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Letter to Pan Africanists Concerning the Upcoming Pan African Congress in Harare, Zimbabwe Later This Year

Siphiwe Baleka with H.E. Ambassador Arikana Chihombori-Quao and Damian Cook, ADDI Vice President, February 12, 2023

Later this year, the government of Zimbabwe will be hosting the “8th Pan African Congress Part 1”. More than 800 delegates from the African Diaspora and Africa will convene for the sole purpose of further establishing the AU 6th Region and creating a comprehensive African Diaspora Citizenship Policy for the African Union. The initiative comes from Uganda President Yoweri Museveni and Her Excellency, Ambassador Arikana Chihombori-Quao, the former AU Ambassador to the United States who has become a voice and champion of the African Diaspora and the African Union 6th Region. Many grassroots Pan African activists are asking questions about the event which I have addressed in the article From the 8th Pan African Congress in 2014 to the 8th Pan African Congress in 2023.

As the Chairperson of the Congress Agenda Steering Committee, I would like to say a few things in hopes of rallying the entire African Diaspora to a most historic moment. 

Twenty years ago, on February 4th, 2003, I was the sole representative of the African Diaspora in attendance at the First Extra-Ordinary Summit of the Assembly of the African Union meeting in Addis  Ababa, Ethiopia. That summit adopted the historic Article 3(q) that officially, “invite(s) and encourage(s) the full participation of Africans in the Diaspora in the building of the African Union in its capacity as an important part of our Continent.” From this decision, the African Diaspora would eventually become designated as the 6th Region of the African Union.

The AU 6th Region Education Campaign was launched in 2006 which attempted to organize the African Diaspora to begin working within the African Union as its 6th Region to create the “Africa We Want.”  Our original task was to organize ourselves and elect twenty representatives to the AU Economic, Social and Cultural Council (ECOSOCC) that was designated for African civil society participation within the African Union. Until now, those elections have not been concluded and those positions have never been filled. It should be recalled that inclusion in ECOSOCC was only meant to be the first step in becoming full partners in the African Union and the development of our motherland.

As many people remember, H.E. Ambassador Arikana Chihombori-Quao was removed from her position as the AU Ambassador to the United States at a time when she was fiercely exposing the neo-colonialist exploitation against African people. Her three-year tenure, however, gave her the experience and insight into what needed to be done in order to unite the African Diaspora to take its place at the table inside the African Union.

Now is the moment to implement what I am calling Ambassador Chihombori-Quao’s “Get the Keys Strategy”. Instead of shouting from outside the African Union about a broad host of issues, now is the moment when the African Diaspora can accomplish two objectives: first, establish a continental diaspora citizenship policy that will create four pathways based on investment, work, residency and/or dna under the principle of the “Right to Return”. The four pathways, taken together, allows for every African Diaspora to obtain citizenship to the country of their choice or ancestry regardless of one’s circumstances. The second objective is to establish the equality of the AU 6th Region with the other five regions within the African Union by establishing Ambassadors at the AU Permanent Representatives Council (PRC) and throughout all the other AU organs and establishing an AU 6th Region Headquarters outside of Africa. This is the LIMITED OBJECTIVE of the upcoming Pan African Congress in Harare, Zimbabwe and will open the door for the African Diaspora to physically enter the continent and to administratively begin to assist in governing the continent.

After spending five days in intense strategy sessions with Ambassador Chihombori-Quao, it is my firm belief that her “Get the Keys Strategy” is the historical imperative of the moment. The entire African Diaspora must rally behind this. 

As my article highlights, there are contradictions and differences within the African Diaspora. However, this is the moment we must exercise our understanding that unity does not require homogeneity, but it does require solidarity of purpose. 

The previous Pan African Congresses had a much broader agenda with differences of opinion. The upcoming Congress has a limited agenda, thus breaking with tradition in order to achieve a result that the entire African Diaspora desires: citizenship in our ancestral homeland. Again, this can be achieved now, but only if we come together and perform well.

There will be some conflict over the Congress’s connection to Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni. There may be arguments over whether or not the Congress should be called the 8th PAC, the 9th PAC or even be called a PAC at all. Some veterans of the Pan African movement may feel slighted that, until now, they were not consulted from the start. And perhaps there may be many more objections. 

What is important, however, is that we now have a Champion who knows what to do and how to do it. Ambassador Chihombori-Quao has support from current and past African Presidents who are ready to move the needle IF we come together and unite under a congress that is truly representative of the entire African Diaspora. The Congress’s Harare Declaration that includes the African Diaspora Citizenship Policy recommendations will then be submitted by the President of Zimbabwe to the African Union General Assembly in July for adoption. The stronger the unified support of the Congress, the more likely the African Diaspora Citizenship Policy will be accepted by the African Union. Therefore, we must put aside all other concerns to achieve this objective.  All Pan Africanists, heed the call. 

During the next seven weeks leading up to the Congress, there will be open Preparatory Meetings each Saturday to debate and contribute input on each of the specific Agenda items. All Pan Africansits and African Diasporans are invited to make this the most inclusive Pan African Congress in history. If you agree, please register your name and organization below.

Siphiwe Baleka, Coordinator, Chairperson of the Congress Agenda Steering Committee

8th PAC Part 1 Agenda

Pathway to Dual-Citizenship for Continental Diaspora and Descendants of the formerly enslaved

Pathway 1: Investment 

Citizenship granted anywhere in Africa to African Diasporans who have bought a home, started a business, or invested $100,000 to $200,000 in one way or another in the country of their choice.

Pathway 2: Work

Citizenship granted anywhere in Africa to African Diasporans who have worked for three years in the country of their choice.

Pathway 3: Residency

Citizenship granted anywhere in Africa to African Diasporans that have lived in the country of their choice for three years.  For example, students, researchers, NGO workers, etc.

Pathway 4: DNA/ Right to Return 

Citizenship granted to a specific country to African Diasporans that have taken an African Ancestry DNA test and have either a maternal or paternal African lineage.

Pathway 5: Retirement

Citizenship granted anywhere in Africa to retirees upon submission of qualifying information

Diaspora Pan African Capital Fund, Diaspora Pan African Bank and Diaspora Preferential Investment Pathway for International Contracts 

Diaspora Pan African Capital Fund 

$100 a month from 1 million African Diasporans (0.4% of the African Diaspora population) is $100 million a month. That’s $1.2 billion a year and $6 billion in five years. Investment through the fund qualifies for citizenship through Pathway 1. At maturity, money is deposited in a bank in the country of choice.

