Public discontent with the African Union grows over its inability to achieve key goals like a single currency or unified military. Social media discussions highlight frustrations with the organization's perceived ineffectiveness. Calls for urgent reforms aim to align the AU with Africa's needs.
An opinion piece by Mike Omuodo questions whether the African Union (AU) is evolving into the institution Africa requires. Drawing from online discussions, it notes a commentator's query: “If the African Union (AU) cannot create a single currency, a unified military, or a common passport, then what exactly is this union about?” Commentators argue that the AU prioritizes Western interests and resource exploitation by individual nations over African needs, with some humorously proposing a rename to “Western Union”.
The article contrasts France's control over 14 African states via the CFA Franc with Africa's failure to establish its own currency system. It also critiques the acceptance of foreign military bases while resisting a unified African military or open borders, citing sovereignty concerns.
Established in July 2002 to replace the Organization of African Unity (OAU), the AU aimed for economic integration, peace and security, good governance, and global representation post-colonialism. However, ongoing conflicts, coups, flawed elections, and external threats have exposed its limitations, turning it into what one view describes as “a farce talk shop that cannot back or bite.”
Public sentiment, reflected in social media, views the AU as outdated after over 60 years since the OAU's era, labeling it a “club of cabals” that protects dictators. Quotes include: “AU’s main job is to congratulate dictators who kill their citizens to retain power through rigged elections,” and “AU is a bunch of atrophied rulers dancing on the graves of their citizens, looting resources from their people to stash in foreign countries.”
The piece urges dissolution or a new body, emphasizing reforms for accountability and courage to pursue a common market, single currency, unified military, and common passport. Omuodo, based in Nairobi, Kenya, stresses that symbolism alone is insufficient amid economic fragmentation and democratic setbacks.