President Jakaya Kikwete has said Tanzania’s foreign policy will remain the same even after he leaves the office.
Kikwete whose second five-year and last term ends in October after the General Election is expected to leave the office in early November.
He was speaking at the 25 African Union Heads of State meeting that took place in Johannesburg, South Africa on Sunday.
According to the statement from The Directorate of Presidential Communications circulated to the media yesterday, Kikwete assured the AU Heads of State that he was leaving the office but the Tanzania they have known will remain the same.
He called on the leaders to render cooperation to his successor just as it is the case with him. He repeated call on Sunday - first as he bid farewell to his fellow Heads of State and during the general conference.
The President repeated his statement and Tanzania’s stance when he held a meeting with Somali President Hassan Sheikh Mahmoud where the Somalia President informed Kikwete that he would love to visit Tanzania next year.
He said the country’s foreign policy had remained unchanged since independence, especially the policy of 1972.
“We have never changed our foreign policy which guides our relations with neighbouring countries, followed by African countries in general and our friendships with other countries in the world…there is no doubt that our policy will remain the same unless the next President comes from a different party. What will change though is the style for leadership but the basics will remain the same,” noted Kikwete.
Another AU Heads of State meeting is expected to take place in January 2016 in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia but Tanzania will have a new President.
African leaders started meeting in Johannesburg, in South Africa on Monday for an African Union summit that is expected to be dominated by the political unrest in Burundi and the migration crisis in the continent.
Burundi has been plunged into a period of instability sparked by President Pierre Nkurunziza's push to run for a third five-year term.
Violent protests have left around 40 people dead while 100,000 people have fled the country, raising peace and security concerns in the region.
Other crises like the threat posed by Islamist militant groups are also on the agenda.
"The situation in Burundi is still unresolved... and Nigeria, which is supposed to be an important player, still has challenges around Boko Haram," said Tjiurimo Hengari, research fellow at the South African Institute of International Affairs.
"I see the next two years being very challenging, especially in light of a new threat that is emerging on the horizon -- the issue of constitutional revisions to allow sitting heads of state third terms and fourth terms."
In another development, African leaders have passed a resolution to include the African Peer Review Mechanism (APRM) in the official activities of the continental body, compulsorily subjecting all the AU members to the good governance testing machinery.
The Minister of State in the President's Office, Good Governance, George Mkuchika, said in South Africa over the weekend that the new resolution automatically subjects all AU members to the self-assessment programme, enhancing good governance in the continent.
"Membership to the review mechanism is currently voluntary, giving room for some countries to snub the initiative, but when it becomes compulsory all countries will have to oblige in favour of good governance," Mkuchika told journalists on the sidelines of the 25th AU Summit.
Out of the AU's 54 member states, only 35 countries have volunteered for scrutiny under APRM that entails a comprehensive investigation by experts, with the country's head of state appearing before a critical panel of their fellow leaders to defend their respective countries' performance but the summit, which often fails to grapple with thorny issues, is likely to be overshadowed by the expected presence of Sudan's President Omar al- Bashir.
Bashir, who is wanted by the International Criminal Court over war crimes charges, faces arrest if he lands on South African soil, and has not visited the country since his indictment by the court in 2009 and 2010. As a signatory to the Rome Statute which established the ICC, South Africa is obliged to arrest the Sudanese leader.
AU spokesman Molalet Tsedeke told AFP Saturday that he had been informed that Bashir was expected to attend the meeting. "He is coming," said Tsedeke. African leaders remain divided on the ICC statute, with AU chairman Zimbabwe's President Robert Mugabe urging African leaders in January to pull out of the treaty.
Mugabe and South African President Jacob Zuma were among those scheduled to speak yesterday. Also attending is Nigeria's newly-appointed President Muhammadu Buhari, whose country is battling the onslaught of Islamist group Boko Haram. The leaders of Africa's other major economies, Egypt and Angola, are absent.
The summit in South Africa's economic capital comes two months after a wave of xenophobic violence swept parts of Johannesburg and Durban as African immigrants were hunted down and attacked by gangs. The two-day summit comes only five months after the last gathering of AU Heads of State in Addis Ababa in January.
Meanwhile, a South African judge barred Sudan's indicted president from leaving the country in a deepening rift between Africa and the West over what Pretoria called anti-poor country bias in the International Criminal Court (ICC).
President al-Bashir stands accused in an ICC arrest warrant of war crimes and crimes against humanity over atrocities committed in the Darfur conflict. He was first indicted in 2009.
A judge was expected to hear an application calling for Bashir's arrest, though this appears unlikely as South Africa's government has granted legal immunity to all AU delegates.
South African President Jacob Zuma's ruling African National Congress (ANC) responded furiously to yesterday court order, accusing the Hague based ICC of seeking to impose selective Western justice by singling out Africans.
"The ANC holds the view that the International Criminal Court is no longer useful for the purposes for which it was intended," the ANC said in a statement. "Countries, mainly in Africa and Eastern Europe ... continue to unjustifiably bear the brunt of the decisions of the ICC, with Sudan being the latest example."
A human rights group, the Southern African Litigation Centre, earlier petitioned the Pretoria High Court to force the government to issue an arrest warrant for Bashir.
Judge Hans Fabricius postponed the hearing until 0930 GMT tomorrow to allow the government time to prepare its case, urging South African authorities to "take all necessary steps" to prevent Bashir leaving the country.
Sudan's government defended the South African visit of Bashir, who was sworn in this month in Khartoum for another five-year term, and said the court order had ‘no value’.
SOURCE: THE GUARDIAN
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