Diaspora Pan African Bank 

We need a bank that can monetize gold. Currently only 2 foreign owned banks in Africa can do this. Remittances to go through this bank.

Diaspora Preferential Investment Pathway for International Contracts

Diaspora to receive 3 to 6 month exclusive right to bid on all International Contracts. Waived or reduced fees for registering a company or for acquiring permanent residency.

Introduction to the African Union 6th Region

Explanation of the African Union Five Regions

The Five Regions participation in the AU organs. 

Definition of the Diaspora 

The African Union defines the African Diaspora as "Consisting of people of African origin living outside the continent, irrespective of their citizenship and nationality and who are willing to contribute to the development of the continent and the building of the African Union."

AU 6th Region Ambassadors to the PRC 

The need to make the AU 6th Region equal in function to the other 5 regions through inclusion in all AU organs starting with the Permanent Representatives Council. 

Establishment of AU 6th Region and 9th REC Headquarters 

Just as the 5 regions of the AU each have a headquarters within their region, so, too, must the AU 6th Region have a headquarters somewhere within its region such as the Caribbean. Headquarters to be financed by the Diaspora Pan African Fund with construction contributions from EU, OAS, CARICOM, AU and the host country.

Establishment of a Pan African TV and Radio Station/Network 

Nearly all organized efforts have a system of propaganda to convert people to their principles and get them to support them. Western Media, especially CNN, BBC, etc. has been and continues to be the highest form of systemic propaganda. That is why it is able in a major sense, to control the mind of the people of the world.Therefore, we must organize our propaganda to undo the propaganda of other people through a Pan African TV and Radio network that can rival CNN, BBC, etc.

Call to Action: 8PAC1

Letter to Pan Africanists Concerning the Upcoming Pan African Congress in Harare, Zimbabwe April 2023

TOWARDS THE 8TH PAN AFRICAN CONGRESS PART 1: LESSONS FROM THE 6TH PAC AND 7TH PAC

From the 8th Pan African Congress in 2014 to the 8th Pan African Congress in 2023

Outcome of the FIRST PREPARATORY MEETING FOR THE 8TH PAN AFRICAN CONGRESS PART 1 IN HARARE, ZIMBABWE

OUTCOME OF SECOND PREPARATORY MEETING FOR THE 8TH PAN AFRICAN CONGRESS PART 1 IN HARARE, ZIMBABWE

OUTCOME OF THE 3RD PREPARATORY MEETING FOR THE 8TH PAN AFRICAN CONGRESS PART 1: DIASPORA PAN AFRICAN CAPITAL FUND

OUTCOME OF THE 4TH PREPARATORY MEETING FOR THE 8TH PAN AFRICAN CONGRESS PART 1: PAN AFRICAN TV AND RADIO

5TH PREPARATORY MEETING FOR THE 8TH PAN AFRICAN CONGRESS PART 1: DEFINITION OF THE DIASPORA

COUNCIL OF PAN AFRICAN DIASPORA ELDERS FORMS TO SUPPORT THE 8TH PAN AFRICAN CONGRESS PART 1 TO BE HELD IN HARARE, ZIMBABWE

Council of Pan African Diaspora Elders Letter of Support to President Emmerson Dambudzo Mnangagwa of The Republic of Zimbabwe for the 8PAC1

DEFINING THE AFRO DESCENDANTS' RIGHT TO RETURN (RTR) TO THEIR ANCESTRAL HOMELANDS ON THE AFRICAN CONTINENT FOR THE 8PAC PART 1

The African Union and the African Diaspora - Tracking the AU 6th Region Initiative and the Right to Return Citizenship: A Resource for the 8th Pan African Congress Part 1 in Harare, Zimbabwe

To join the 8PAC1 Committees, email the Agenda Coordinator, email PAC8.1coord@ouraddi.org

PLEASE REGISTER YOUR SUPPORT OF THE PAN AFRICAN CONGRESS IN HARARE, ZIMBABAWE APRIL 2023

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From the 8th Pan African Congress in 2014 to the 8th Pan African Congress in 2023

No, that’s not a typo. An 8th Pan African Congress was held in Johannesburg from January 14-16, 2014 under the theme “Mobilizing Global Africans, for Renaissance and Unity”. The 8th PAC was convened by a Preparatory Committee chaired by Professor Kwesi Kwaa Prah, Director of the Cenre for the Advanced Studies of African Society (CASAS). and brought together one hundred and twenty participants representing institutions and organizations of Africans from around the world. Participants came from Latin America, the Caribbean, USA, Europe, Asia, the Arab World and the African continent. The 8th PAC ended with a final recommendation for the establishment of a Council for African National Affairs (CANA).

However, according to the official website of the North American Delegation to the Pan African Congress International Preparatory Committee

“At the 2012 meeting of Pan Africanists to remember Tajudeen Abdul Raheem, in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, there was a committee established to work to build the 8th Pan African Congress in Accra, Ghana and to link the movement back to the Nkrumah goals of full unification and emancipation. This goal was reaffirmed in 2013 when the AU celebrated its 50 years of unity and explicitly determined to bring back the Pan African Movement and Pan African agenda into the AU. These meetings in Addis Ababa brought out the reaffirmation of the vision of the African Union as that of: “An integrated, prosperous and peaceful Africa, driven by its own citizens and representing a dynamic force in global arena.”

A series of meetings were held with the surviving members of the International Governing Council and it was agreed to request the government of Ghana to host the 8th Pan African Congress and for a relocation of the Secretariat from Uganda to Accra, Ghana. By June 2014, there was an agreement on the Call for the 8th Pan African Congress emanating from the IGC.”

Stressing the mantra of the 7th Pan African Congress that there should be mass based organization, the call went out to all organizations and individuals to participate at the congress scheduled to be held in Accra, Ghana, 4-9 November 2014. The Call noted that “in keeping with the broad character of all previous congresses, 1900-1994, will be open to all shades of opinion, groups and individuals in the whole Pan African world. In addition, African governments on the continent and in the Diaspora will participate on an equal footing with other delegates. The African Union and its organs and institutions as well as regional economic blocs and platforms will also participate.”

