SADC chief President Mnangagwa touched down at Santa Isabel International Airport yesterday evening for a crucial continental gathering. Equatorial Guinea Prime Minister Manuel Osa Nsue Nsua led the welcoming delegation alongside Foreign Affairs Minister Professor Amon Murwira. The Zimbabwean leader departed from Robert Gabriel Mugabe International Airport after farewell ceremonies with both Vice-Presidents. His arrival sets the stage for today's 7th African Union Mid-Year Coordination Meeting addressing pressing continental challenges. Government officials and embassy staff joined the airport reception ceremonies.
African leaders will tackle the union's troubling financial dependency during today's high-stakes discussions. Development partners currently fund a staggering 77 percent of the AU budget, raising serious sovereignty concerns among member states. Foreign Affairs Ministers highlighted the urgent need for bold programming using continental resources rather than borrowed funds. Professor Murwira emphasized that reliance on external funding undermines the bloc's ability to set independent priorities. The meeting seeks innovative self-financing mechanisms to reduce dangerous donor dependency.
Continental free trade discussions will dominate another major agenda item as leaders push for increased intra-African commerce. The African Continental Free Trade Area represents a potential liberation path from excessive reliance on international donations. Only 17 member countries have implemented the critical 0.2 percent import levy designed to fund AU activities. Today's deliberations will directly influence priorities heading into the February 2026 AU Summit. Regional economic integration remains the key strategy for achieving sustainable continental prosperity.
African leaders will tackle the union's troubling financial dependency during today's high-stakes discussions. Development partners currently fund a staggering 77 percent of the AU budget, raising serious sovereignty concerns among member states. Foreign Affairs Ministers highlighted the urgent need for bold programming using continental resources rather than borrowed funds. Professor Murwira emphasized that reliance on external funding undermines the bloc's ability to set independent priorities. The meeting seeks innovative self-financing mechanisms to reduce dangerous donor dependency.
Continental free trade discussions will dominate another major agenda item as leaders push for increased intra-African commerce. The African Continental Free Trade Area represents a potential liberation path from excessive reliance on international donations. Only 17 member countries have implemented the critical 0.2 percent import levy designed to fund AU activities. Today's deliberations will directly influence priorities heading into the February 2026 AU Summit. Regional economic integration remains the key strategy for achieving sustainable continental prosperity.