17 August 2022
Malawi’s President Lazarus Chakwera has handed over the SADC chair to the DRC’s President Felix Tshisekedi. The leadership of the regional bloc is rotational and Malawi took it over the Chairship last year.
The two-day 42nd ordinary summit of heads of state and government of the Southern African Development Community (SADC) is expected to wind up, Thursday, in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC).
Chakwera said his time at the helm of the SADC leadership has been a good challenge and that he leaves the leadership role a happy man after fulfilling his targets.
Malawi took over from Mozambique’s President Filipe Nyusi, whose problems with insurgencies in the oil and gas-rich province of Cabo Delgado back home
formed a major task on Chakwera’s to-do list.
Under Chakwera, SADC agreed to send its standby force to Mozambique to fight insurgents. Two days ahead of the mission’s mandate coming to an
end on 24th June 2022, SADC agreed to extend the mission’s presence in Mozambique on an interim basis until an SADC heads of state summit in mid-August, when a more detailed report on the mission’s progress was
meant to be considered.
Recent reports indicate that presence of SADC troops and Rwandan troops in Cabo Delgado province have achieved some important results. Some roads have been reopened, and calm has returned in key locations for liquefied natural gas projects, such as Palma and Mocímboa
da Praia.
Since July, some displaced population has since returned to their ruined settlements for rebuilding as attacks have relatively quelled although the United Nations Refugee Agency has said it would be premature to encourage displaced people to return to their homes as there are still
attacks in some parts across the province.
Tshisekedi takes over the SADC leadership from Malawi’s Lazarus Chakwera, a few months after he joined the East African Community, another regional bloc.
In Democratic Republic of Congo, Tshisekedi is faced with terrorist acts in the eastern part of the country bordering with Rwanda.
His tenure as SADC chairperson coincides with him defending his presidency in next year’s general elections.
South African President, Cyril Ramaphosa, also handed over his chairmanship of the SADC organ on politics, defence and security cooperation, taking the bloc leadership amid Covid-19 devastation last year.
The new SADC Chair said the inequalities and disparities must be tackled head on as they are seriously hindering efforts to save the lives of millions in the SADC.
“I want to make a larger point to the rest of the global community: The inequalities and disparities we are seeing in the distribution and production of COVID-19 vaccines are symptomatic of an old geopolitical framework that is no longer working, no longer sustainable, and no
longer acceptable,” said Chakwera.
“I am referring to a framework that regards the world as an animal farm in which some nations are more equal than others; I am referring to a framework that regards some nationalities as more special than others; I
am referring to a framework that regards some human lives as more worthy of saving than others,” he continued.
Eventually, Covid-19 vaccine patent holders permitted SADC countries, among others to produce the vaccines using their formulae. South Africa and Botswana responded by rolling out Covid-19 manufacturing programmes and have remained the duo countries taking the lead in the larger part of Africa beyond SADC.
South Africa’s president, Ramaphosa, is one of the three signatories to a letter published in the international media that reads: “It is difficult to build a vaccine production unit, but it is even more difficult to ensure its sustainability.”
The predominant theme for the SADC summit in Congo was Climate change. The SADC leaders held their meeting after the devastating Cyclone Gombe
and tropical storm Batsirai, which affected parts of Madagascar, Mozambique, Malawi and Zimbabwe leading to the displacement of hundreds of thousands of people. South Africa also experienced a climate
change-related disaster, in the form of floods and landslides in KwaZulu-Natal which destroyed property and life.
In wrapping up their two-days meeting tomorrow, the SADC leaders are expected to ratify agreements and protocols one of which is proposing SADC Mechanism for Engagement with Non-State Actors, particularly with
regard to climate change and humanitarian assistance.