Further, the Report of the First Preparatory Meeting of the North American Delegation to the 8th Pan African Congress in Accra-Ghana, Held at Howard University Blackburn Center, Washington DC, August 2, 2014 states,

(Please note that the 8th PAC that was scheduled to take place in Ghana has been postponed. See details of our position on the PAC )

The first preparatory meeting of the North American Delegation to the 8th Pan African Congress in Accra, Ghana, was held at Howard University in Washington DC on August 2, 2014. Organized by the Pre-congress Preparatory Committee of the North American Delegation, the meeting was attended by over 80 persons. In attendance were representatives of national and international organizations such as the African Union, Baltimore Pan African Liberation Movement, Universal Negro Improvement Association (UNIA), National Black United Front (NBUF-DC), Universal African People’s Organization (UAPO), the All-African People’s Revolutionary Party (AAPRP), United Nations Working Group for People of African Descent, the Maryland Coordinator from the 6th region, the December 12th Movement, the International Association Against Torture and the World African Diaspora Union (WADU).

The goal of the meeting was to mobilize Pan African organizations and activists in North America to organize and engage in the process and develop recommendations and strategies for incorporation into the deliberations at the 8th Pan African Congress scheduled to take place in Accra Ghana.

Remarks
In his introductory remarks, Professor Horace Campbell, member of 8th PAC International Preparatory Committee and Governing Council, highlighted the historical importance of the Pan African Congress and the need for a robust participation of the Global African Family in the upcoming PAC in Ghana. Another member of the International Preparatory Committee, Professor Ikaweba Bunting, further emphasized the centrality of engaging different Pan African views, opinions, and constituencies in the process of the PAC – particularly with regard to what he called ‘the paradox of working with Africa’s political leaders and the nation states while also working to get rid of the same nation states. . . .’

The African Union was represented by its deputy ambassador to the United Nations, Ambassador Adonia Ayebare. The ambassador stressed the importance of engaging with the AU in the PAC preparatory process, while emphasizing that the pre-congress meeting was very important to the African Union. He also stated that the outcomes of the meeting would be an integral part of the PAC preparatory process.

Other international dignitaries at the meeting include Pan African activist from the Netherlands Beryl Biekman and Mireille Fanon Mendes-France, Chair of the UN Working Group of Experts on People of African Descent (WGPAD) and Chair of the Frantz Fanon Foundation. Ms. Biekman noted the importance of North American Pan Africanists for other regions, especially in the struggle against xenophobia and racism in Europe. She also emphasized the need to build a stronger relationship among the Global African Family to solidify the AU’s 6th Region in order to maintain a better engagement with the AU and Africa.”

OUR POSITION ON THE 8TH PAC: A CONGRESS OR A REGIONAL MEETING?

“A Congress or A Regional Meeting? The Position of the North American Delegation Regarding the March 2015 Pan African Meeting in Ghana

The North American Delegation strongly advocates for an 8th Pan African Congress that is consistent with the traditions of the Pan African liberation struggle and truly representative of the broader vision of Pan Africanism.

In April 1994, the 7th Pan African Congress concluded in Kampala, Uganda, with the adoption of 29 resolutions. This Congress and its resolutions were consistent with the process followed in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, for the 6th Pan African Congress, as well as the others that preceded it. All 29 resolutions of the 7th Pan African Congress were mechanisms that both addressed issues specific to some constituencies as well as the barriers to a more inclusive Global African community overall.

One of the key resolutions of the 7th Congress was the establishment of a Pan African Secretariat that would call, manage, and fund subsequent Pan African Congresses.

This Secretariat could also serve as a home for a permanent Pan-African body for facilitation and dialogue or simply be the genesis for one. Due to the unforeseen death of Dr. Tajudeen Abdul Raheem, General Secretary of the Pan African Movement and principal organizer for decades, there was a period of reorganization with a continuing lack of funds during which the proper functioning of the Secretariat was affected over the next decade.

Another important resolution of the 7th Pan African Congress was to support regional mechanisms that would allow for local input at the broadest level geared towards the next Pan African Congress. Delegates also realized that this could only happen with sufficient funding, and therefore called for mechanisms by which both the regional and international convocations would be funded.

On the ideological and procedural fronts, there was strong debate over the nature of subsequent bodies and specifically whether the Congresses should be guided by “principled political action or by protocol.” This was because many African governments at the time were succumbing to Western protocols/pressure and forgetting their genesis in the African liberation struggle. A clear resolution to the matter was that the Pan African Congress should promote the interests of the African people against a global current that continues to use them as fodder for an international financial system that strongly benefited others. . . .

One mechanism by which this was to be achieved was through the incorporation of the entire Global African community, in tandem with all previous Congresses. This meant that African and Caribbean governments, as states representing African people, would have the same status in terms of participation as delegates from civil society from other states. In addition, representation from regional blocs and key institutions, such as labor movements, political organizations and social platforms would be important to ensure that the diversity of Pan African views would be well represented.

The planning process for the proposed 8th Pan African Congress meeting that was called in 2014 does not seem to have taken into consideration the key resolutions of the 7th Pan African Congress.

Major issues about the Pan African outlook that were raised regarding the proposed meeting have not been addressed. Hence the question: is the March 2015 meeting in Ghana a Pan African Congress or a Regional Meeting?

In July 2014, Major-General Kahinda Otafire, Chairman of the Pan African Movement and head of the Secretariat released the International Preparatory Committee’s Call for the 8th Pan African Congress to be held in Ghana in November 2014. However, there were concerns that the Ebola scare, which had affected the West African nations of Sierra Leone, Guinea, and Liberia, would inhibit travel from those nations as well as regional travel in general. This was intertwined with the need to ensure that Congress is truly Pan African – through the broad participation of the entire Global Pan African family. Additionally, there were funding uncertainties and a call from some regions for further mobilization. Reconsideration was given to the meeting date and a postponement was called for, until a date could be determined in 2015.

A postponement was initiated, but more concerns were raised over the new date, March 2015. The new date was too close to the initial November 2014, and there were no guarantees that the issues that led to the postponement would have been resolved. The larger Pan African community continues to wonder why the Local Organizing Committee in Ghana insisted on the March date.

In November 2014 a pre-congress meeting was to be held in Kampala to address the progress on the resolution regarding gender concerns. Due to the same reasons for rescheduling the full body, the gender body was also postponed. Although funds were available at that time, it was never rescheduled.

Another major area of concern was the participation of the Global African community, especially the Caribbean region within the Pan-African Congress structure. Given the historic role of delegates from the Caribbean since the very first Pan-African Congress in 1900, it was only fitting delegates from this region be more formally acknowledged. Resolutions were adopted with respect to specific countries (Haiti and Brazil) as well as a broader one that called for more systemic inclusion of the Caribbean region at the ideological, political and economic levels.

