Amisom troops in Somalia. PHOTO | FILE
By TREVOR ANALO and KEVIN J KELLEY
In Summary
- China to set up an 8,000-strong peacekeeping force and to give the African Union $100 million to support peace efforts.
- The UK said it would send 70 troops to Somalia to reinforce the AU forces fighting Al Shabaab.
- US and China said they would work together to enact “nearly complete bans” on the import and export of ivory
East Africa clinched major regional security deals at the
Sustainable Development Goals conference in New York last week as global
efforts to contain terror and alleviate poverty gathered momentum.
The highlight of the deals was a commitment by China to set up
an 8,000-strong peacekeeping force and to give the African Union $100
million to support peace efforts such as those by the African Union
Mission in Somalia (Amisom), where Kenyan, Ugandan and Burundian
soldiers are deployed.
The UK also said it would send 70 troops to Somalia to reinforce
the AU forces fighting Al Shabaab, adding that a further 300 will go to
South Sudan to help stabilise the country, where civil war broke out in
December 2013, barely two years into Independence from Sudan.
Although the US said it would not join the UK in sending troops,
President Barack Obama committed to increase logistical and material
support to UN forces in Africa and elsewhere, estimated at 120,000
worldwide.
US Assistant Secretary of State for African Affairs Linda
Thomas-Greenfield said the US intends to provide more “enablers,”
including air power, to Kenyan, Ugandan and Ethiopian troops fighting in
Somalia. This would be a big fillip to Amisom, which has previously
complained that it is hampered in its battle against Al Shabaab by a
lack of airborne capability.
“It is not something that we normally do,” Ms Thomas-Greenfield
said at a press briefing in New York when asked if the Obama
administration will assign troops to help enforce the peace agreement in
South Sudan.
Washington pays about a quarter of the UN’s annual peacekeeping
costs of $8.2 billion and Ms Thomas-Greenfield said the US has
independently trained and equipped 250,000 African peacekeepers.
The Obama administration acknowledged last year that at least
120 American soldiers were deployed at various locations throughout
Somalia.
An unknown number of CIA personnel also operate inside Somalia.
In addition, the US maintains drone bases in Somalia, Djibouti,
Ethiopia, Kenya and the Seychelles, from which it conducts air strikes
on suspected leaders of Al Shabaab.
After the summit, the US embassy in Nairobi announced a
partnership between Kenya and the Massachusetts National Guard, under
the US Department of Defence State Partnership Programme.
“Our service members will provide mutual benefits to this
strategic partnership with the Republic of Kenya,” said Maj-Gen L. Scott
Rice, Adjutant General, Massachusetts National Guard.
“Our force will use their dynamic civilian and military skill
sets and experiences to identify potential problems and offer effective
solutions to co-operate with shared initiatives in Kenya.”
With insecurity being a key factor in the escalation of poaching
in East Africa, the US and China said they would work together to enact
“nearly complete bans” on the import and export of ivory. This is a
significant step in measures to shut down the trade in animal trophies
that drives the illegal hunting of elephants.
Details of the investments expected from the leaders’
discussions at the summit were scanty with the exception of Kenya, where
Kerry Adler, the CEO of Sky Power Global, pledged to double his firm’s
investment in solar energy to $4.4 billion. At the recent Global
Entrepreneurship Summit held in Nairobi, he pledged to invest $2.2
billion.
National security concerns were also foremost at the summit,
with Uganda’s President Yoweri Museveni meeting US Secretary of State
John Kerry to discuss the Lord’s Resistance Army and how to respond to
the crisis in Burundi and South Sudan.
President Museveni chaired the AU Peace and Security Council
on South Sudan and held talks with King Abdullah II of Jordan on how to
counter violent extremism in Africa.
As the immediate former president of the UN General Assembly, he
delivered the opening remarks and chaired the assembly for two days
before meeting with Pope Francis, who is scheduled to visit Kenya and
Uganda next month.
Tanzania’s President Jakaya Kikwete — who will retire after the
general election on the 25th of this month — in his last address to the
UNGA, called on the UN to make a decision on the status of Western
Sahara.
President Paul Kagame of Rwanda co-chaired the Millennium
Development Goals Advocacy Group and the Columbia University World
Leaders Forum ahead of the launch of the Sustainable Development Goals
(SDGs).
With the absence of Burundi’s President President Pierre
Nkurunziza following the diplomatic fallout from his recent
controversial third term election, Bujumbura was cited by several
leaders, including President Obama and Mr Ban, in their remarks on
increasing political instability in the world
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