Regional integration and the East African
Federation as currently conceived are incompatible. This is because the concept
of integration as understood and operationalised in regional arrangements is an
economic project with superimposed political structures of authority that are
top-down and authoritarian. On the other hand political federation understood in
the Pan-African context is a political project that was conceived as part of the
strategy for political and economic emancipation. The underlying understanding
was that there was basic cultural and social unity of the African people and
that was the basis of African nationalism (Kwame Nkrumah, 1963). An
understanding of the political history of East and Central Africa shows that the
nationalists of the period before independence believed in a political
Pan-African federation as witnessed by the creation of Pan-African organisations,
such as the Pan-African Federal Movement of East and Central-PAFMECA, the
Pan-African Federal Movement of East, Central and Southern Africa-PAFMESCA and
AFRICAN UNITY.
To be sure, the concept of regional integration was itself an adaptation of the
customs union theory as propounded by Jacob Viner (1950) and as applied to the
BENELUX customs union, the forerunner of the European Union. The customs union
is a grouping of countries with a common external tariff in which free trade,
free movement of labour and capital among the member countries is promoted. The
theory examines the impact on trade following the removal of barriers (such as
quotas and tariffs) between the countries and their establishment against other
countries. It dates back to the classical economic concept of free trade
expounded by Scottish economist Adam Smith and English economists David Ricardo
as well as Robert Torrens. Jacob Viner just gave an updating to this theory from
which the theory of regional integration is derived. This is the model that has
been imitated by attempts at forming regional economic groupings.
As Adedeji Adebayo has pointed out, independent Africa came into existence
during the age of regional integration. He points out that after the Second
World War , the promotion of regional integration became a global phenomenon
culminating in the establishment of the European Economic Community (EEC) in
1957, the Latin America Free Trade Association in 1960, the Central American
Common Market in 1961, the Association of South East Asian Nations (ASEAN) in
1967, the Caribbean Free Trade Association (CARIFTA) in 1968 etc. He further
goes on to state that it was these developments that strengthened the United
Nations Economic Commission for Africa’s determination to pursue vigorously the
policy of promoting regionalism in socio-economic development in Africa. But
this was then quite a different agenda from that propounded by African
nationalist leaders about the political unity of Africa.
THE IDEA OF FEDERATION
Indeed, the idea of federation is not an African creation. It is therefore
necessary to recognise three main trends in the evolution of the concept of
‘federation’ since the European colonisation of East Africa. The first is a
colonial concept, the second is a Pan-African concept and the third is a
neo-colonial concept. The first concept was advanced for the sake of domination
and the other was advanced as a tool of resistance against exploitation and
domination, crafted as a response to the European ‘balkanisation’ of Africa, and
the third, a neo-colonial concept, which exploits the Pan-African idea of
federation and instead promotes an imperialist integration project in the form
of ‘nation building’ and ‘regional integration’ as neo-colonial projects under
British imperialist hegemony and later under neo-liberal globalisation. We
pursue these issues in the larger manuscript, which we are publishing separately
as a document.
One point, however, needs to be brought out here. The East African situation has
indeed shown that the three trends of federation are real ones in the way the
advocacy of a Pan-African federation for East Africa was abandoned for a scheme
of regional integration due to the reality of neo-colonial domination. In this
connection, it should be pointed out as proof of this that, in 1963, the three
East African leaders (Kenyatta, Nyerere and Obote) in their Declaration of
Federation by the Governments of East Africa issued in Nairobi on 5 June 1963,
were clear on the need for the urgency to federate politically in order to avoid
their narrow differences ballooning into irreconcilable differences due to the
‘territorial factor’. In the declaration they pointed out that:
‘We the leaders of the people and governments of East Africa assembled in
Nairobi on 5th June 1963, pledge ourselves to the political Federation of East
Africa. Our meeting today is motivated by the spirit of Pan-Africanism and not
by mere regional interests. We are nationalists and reject tribalism, racialism,
or inward looking policies. We believe that the day of decision has come, and to
all our people we say there is no more room for slogans and words. This is our
day of action in the cause of the ideals that we believe in and the unity and
freedom for which we have suffered and sacrificed so much (Hughes, 1963).’
This declaration was an expression of a Pan-African desire to bring the people
of Africa together into a political unity. The leaders went further to declare
that they believed that the East African Federation could be ‘a practical step
towards the goal of Pan-African unity.’ They referred to the declaration made at
the Addis Ababa conference of Heads of States and governments and added:
‘practical steps should be taken wherever possible to accelerate the
achievements of our common goal.’ The leaders recognised that certain
‘territorial factors’ existed and that these had to be taken into account
because they believed that ‘some of these territorial problems can be solved in
the context of such an East African Federation.’
Indeed, just like the current leaders who in 2005 ‘resolved to expedite the
process of integration so that the ultimate goal of a Political Federation is
achieved’ through a Fast Track Committee, the political leaders in 1963 also
decided to set up a ‘Working party’ that was supposed to ‘prepare a framework of
a draft constitution for the Federation of East African.’ Again, just like the
Wako Fast Track Committee, the 1963 working party was required to report back in
the third week of August of that year to the full Conference of East African
governments ‘to consider the proposals of the Working party.’
But this never happened because in the meantime, the more pressing economic
issues emanating from the management of the ‘territorial economy’ and the
‘territorial factors’ and ‘problems’ that arose began to overwhelm the Work of
the Party. As a result the leaders abandoned the political initiative for a
political federation. These ‘territorial problems’ and pressures had emerged
within the workings of the East African Common Services Organisation (EACSO)
that had replaced the colonial East African High Commission to take care of the
interests of an independent Tanganyika before the independence of Uganda and
Kenya (Nabudere, 1982).