The International Preparatory Committee’s Call identified as the broad theme for the 8th Pan African Congress “The Pan-African World We Want: Building a people’s movement for just accountable and inclusive structural transformation.” This Call provided a list of subthemes that were consistent in character with the resolutions adopted by delegates at the 7th Pan African Congress.

While many Pan Africanists had reservations about the March 2015 date for the 8th Pan-African Congress, there was no question about the content of the Call from the Secretariat. However, the content of the proposed Congress agenda does not appear to be consistent with the Call from the Secretariat and broader Pan African vision of the preceding Congresses. It appears to be deliberately structured to avoid any serious deliberations.

Certainly, no serious Pan-Africanist would deny Ghana’s leading role in advancing the vision of Pan Africanism. And many would welcome the opportunity to acknowledge this history during Ghana’s independence celebrations taking place concurrently with a Pan African meeting in Accra in the month of March. However, it will be a monumental disservice to the Pan African cause and to Ghana’s immense contribution towards the advancement of Pan Africanism if the country were to host a Congress that is exclusionary and falls short of deliberating on issues that will advance the interest of the oppressed African workers, women, and our brothers and sisters in the Global African family.

As a result of the foregoing, the North American Delegation states its position regarding the March 2015 meeting as follows:

  • The proposed March 2015 meeting in Ghana does not represent the total Pan African Movement, and hence is not representative of a Pan African Congress.

  • The North American Delegation only recognizes the meeting as a regional preparatory meeting for a broad-based and truly representative 8th Pan African Congress to be held at a later date.

  • Serious conceptual, consultative, and logistical groundwork needs to be done towards a broad-based Pan African Congress; but the organizing infrastructure (or lack thereof) in Ghana and Kampala doesn’t have the capacity for the required groundwork.

  • The agenda of the proposed meeting does not reflect critical issues of urgent importance that are affecting our brothers and sisters in the Global African Family – from the clamor that “Black Lives Matter” in the USA to the challenges facing about 100 million African descendants in Brazil and the effect of coup plotting on Africans in Venezuela as well as xenophobia in Europe and the question of reparations for Africans in Latin America, Caribbean, North America and elsewhere. Also missing from the agenda are the serious questions of regarding grassroots Pan African women, reconstruction and transformation in Africa – beyond election cycles and the looting of working people’s resources.

The North American Delegation therefore recommends that serious work and consultation be set in motion for the planning of an 8th Pan African Congress that is truly representative of the Pan African Movement and genuinely reflective of the critical issues affecting Africans on the continent and the Global African Family.”

On May 6, 2015, Professor Ikaweba Bunting published 8th Pan African Congress: The congress is not the movement Reflections on Phase I of the Congress in Accra, March 2015:

“The pan-Africanist spirit is alive and strong, but building a solid Pan African Movement remains a big challenge – as witnessed in the Pan African Congress in Accra, Ghana, in March. A Pan Africanist political culture must be inculcated, nurtured and institutionalized throughout the six regions of the African world.

In early 2012, a collective of Pan Africanists in Africa, the Caribbean, South America, Europe and North America began to circulate a call for the 8th PAC congress. Proposals and discussions were exchanged via social media, radio programs, local Pan African and community mobilization forums, workshops and town hall meetings. The discussions, comments and reactions generated by the call for a Pan African Congress reflected a mosaic of ideas, sentiments, analyses, criticisms, denouncements, claims and affirmations.

Among the various comments and responses, three characteristics of particular significance emerged. The first being the many different perspectives, ideas, dogma and positions related to defining Pan Africanism, who qualifies as a Pan Africanist, how to organize the congress, and who should or should not participate. In regards to participation, there were divisions as to whether or not the African Union and other state actors should participate. Would their very presence be the antithesis of Pan Africanist objectives or are African governments and the AU essential partners in achieving Pan Africanist objectives?

A second characteristic was that despite the many differences, there was consistent concurrence that in order to redress the economic, cultural and political disempowerment and racial based oppression of African peoples, mobilization and organization globally under the structure of Pan Africanism is essential. The consistency of this perspective is of strategic significance. It reveals a common basis for building a Pan African Movement. Simultaneously the array of ideological differences and dogmatic exclusiveness reveal the amount of work remaining and the characteristics of the challenges to overcome in order to build the Pan African Movement.

The third notable feature apparent during this process was the absence of institutional sustenance of Pan Africanist political culture. Despite a broad recognition of the critical need for a Pan Africanist’s method of organization there is an absence of cohesive and persistent effort, clarity of purpose and sustainable institutional support. To realize the objectives of a Union Government and create a movement to rectify the social, economic and political exploitation of African peoples, a Pan Africanist political culture must be inculcated, nurtured and institutionalized throughout the Six Regions of the African world. It is the task for the Global Pan African Movement to ensure that Pan African institutions and organizations at all levels are functional and effective, and imbued with a Pan Africanist political culture.

The absence of functional Pan Africanist institutions and Pan African political culture has left a vacuum that has been filled with a potpourri of ideas formulated under the rubric of Pan Africanism. What materializes is an amalgam of values, notions, ideas and dogma that are perplexing or contradictory to Pan Africanist purpose and ideology.

As the efforts for the convening of the 8th Pan African Congress began to gain momentum a meeting was held in South Africa. Although convened as a Pan African Congress it suffered from lack of consultation and inclusion. A non-inclusive method of organizing that circumscribes broad based participation is contrary to the purpose of convening a Congress as well as the principles of Pan Africanism. In February 2014, the South African meeting convened with an ideological perspective of Pan Africanism that explicitly excluded North Africa and Arab-speaking North Africans. The 8th PAC North American Organizing Committee together with the Caribbean Pan African Network, the PAM Governing Council and many Pan Africanist activists and organizations decided not to associate with this meeting. Though held under the umbrella of Pan Africanism, it fostered an ideological position that apparently coincided with the imperialists’ fabricated narrative that severs the land and peoples of North Africa from the continent.

This offers one example of the many ideological contradictions and breaches that exist within the movement. Coupled with the array of logistical, organizational and financial challenges the situation epitomizes challenges confronting our efforts to convene a credible and representative Congress and building the Global Pan African Movement.

