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African Union Sets August 6 Deadline for Commission Posts Applicants

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1/1/2035

There are four members of the Panel, although the final list should have five once the northern region nominates its representative. They include Burundian academic Prof Paul Ngarambe representing the Central Region, Ethiopia’s former Permanent Representative to the African Union Konjit SineGiorgis for the Eastern Region, and South African diplomat Nozipho Joyce Mxakato-Diseko for the Southern region. She also serves as co-chair on the UN Panel on Critical Energy Transition Minerals. The other expert is Patrick Hayford, a retired Ghana

Aspirants are to submit their CVs to their respective countries, statements of vision and how they intend to address emerging challenges on the continent. It is the first step for aspirants to show intent to serve as leaders of the African Union Secretariat.
Monique Nsanzabaganwa chairperson and deputy chairperson positions of the AU Commission

The African Union (AU) has announced an August 6 deadline for candidates to apply for the chairperson and deputy chairperson positions of the AU Commission. Aspirants must submit their CVs, vision statements, and strategies for addressing Africa's emerging challenges to their respective countries.


Four candidates have declared their intentions to run: Kenya’s opposition leader Raila Odinga, Djiboutian Foreign Minister Mahmoud Ali Youssouf, Somalia’s former Foreign Minister Fawzia Yusuf Adam, and former Seychellois Vice President Vincent Meriton. Their candidacies have received official backing from their nations.


Under AU rules, the chairperson seat will be contested by eastern region countries, while the deputy seat will be contested by the northern region. Gender parity is a factor, with the deputy chairperson being of the opposite gender to the chairperson.


Candidates will be vetted by a Panel of Eminent Africans and must pass a public debate, MjadalaAfrika, to outline their vision and respond to questions from African citizens and stakeholders.


The AU’s election process emphasizes equitable regional representation, gender parity, merit-based selection, and transparent leadership. Countries under AU sanctions, including Sudan, Gabon, Niger, Mali, Burkina Faso, and Guinea, are ineligible to submit candidates.


The final candidates will be determined after thorough vetting, with elections scheduled for February 2025. The new leaders will play a crucial role in implementing the AU Mandate and Africa’s Agenda 2063.

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