ICFTU African Regional Organisation explained

ICFTU African Regional Organisation
Location Country:Africa
Affiliation:ICFTU
Members:15 million (2004)
Founded:1957 (1993)
Dissolved:2007
Merged:African Regional Organisation of the International Trade Union Confederation
Headquarters:Lome, Togo

The ICFTU African Regional Organisation (AFRO) was a regional organisation of the International Confederation of Free Trade Unions (ICFTU), representing trade unions from countries in Africa.

History

The organisation held its first congress in Accra in January 1957, but had little organisation in its early years. In 1965, the ICFTU's secretariat placed the organisation under the direct control of the ICFTU General Secretary, and it did not regain its autonomy until 1972. At that year's congress, F. T. Tekie of Ethiopia was elected as General Secretary of AFRO, but he was arrested in 1974.[1]

but the current organisation was not fully formed until 1993. In 2007, the ICFTU merged with the World Confederation of Labour (WCL). AFRO merged with the WCL's Democratic Organization of African Workers' Trade Union, forming the African Regional Organisation of the International Trade Union Confederation.[2]

Leadership

General Secretaries

1964: Momadou Jallow

1965: Post vacant

1972: Fisseha Tsion Tekie

1974: George Palmer (acting)

1979: Amos Gray

1993: Andrew Keilembo

Presidents

1960: Haroun Popoola Adebola

1964: Humphrey Luande

1965: Post vacant

1972: Alhaji Yunusa Kaltungo

1979: Boniface Kabore

1988: Sadok Allouche

1993: Madia Diop

2005: Mody Guiro

See also

References

  1. Book: Carew . Anthony . The International Confederation of Free Trade Unions . 2000 . Peter Lang . Oxford . 9783906764832 . 579.
  2. News: Trade unions urged to close ranks . Ghana Web . 27 November 2007.