In the lead up to the meeting in Ghana, various Pan African organizations, members of the Governing Council of PAM and regional organizing committees in the Caribbean and North America protested that November 2014, a date proposed by the Ghana Local Organizing Committee, was too soon. The primary concern was that it did not allow sufficient time to mobilize for broad based representation from the different regions of the continent and the diaspora.

Concerns were also expressed regarding the Ebola outbreak and the subsequent travel restrictions that prevented Pan Africanists from several West African nations from attending. The Government of Ghana and the LOC moved the date from November to March 4-7, 2015. It had been recommended by the majority of stakeholders that, at the earliest, May 25, 2015 (African Liberation Day) could be an acceptable date. However, even with the May 25 proposal, several participants in the preparatory dialogue were skeptical in regards to sufficient time and resources being available to mobilize a truly representative, broad-based Pan Africanist participation. The Ghana Government and LOC insisted on March. Consequently, there was a tentative and conditional agreement to participate provided Ebola had been contained and the broad based consultation with Pan Africanist organizations throughout all of the regions of the world had taken place, ensuring their input and participation in the Congress.

There was also concern that four days for a congress were insufficient. Particularly so because the dates proposed coincided with the Government of Ghana’s Independence Day Celebrations. Two of the four days were predominantly concerned with ceremony. Approximately 11 hours only over the course of four days were available for deliberations. As a consequence critical questions arose as to the purpose of the meeting in Ghana. Was it for revitalizing the Pan African Movement or was it for Ghana’s Independence celebration and internal Ghanaian politics? Communications became disjointed as it appeared these concerns were not being responded to. The prevailing sentiment across the scope of a four-continent-wide discussion and commentary was that the meeting in Ghana, if convened as planned, could only be a regional preparatory meeting and not a Congress and due to its not representative process a decision not to participate had been taken. However, compromise and shared purpose prevailed to make the best of a difficult situation and facilitated the convening of the meeting in Ghana despite all of the shortcomings.

An emergency meeting of the Governing Council and the International Preparatory Committee was held in Accra on 28 February 2015. The meeting recognized the grave concerns that had been expressed by the various local organizing committees and Pan African organizations worldwide. The meeting assessed the situation and addressed the following issues:

(1) the government of Ghana in agreeing to host 8th PAC had incurred certain obligations, made commitments and invited high level international guests;
(2) the desire to ensure that 8th PAC was truly global in character and was more representative in terms of delegates, content and purpose;
(3) the general need to ensure a unifying and broadly inclusive 8th PAC process and outcome truly owned by all constituent elements of the Pan African Movement.

During the meeting it was noted that several organizational and operational challenges existed, partly emanating from the 20-year lull after 7th PAC. The criticisms also noted that in regards to the preparation of 8th PAC there was inadequate coordination and communication as well as financial and administrative constraints and inadequate representation of PAM structures in the planned 8th PAC (Ghana). The International Preparatory Committee considered the historical precedent set by various PACs and in particular the 2nd PAC that was held in phases. Subsequently the meeting unanimously agreed to follow the historical precedent of the 2nd PAC of 1921 that took place in phases in different cities including London, Brussels and Paris. This compromise reflected the overall desire to have a congress and to build upon the momentum of organizing and overcoming the challenges we face in building the Pan African Movement.

In Ghana the meeting itself was raucous, often times descending into shouting matches and vociferous protests referencing, what seemed to be, randomly selected rules from Robert’s Rules of Order. The glaring need for improved communications, organizational functionality and leadership within the movement and Governing Council was perhaps the most pronounced weakness revealed in the lead up to and the convening of Phase 1 of the 8th Pan African Congress/Ghana.

There were issues regarding the criteria and method of accrediting delegates that were never clear or coordinated sufficiently. In attendance at the Ghana meeting were participants that did not have historical knowledge or working understanding of Pan Africanism. Quite a number of participants were more familiar with the NGO agendas and NGO discourse than they were of Pan Africanism. This is reflected in some of the resolutions and the nature of discussions. There were elements in each committee whose singular focus was on holding elections, changing the leadership of the GC and the location of the secretariat rather than the issue the committee was constituted to deliberate. The obviously prearranged caucusing and tactic threatened to undermine the process as well as purpose of the Congress and spirit of the compromise agreement.

Many of the contradictions that emerged during the Ghana meeting were reflections of issues of concern expressed before the meeting. However as we criticize the mistakes and contradictions it is also correct to acknowledge that there were actions taken that resulted in positive outcomes. This reflected strength of commitment, political maturity, compromise and common purpose thus preventing a rupture and allowing for broader participation and inclusion. Individuals took initiative to work through the problems.

8th PAC Phase One (Ghana) concluded with several resolutions being passed. The resolutions together with other documents of the North American Organizing Committee are on this website. The contribution of the resolution drafting committee was a particularly valiant effort working well into the early morning to fabricate a coherent set of resolutions that reflected the content and intent of committee reports together with the comments and recommendations from the plenary sessions.

However in effect the conclusion and outcome of the meeting in Ghana is the agreement to organize the 8th Pan African Congress as a two -process. 8th PAC Phase One was the meeting convened in Ghana March 4th -7th 2015. The agreement states that 8th PAC Phase Two will convene no later than May 31st 2015. The interim period would be used to organize regional meetings and consultations to ensure broad base participation.

The responsibility is with the Governing Council and the IPC to immediately rectify the operational and structural impediments that have undermined the efficiency of the Secretariat. The secretariat is the operational extension of the GC tasked with coordinating regional consultations, laying the groundwork for elections of new office-bearers and managing the overall planning and preparation for the final phase of 8th PAC.

It is important to recognize when reviewing our efforts the weaknesses and mistakes we reveal is a positive outcome when we use it to our organizational advantage!

* Dr Ikaweba Bunting lived and worked in eastern and southern Africa for almost three decades before returning to the US in 2002. He was a member of the organizing committee of the 7th Pan African Congress in Kampala in 1994.”

Recalling the “Dueling 8 PACs”, Cliff Kuumba, writes,

“ I don't have any articles that specifically look at the two visions for a Pan African Congress from back then, and I don't recall writing anything on it at the time for my Web site https://kuumbareport.com (I will look there to see if I had written anything on it that I had later forgotten), but I was in Los Angeles for the 2013 SRDC Summit when Dr. Ikaweba Bunting and General Ishola Williams engaged in their debate about the nature of the 8th Pan African Congress.  Much of their discussion, which as I recall was slightly contentious but generally cordial, took place during a dinner that was held at a Los Angeles restaurant after the day's SRDC-related activities.  This is my take on the nature of their debate.  Professor Horne may have a different take, and I've linked an article he wrote from Our Weekly in 2014 that may explain his understanding of the debate better.