In other words, the African leaders became embroiled in the colonial problems
they had inherited in their different territories, which they now called
‘nations,’ and forgot about the noble objective of declaring a political union
of the three countries into an African nation of East Africans within which they
could have collectively addressed the inherited ‘territorial problems’. By doing
this they surrendered to the neocolonial project, which the colonisers were
perfecting under the colonial idea of ‘nation-building’ by making the African
leaders manage their former ‘territories’ for them as the new governors. Even
the unilateral offer that Julius Nyerere had made to delay Tanganyika’s
political independence until the other two countries were ready to federate was
abandoned.
So while the idea of Pan-Africanism continued in the minds of East Africans, the
economic problems emanating from EACSO became the new reality on which immediate
focus was placed. The management of the economic problems that the British had
left in this new organisation took precedence over any talk about a political
East African Federation that was envisaged by the Nairobi Declaration. Hence the
political federation of Africa never materialised for these leaders. The
differences between Nyerere and Amin had their roots in this failure of the
leaders to go beyond ‘territorial factors’ and problems in the interest of the
unity of the people of East Africa and to respect the principles of democracy,
which were denied the people of Uganda. Thus, although the working party met in
Kampala on 30 May 1964 to produce a constitution for a Pan African Federation
for East Africa, this working party, according to Franck, ‘did little but wind
up the books’ on a Pan-African federation in East Africa (Franck, 1964). It is
clear that the on-going ‘Fast tracking” of the political federation is going to
end in a similar manner since currently they are all bogged down in determining
who will get more ‘benefits’ through the customs union and common market.
THE WAY FORWARD
It can already been seen that the real reason for the lack of achievement of a
political Pan-African federation is the existence of power of neo-colonialism
which still dominates our political space. This means that the sovereign power
of the people has been negated and relegated into the background. Instead of
ensuring that the power of the people of East Africa is asserted, the three
leaders and their governments (now five with the admission of Rwanda and
Burundi) are ‘sensitising’ the people to accept their ‘fast-tracking’ process
which will not produce any positive results. As such what is required is for the
leaders of East Africa to put forward the issue of referendum at the fore as the
starting point. They must frame a single question to be answered by the people
throughout the region on the same day. This question should be: ‘Do you want the
borders between the existing states to be dissolved and for East Africa to
become one federated State?’ This is because dissolving the current borders will
be the only way the ‘sovereignties’ of the people of the three countries based
on foreign domination and elite interest can be dismantled. If it is true that
the people of East Africa have clearly expressed their desire to unite, as the
leaders keep on repeating, then it is clear that the answer in the referendum
will be: YES.
Following such a response, the leaders should on a single day put a resolution
to their respective parliaments to implement the peoples’ decision by resolving
to irrevocably to dissolve the existing colonial borders and constitute one
single federated state with inviolable East African borders with the prospect of
them only expanding to include the rest of Africa through stages. The decision
will be a momentous one because for the first time, the people of East Africa
would have expressed their sovereign will to constitute themselves into a state
of their own in determination within the modern reality.
Prior to the referendum, there should be a process of grassroots discussions and
consultations at village level about the implications of removing the borders
and this discussion will include the issue of how to form new states, which will
constitute the federation. This is their sovereign right. These discussions will
include the issue of what to do once the current colonial borders are dissolved.
The people will discuss the effect of dissolution and anarchy that could arise
and for them to discuss how to avoid it. They will determine that once the
colonial borders are dissolved, the new East African border cannot at any cost
be dissolved or interfered with except through its future expansion from time to
time to include other African states towards the achievement of a United States
of Africa. As Professor Cheick Anta Diop emphasised:
‘The permanency of the federal structures must be inviolable. This principle
should be upheld whether the case be national federation like Nigeria, a
regional federation, or a continental federation. Once a federal structure is
set up it should become irreversible. Once federal structures are elaborated,
confirmed and consolidated, succession of any kind must be prevented. … However,
its counterpart must be the granting of cultural freedom and autonomy of the
various communities. Africa must be protected against anarchy. … While Africa
must be protected, we cannot (also) condone the other extreme, which leads to
the stifling of the cultural freedom and autonomy of the various communities
inhabiting the continent. Each community must able to enjoy to the fullest a
freedom compatible with its desire to fulfil itself culturally and
linguistically.’ (Diop, in Sertima, 1986).
Thus with the surrender of their sovereignty to the federal state, the
communities will have the right to regroup across former colonial boundaries and
determine whether they want to constitute new cultural-linguistic states of
their own, which can enable them to enjoy self-determination and autonomy within
their own states as free members of the federal state, which they would have
formed and in which they will all be citizens. This right to reconstitute their
own states fits with the reversal of the colonial injustice that saw to the
fragmentation and dismemberment of the communities along ‘tribal’ lines into
which they were fixed in the colonial states. This will create greater cultural
and linguistic unities across former colonial borders, which will enable them to
develop their cultures, including their languages in the way they want.
The issue of sovereignty is important to consider in the context of what the
ordinary people of East Africa really want. You cannot convince a Maasai of
Laikipia in Kenya and a Maasai in Ngorongoro Crater in Tanzania that removing
the boundaries between Tanzania and Kenya is a ‘risk’ to them, when in their
daily life activities; they ignore these borders to feed their cattle and goats
and to maintain their cultural identities and solidarities. They do this because
they have never accepted the colonially-imposed borders between Kenya and
Tanzania. That is why they cross the borders on a daily basis without ‘national
identity cards’ or ‘national passports’ to assert their sovereign rights over
the territories! So unless we are thinking of other human beings than those that
exist on the ground in East Africa, doing away with the existing colonial state
sovereignties and borders cannot be considered to be a ