarily and financially to the union, political will to do so, and effective diplomatic presence at Addis Ababa. [1]

The council is composed of fifteen countries, of which five are elected to three-year terms, and ten to two-year terms. Countries are immediately re-eligible upon the expiration of their terms.

History

Background

In the early 1990s, members of the Organization of African Unity (OAU), the predecessor to the African Union (AU), decided to abstain from active peacekeeping operations and focus instead on "preventive diplomacy". [2] However, they reevaluated their stances after conflicts in Rwanda and Burundi. [2]

In 1995, members of the OAU started to support the use of peacekeeping operations after a summit in Addis Ababa. However, the OAU still prioritized preventive diplomacy and believed that the United Nations should shoulder most of the responsibility for organizing peacekeeping operations. [2]

Later conflicts in Africa were largely mediated by African institutions rather than the UN. For example, conflicts in Liberia and Sierra Leone were addressed by the Economic Community of West African States. Similarly, conflicts in Lesotho and the Democratic Republic of Congo were addressed by the Southern African Development Community. [2]

These sub-regional organizations' large role in addressing regional conflicts led to a debate about the effectiveness of the OAU. Members specifically wished to reform the OAU's focus on consensus-based meetings rather than on-the-ground action, since some conflicts' actors were part of the meetings and could interfere with their judgement. Similarly, the large size of the OAU, its consensus decision-making and its lack of clear procedures both obstructed constructive debate. [2] [3] However, on-the-ground interventions were also limited by the OAU's non-interventionist principles, which only allowed domestic military intervention with the state's consent. [4]

Thus, in 2001, an OAU Assembly session moved to reform the OAU's mechanisms in a new institution: the African Union. [2] The new African Union was designed to center around a central decision-making organ with concrete rules, a smaller membership of 15 states to facilitate decision-making, majority rather than consensus-based decision-making, and viable options to recommend military intervention to the African Union Assembly. [2] [3] After some debate, this decision-making organ was coined the Peace and Security Council, and its rules were outlined in the Protocol Relating to the Establishment of the Peace and Security Council.

Protocol Relating to the Establishment of the Peace and Security Council

Adopted in July 2002, the Protocol was later ratified by a majority of AU members in December 2003. [2] Within the Protocol's text, the institutional design, subsidiary committees, powers and goals of the PSC were outlined.

Specifically, its Objectives were stated in Article 3, and its Principles were stated in Article 4. When outlining its Principles, the Protocol cites three inspirations: "the [AU's] Constitutive Act, the Charter of the United Nations and the Universal Declaration of Human Rights". [5]

In Article 5, the Protocol details the PSC's membership structure and membership criteria. [5]

Article 8 outlines the PSC's procedural rules, including rules for voting, organizing meetings and creating subsidiary bodies. [5]

Specific subcommittees that support the PSC, such as the Panel of the Wise, the Continental Early Warning System, and the African Standby Force are detailed in Articles 11, 12 and 13, respectively. [5]

Finally, the Protocol outlines the PSC's relationship with regional bodies in Article 16, and relationship with international organizations, especially the UN, in Article 17. [5]

Organization

Meetings

There are three levels of PSC meetings: meetings between permanent representatives, meetings between ministers, and meetings between heads of state. Permanent representative meetings meet at least twice a month, whereas the other two levels meet at least once per year. [5]

Until 2007, there were three types of meetings: formal meetings, briefing sessions and consultations. [2] In formal meetings, members discuss AU Commission reports, which often concern brewing conflicts. [2] In briefing sessions, PSC staff briefs members on various subject areas and themes, such as terrorism and development. [2] In consultation meetings, PSC members work to gather various actors and develop an understanding of a certain issue. [2]

After a brainstorming session in July 2007, the PSC instead chose to meet under four types of meetings: public meetings, closed meetings, consultations and "Arria-type" meetings. [2] In "Arria-type" meetings, PSC members meet with non-state actors and carry out informal discussions. [2]

As of 2016, the PSC has held over 600 meetings. [6]

Chairperson of the Commission

Every month, a new chairperson is selected from the PSC members. This selection cycles through the alphabetical order of the PSC's member country names, in English. [7]

Members

Although the PSC was partly inspired by the United Nations Security Council, unlike the UNSC, the PSC does not have any permanent members or veto power. All 15 members have equal power in the council. [4] Ten members are elected for two years and five members are elected for three years. Members are elected to represent Africa's regional distribution. In order, each potential member must meet certain criteria. These criteria are outlined in Article five of the Protocol Relating to the Establishment of the Peace and Security Council.