General Williams, who I believe is considered one of the relatively few former members of the Nigerian military to have conducted himself with honor in the face of that country's issues with military-controlled regimes (Ishola Williams, Nigeria's poorest and most honest General, 9 News Nigeria, argued that Sub-Saharan Black Afrikan nations needed to meet to stem the tide of increasing Islamization and Arab dominance over North Africa that threatened the entire Continent over time.  Dr. Bunting was of the "Not One Inch" perspective, that we would not give up one inch of the Afrikan Continent and that General Williams's PAC would ignore the entirety of North Africa, thus going against the very essence of Pan-Afrikanism and building a United Continent.

see:

8th Pan-African Congress Calls for Council on African National Affairs, ITUC-Africa,

A Pan African Step Forward, by Dr. David L. Horne, Ph.D, Our Weekly, Los Angeles,

Arabs and the West must pay for slavery, says Pan African Congress, Mail & Guardian,

Ishola Williams, Nigeria's poorest and most honest General, 9 News Nigeria,

8PAC Accra, Ghana, March 2015

8th Pan African Congress Resolutions,

The 8th Pan African Congress Faces New Age of Struggles and Triumphs, Huffington Post,

Dr. Ikaweba Bunting's Facebook, ”

One can imagine the confusion, then, when in July of 2022, the African Diaspora Development Institute (ADDI) under H.E. Ambassador Arikana Chihombori-Quao, former AU Ambassador to the United States, solicited for delegates to attend what was originally announced as the 9th Pan African Congress to be held in Harare, Zimbabwe from 14-19, 2022 hosted by the Government of Zimbabwe. In that call it was stated,

“For those of you who are not familiar with the history of the Pan African Congress, this is a conversation which was started by W.E.B Du Bois in the 1900’s when the descendants of the formally enslaved wanted to have a pathway back home to Africa. To date, there has been a total of eight (8) Pan African Congresses which were held between the year 1919 & 2014. Unfortunately, the eighth was nullified as it was not properly constituted. The first five Pan African Congresses were held outside of the continent of Africa 

1919 in Paris - 1st Pan-African Congress 

1921 in London, Brussels, and Paris 2nd Pan-African Congress 

1923 in London - 3rd Pan-African Congress 

1927 in New York City - 4th Pan-African Congress 

1945 in Manchester -5th Pan-African Congress

1974 in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania - 6th Pan-African Congress 

1994 in Kampala, Uganda - 7th Pan-African Congress 

2014 in Johannesburg -8th - Nullified”

The question, therefore, was - why was the 8th PAC in Johannesburg “Nullified” and by who? We have the explanation that the 8th PAC held in Accra, Ghana in March of 2015 was somewhat nullified (reduced to a regional meeting) by the North American Delegation. But what about the 8th PAC in South Africa????

In response to the call for the 9th PAC, Dr. David Horne stated in a letter to H.E. Ambassaodor Chihombori-Quao,

“A few weeks ago, your ADDI organization started sending out letters to various Pan African individuals and organizations informing them that ADDI and the Zimbabwean government were planning on hosting a Pan African Congress in Zimbabwe later this year. This is a Pan African-friendly response to that information/invitation letter.

Your letter emphasized that you intended to be a part of and to continue in the tradition of the previous 8 PACs. Your letter, however, demonstrated a bit of disrespect for and certainly a lack of historical clarity regarding that tradition.

You mentioned, for example, your conclusion that “None” of the previous “eight congresses held (had) yielded implementable decisions. I refer you to Pan Africanism, edited by Tajudeen Abdul Raheem and Horace Campbell (1996). This is still the single best short volume history of the first 7 PACs. . . .

You also make a claim that the 8 th PAC in 2014 in South Africa was a negligible and nullified affair. That, too, is inaccurate. There was an on-going dispute between those who represented the Pan African Secretariat out of Uganda (7 th PAC), and the organizers of the 8 th PAC. Essentially, the primary 8 th PAC organizers advocated the exclusion of Arab-based states (Tunisia, Egypt, Algeria, Morocco, etc.) in any PACs mainly (but not exclusively) because those states had refused to apologize for or institute any actions in restitution for their participation in the Arab slave trade. Only Muammar Ghaddafi in Libya had written such an apology. Additionally, the 8 th PAC organizers were a small, non-grass roots committee led by Prof. Kwesi Kwaa Prah, Director of the Center for Critical African Studies, who had publicly criticized the Uganda-based Pan African Secretariat (which had slowly become dysfunctional after the death of Raheem in 2009). Some of the primary and most memorable decisions made at the 8 th PAC were to create a Council of African National Affairs (CANA), to create PAC chapters wherever the African Diaspora lived and in all African countries and especially to include more youth in decision-making , and to include African diasporans from Ecuador, India and other formally ignored areas. Of the 10 major decisions made at the 8 th PAC, at least 7 of them have been implemented or are in the process of being implemented. Certain activists from the 1994 PAC continue to criticize the organization of the 8 th PAC, but to declare that gathering “nullified” is simply inaccurate.

Finally, to cut to the chase, the one constant in all of the PACs was an effective Pan African Preparatory Committee, usually spear-headed by on-the-ground activists in different parts of the world. That committee has virtually always been both grass roots and government-based. Your ADDI seems to have assumed that role in connection with the Zimbabwean government. In order to achieve the primary goals you identified for the gathering in Zimbabwe, that arrangement may prove problematic. For one thing, there is a severe lack of time for preparation, and there does not seem to have been much grass-roots organizing thus far. To get to a gathering of forces and a centralizing leadership decision for the African Diaspora, as you state you are aiming for, there must be adequate organizing time. . . .

I, and many other working Pan Africanists, strongly support your stated goals for the Zimbabwe gathering. Certainly, we need more “unity without uniformity” and a bigger, more organized representation for the African Diaspora in the race to achieve the goals of AGENDA 2063. But we must have more much more discussion right now (not obfuscation) about how to pull off this next step.”

Siphiwe Baleka with H.E. Ambassador Arikana Chihombori-Quao and Damian Cook, ADDI Vice President, February 12, 2023

After arriving in Harare, Zimbabwe on February 7th to join H.E. Ambassador Chihombori-Quao’s planning committee, I asked her why the conference was now being called the “8th PAC Part 1"” when it was originally annouced as the “9th PAC”. Her response was that it was on the insistence of Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni, who intends to host the “8th PAC Part 2” next year in Uganda to commemorate the 30th Anniversary of the 7th PAC that was held in Kampala, Uganda.

