Friends of the African Union explained

FAU
Full Name:Friends of the African Union
Founded:January 16, 2012
Location Country:United States
Headquarters:Cincinnati, Ohio
Key People:Hershel Daniels Jr., Chairman
Affiliation:North American African Diaspora Unity Council

Friends of the African Union (FAU)[1] is an economic, social, humanitarian, charitable, educational and civil society organization founded to work for the benefit of the African Union and the African diaspora in their host countries.

FAU has developed programs with allied companies to supply metropolitan, regional and site-specific sewers, water systems, power, communications, computing, gas, and trash solutions along with urban planning services, architectural design, and multi-disciplinary engineering services for members of the African Union, the African diaspora and its allies. FAU will work with the allied peoples of the African American diaspora, non-governmental organizations and governments of the world who support the African Union and the people of the African diaspora.

African Union

See main article: African Union. The African Union (AU) is a union of all 55 African states. Established on 9 July 2002, the AU was formed as a successor to the Organisation of African Unity (OAU). The most important decisions of the AU are made by the Assembly of the African Union, a semi-annual meeting of the heads of state and government of its member states. The AU's secretariat (the African Union Commission) is based in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.

FAU mandate

The FAU is mandated via its United Nations Civil Society Non-governmental organization (NGO) joint venture of September 15, 2014 to:

FAU Functions

As an advisory group, the FAU's functions are to:

FAU Operational Principals

Friends of the African Union Operational Principles adopted by the Friends of the African Union on November 19, 2012.

Diaspora representation proposal

On the 49th Africa Day (May 25, 2012), the FAU proposed that members of the African Diaspora in the United States of America have four votes in the Economic, Social and Cultural Council (ECOSOCC), an AU organization.[1] At its inauguration in Durban, South Africa in July 2002,[3] the African Union embarked on a course to transform and integrate the continent. The aims and hopes of the AU were a response to calls for democracy and development from Africa's NGOs. The continent's leaders were determined to build a union which was people-oriented.

Aware of the rich and diverse human and institutional resources at the grass roots level, the new union would be devoted to building strong partnerships between governments and all segments of society. The AU did not wish to organize civil society; rather, the ECOSOCC's organizing principle is one in which civil society would organize itself to work with the AU.

Since the launch of ECOSOCC's Permanent General Assembly in 2008,[4] its challenge is to build its own institutions and establish a format for partnering with other groups as it performs its function of providing advisory opinions to the AU. These are the issues which engage ECOSOCC as a young institution of the African Union.

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: FAU wiki. fau2063.blogspot.com. February 12, 2012. October 19, 2016. https://web.archive.org/web/20161019191113/http://fau2063.blogspot.com/. dead.
  2. Web site: FIRST MEETING OF INTELLECTUALS OF AFRICA AND THE DIASPORA ORGANISED BY THE AFRICAN UNION . https://web.archive.org/web/20050522042902/http://www.africa-union.org/News_Events/Calendar_of_%20Events/Conference%20des%20Intellectuels/Draft%20Concept%20Paper.pdf . 2005-05-22.
  3. Web site: THE ECONOMIC, SOCIAL AND CULTURAL COUNCIL OF THE AFRICAN UNION (ECOSOCC). African Union. African Union.
  4. Web site: Permanent General Assembly of ECOSOCC. African Union. African Union.