Each term starts from the date of the 1st of April and ends on the date of the 31st of March. As of April 2020, the following countries occupy the seats of the PSC: [8]

Morocco, a member of the Peace and Security Council of the African Union, assumed the presidency of this important executive body for a three-year term (2022–2025) starting from the first of February 2024. This council is dedicated to promoting peace, security, and stability on the African continent. [9] [10] [11] [12] [13] [14] [15] [16] [17] [18]

TermCentral AfricaEastern AfricaNorthern AfricaSouthern AfricaWestern Africa
1 April 2017Flag of the Republic of the Congo.svg  Congo-Brazzaville Flag of Kenya.svg  Kenya Flag of Egypt.svg  Egypt Flag of Zambia.svg  Zambia Flag of Nigeria.svg  Nigeria
2018Flag of Togo (3-2).svg  Togo
2019Flag of Equatorial Guinea.svg  Equatorial Guinea Flag of Gabon.svg  Gabon Flag of Djibouti.svg  Djibouti Flag of Ethiopia.svg  Ethiopia Flag of Morocco.svg  Morocco Flag of Angola.svg  Angola Flag of Zimbabwe.svg  Zimbabwe Flag of Liberia.svg  Liberia Flag of Sierra Leone.svg  Sierra Leone
2020Flag of Burundi.svg  Burundi Flag of Kenya.svg  Kenya Flag of Algeria.svg  Algeria Flag of Lesotho.svg  Lesotho Flag of Benin.svg  Benin Flag of Nigeria.svg  Nigeria
2021Flag of Cameroon.svg  Cameroon Flag of Chad.svg  Chad Flag of Egypt.svg  Egypt Flag of Malawi.svg  Malawi Flag of Mozambique.svg  Mozambique Flag of Ghana.svg  Ghana Flag of Senegal.svg  Senegal
2022

Role

Mission

The mission of the PSC is to respond to conflicts in Africa. The PSC relies on collective security and its early warning detection systems. Article 3 of the Relating to the Establishment of the Peace and Security Council expands upon the PSC's objectives.

Powers

Article 7 of the Protocol Relating to the Establishment of the Peace and Security Council lists the PSC's power.

Some of these powers include undertaking "peace-making and peace-building functions to resolve conflicts", recommending intervention to the AU Assembly in "grave circumstances, namely war crimes, genocide and crimes against humanity", promoting a close relationship with regional bodies as well as with the United Nations, facilitating humanitarian action and finally, deciding "on any other issue having implications for the maintenance of peace, security and stability on the Continent". [5]

Peace support missions

The following peace support operations have been conducted under an AU mandate, or with AU authorisation:

The following operations were authorized but never resulted in deployment:

Criticism

Some AU members criticized the PSC Protocol for being vague on which institution has the "primary legal authority" to use military force; in Article 16, the PSC Protocol states that the AU has "the primary responsibility for promoting peace, security and stability in Africa" whereas in Article 17, the Protocol states that the UN Security Council "has the primary responsibility for the maintenance of international peace and security". [2]

Ben Kioko, the African Union's legal adviser, argued that "[some African] leaders have shown themselves willing to push the frontiers of collective stability and security to the limit without any regard for legal niceties such as the authorization of the [United Nations] Security Council". [2]

Later in 2005, African Union members acknowledged the Security Council's authority on military use, as demonstrated in a meeting roadmap which promised that the AU would first get Security Council authorization before carrying out military interventions. [2]

Some officials within the PSC have also argued that the PSC should broaden its scope beyond traditional military threats to security, and also address nontraditional threats such as disease and climate change. [2]

Conversely, others question the political will of PSC and AU members to follow the PSC protocol and carry out military interventions against other members without their consent in cases of mass human rights abuses. Furthermore, the PSC relies on regional bodies contributing funds or troops for operations, but many regional bodies do not have enough resources to meet these standards. [3]

When electing members into the PSC itself, critics have noted that members who were actively disobeying AU decisions or carrying out human rights violations within their borders have still been admitted into the Council because the Assembly of the African Union Heads of State did not properly evaluate the potential members' compliance to the PSC membership criteria. [23]

Related Research Articles

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References

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Bibliography