This, even though, as part of the implementation of its Agenda of the Decade of African Roots and Diasporas, Togo intends to organize a pan-African congress in 2024 with the theme “Renewal of Pan-Africanism and Africa's Place in Global Governance: Mobilizing Resources and Reinventing for Action”. To be sure, the DRAFT DECISION ON THE PROGRESS REPORT ON THE IMPLEMENTATION OF THE 2021-2031 AGENDA, "DECADE OF AFRICAN ROOTS AND DIASPORAS" (item proposed by the Republic of Togo) EX.CL/1420(XLII) -  22 November 2022 states,

“7. ALSO TAKES NOTE of the proposal of the Togolese Republic, as stated in the progress report on the Decade of African Roots and Diasporas, to organize, as part of the implementation of the Decade, an event in 2024 entitled “Renewal of Pan-Africanism and Africa's place in global governance: mobilizing, resourcing and reinventing for action”

8. REQUESTS the Commission and the Togolese Republic to continue their collaboration to ensure the smooth preparation, organization and success of this event; 

9. DECIDES that the event “Renewal of Pan-Africanism and Africa's place in global governance: mobilizing, resourcing and reinventing for action” will be organized in the Togolese Republic in 2024

10. CALLS UPON Member States, African Union partners and Diaspora and Afro-descendant communities around the world to support the organization and smooth conduct of this event;”

The concept note for the 8th PAC Part I in Harare states,

“The African Diaspora Pan African Congress will primarily focus on the formalization of the 6th Region. The issues to be discussed will include but not limited to: 

  • Establishment of a continental pathway to citizenship for the descendants of the formerly enslaved as well as children of continental Africans who were born and live outside Africa. They deserve the liberty to choose what country in Africa they wish to become a citizen of. 

  • Preferential investment pathway designed to promote and pave the way for all people of African descent living outside Africa to not only participate in the development of Africa, but also to reclaim their inheritance by investing in the endless opportunities in Africa that many non-Africans have enjoyed for centuries. 

  • The establishment of a 6 th Region Head Quarters outside of Africa within a host country similar to the other five continental regions (such as ECOWAS) in or outside Africa.

  • The appointment of African Diaspora Ambassadors to the African Union . . . .”

When I joined the Ambassador’s planning committee and saw the list of invited delegates and dignitaries as well as the congress schedule and agenda, I was, quite honestly, horrified! When she asked me what did I think, I replied, “It isn’t the Congress I would have planned. . . . “ I didn’t see any of the grassroots veteran Pan Africanists that I knew of throughout the Western Hemisphere. Moreover, I saw celebrities and politicians that had nothing to do with Pan Africanism. Quite frankly, this was disturbing to me. On the one hand, H.E. Ambassador Chihombori-Quao has become our fiery Queen Mother Spokeswoman of the African Diaspora, unafraid to spit fire on our former colonial masters. Her dismissal as the AU Ambassador to the United States only solidified her as a champion of the people! But how on earth could you call a “Pan African Congress” without those who have been in the trenches and connected to the previous Congress and its subsequent mobilization? Why have more than 800 delegates attend only to have the very African Leaders who haven’t made good on the AU Article 3q invitation to address them? I didn’t understand the logic behind this. But now I do and I’m calling it Ambassador Chihombori-Quao’s “Get the Keys Strategy”. To understand the Get the Keys Strategy, please read:

Letter to Pan Africanists Concerning the Upcoming  Pan African Congress in Harare, Zimbabwe

UPCOMING PAN AFRICAN CONGRESS IN HARARE, ZIMBABWE WILL PROPOSE A COMPREHENSIVE AFRICAN UNION CITIZENSHIP POLICY FOR THE AFRICAN DIASPORA

AFRICAN DIASPORA AMBASSADORS FOR THE AFRICAN UNION 6TH REGION: UPCOMING PAN AFRICAN CONGRESS TO MAKE PROPOSAL

WILL THERE BE AN AFRICAN DIASPORA REGIONAL HEADQUARTERS FOR THE AFRICAN UNION 6TH REGION? UPCOMING PAN AFRICAN CONGRESS TO MAKE A PROPOSAL

Will there be an African Diaspora regional headquarters for the African Union 6th Region? Upcoming Pan African Congress to make a proposal

Towards an AU 6th Region Headquarters

From April 14 to the 17th 2023, the government of Zimbabwe will be hosting the “8th Pan African Congress Part 1”. One of the main Agenda items is establishing the AU 6th Region Headquarters. Naturally, this headquarters would be established outside the continent of Africa somewhere in the AU 6th Region. The Planning Committee would like your suggestions on where the headquarters should be located (note: the headquarters must be located somewhere within the 6th Region - that means OUTSIDE the African Continent following the model of the other five regions which have their headquarters within their respective regions). Please take a moment to answer the following questionaire.

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African Diaspora Ambassadors for the African Union 6th Region: Upcoming Pan African Congress to Make Proposal

AU Permanent Representatives Committee Retreat, June 8-11, 2023. Where are the 6th Region Ambassadors????

TOWARDS AU 6th Region REPRESENTATION

Later this year, the government of Zimbabwe will be hosting the “8th Pan African Congress Part 1”. One of the main Agenda items is establishing the AU 6th Region on par with the other five regions of Africa.

The member states of the African Union (AU) are divided into five geographic regions of the African Union.

*South Sudan is also in the East Region

On February 4, 2003, the AU General Assembly amended the Constitutive Act of the AU with Article 3(q) to “invite and encourage the full participation of the African Diaspora as an important part of our Continent, in the building of the African Union.” In January 2008, the Executive Council suggested that the African diaspora be treated as Africa’s sixth region and its participation in the AU’s organs and activities be strengthened (EX.CL/Dec.406(XII)). The Assembly has recognised the diaspora as a substantive entity contributing to the economic and social development of the continent and has invited its representatives as observers to Assembly sessions (see Assembly/AU/Res.1(XVIII) of January 2012).

The African diaspora, which includes people of African descent living outside of the African continent, such as the Americas, Australia, Asia, and Europe, has been officially recognized by the AU as its sixth region. The agenda for Zimbabwe includes formally establishing the AU 6th Region and brining it to the level of participation in AU organs as the other five regions have done. A next step is proposing that the AU provide formal representation in all AU organs starting with alloting 10 to 15 Ambassador positions in the Permanent Representatives Committee (PRC).

WHAT IS THE PRC?

The Permanent Representatives Committee (PRC) is one of the three main bodies in the African Union, similar to how the United States has the Exexutive, Judicial and Legislative branches consisting of the Senate and the House of Representatives. The PRC is like the House of Representatives and is charged with preparing the work of the Executive Council. The PRC is composed of Permanent Representatives and other plenipotentiaries of Member States. Since the AU 6th Region, unlike the other five regions, does not consist of AU Member States, it cannot have “Permanent Representatives”. That is why the agenda for the 8th PAC Part 1 is proposing that the AU6th Region be represented by “Ambassadors”.

According to the African Union Handbook (2022),

“The Permanent Representatives Committee (PRC) conducts the day-to-day business of the African Union (AU) on behalf of the Assembly and Executive Council. It reports to the Executive Council, prepares the Executive Council’s work and acts on its instructions(under article 21 of the Constitutive Act). All AU Member States are members of the PRC.

Rule 4 of the PRC Rules of Procedure specifies that its powers and functions include to:

• Act as an advisory body to the AU Executive Council

• Prepare its Rules of Procedure and submit them to the Executive Council

• Prepare Executive Council meetings, including the agenda and draft decisions

• Make recommendations on areas of common interest to Member States, particularly on issues on the Executive Council agenda

• Facilitate communication between the African Union Commission (AUC) and Member States’ capitals

• Consider the AU’s programme and budget as well as the Commission’s administrative, budgetary and financial matters, and make recommendations to the Executive Council

• Consider the Commission’s financial report and make recommendations to the Executive Council

• Consider the Board of External Auditors’ report and submit written comments to the Executive Council

• Consider reports on the implementation of the budget of the Union

• Propose the composition of AU organ bureaus, ad hoc committees and sub-committees

• Consider matters relating to the AU’s programmes and projects, particularly issues relating to the socio-economic development and integration of the continent, and make recommendations to the Executive Council

• Consider reports on the implementation of the policies, decisions and agreements adopted by the Executive Council

• Participate in the preparation of the AU programme of activities and calendar of meetings; consider any matter assigned to it by the Executive Council; and carry out any other functions that may be assigned to it by the Executive Council.

Rule 4 also provides that the PRC may set up ad hoc committees and temporary working groups as it deems necessary, including sub-committees.

In October 2020, the Executive Council adopted amendments to the PRC Rules of Procedure, to align them with institutional reform (see EX.CL/Dec.1099(XXXVII) of October 2020 and Ext/Assembly/AU/Dec.1(XI) of November 2018).

Structure

All Member States are represented on the PRC at the level of Permanent Representative. Similar to the Assembly and Executive Council, the PRC Bureau consists of a chairperson, three vice chairpersons and a rapporteur. The Bureau positions are held by the same states that form the Assembly and Executive Council bureaus. Office holders serve for one year (usually January to January). In addition to the official Bureau, a larger informal bureau of 15 Member States traditionally convenes to support arrangements for the Assembly Summit sessions.

At the PRC level, the five regional groups are informal discussion structures, chaired by the longest-serving representative, who acts as the Dean.

Permanent Representatives Committee Meetings

The PRC usually meets at AU Headquarters at least once a week and holds an ordinary session two times a year. It may also hold extraordinary sessions. The quorum is two-thirds of the total membership of the Union (Rules of Procedure, rule 6). The agenda for each session is drawn up by the Chairperson in consultation with the PRC Bureau and the AUC. Sessions are closed, except when the PRC decides otherwise (by simple majority).

The AU Executive Council decided in June 2018 that from 2019, the PRC would hold its sessions in time for it to adopt its reports at least two weeks prior to the start of the ordinary sessions of the Executive Council (EX.CL/Dec.1030(XXXIII)).

The PRC takes all its decisions by consensus or, failing that, by a two-thirds majority of Member States eligible to vote (Rules of Procedure, rule 13). Questions of procedure, and whether a question is one of procedure or not, require a simple majority of Member States eligible to vote. PRC meetings are governed by rules 5–9 of the Rules of Procedure and decision-taking by rule 13.”

Who will be the AU6th Region Ambassadors to the PRC? How will they be selected, elected or appointed?

While the first step is to simply propose the motion for adoption by the AU General Assembly, such an action behooves us to ask the question, who will be the AU 6th Region Ambassadors to the PRC and how will they be selected, elected or appointed? Is this going to be a people centered and democratic bottom-up process or is it going to be a top down, authoritatice state-led process? Additionally, this proposal then raises the question: how or why is this any different than the original instruction from the AU back in 2003 that the African Diaspora should organize itself and elect twenty (20) representatives to the AU Economic, Social, and Cultural Council (ECOSOCC), an effort that has been frought with rejections by the African to accept the AU 6th Region election process? What’s different now? Why not insist on the original 20 ECOSOCC Representatives AND the 10 to 15 PRC Ambassadors now being proposed?

According to H.E. Ambassador Arikana Chihombori-Quao, ECOSOCC is just an advisory organ that allows civil society imput into the AU. Including the diaspora was a token gesture in the early stages of the AU to give substance, however small, to the Article 3(q) amendment inviting and encouraging “the full participation of the African Diaspora as an important part of our Continent, in the building of the African Union.” The PRC is much more than an advisory organ and has real power to influence AU activity.

The congress agenda committee would like your input on this. Please take a few minutes to complete this questionaire.

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Upcoming Pan African Congress in Harare, Zimbabwe Will Propose a Comprehensive African Union Citizenship Policy for the African Diaspora

Towards a Comprehensive African Diaspora Citizenship Policy

From April 14 to the 17th 2023, the government of Zimbabwe will be hosting the “8th Pan African Congress Part 1”. One of the main Agenda items is the establishment of a continental pathway to citizenship for the descendants of the formerly enslaved. Below are the different pathways being proposed. Please take a moment to make comments on each.

Also, take a moment to read Defining the Afro Descendants' Right to Return (RTR) to their Ancestral Homelands on the African Continent.

If you have repatriated to the motherland, please share your testimony. Describe the process for obtaining visa/residence permit/work permit/citizenship/establishing your business. Was the process smooth or a nightmare? How were you treated? What specific recommendations do you have for the African Union member states?

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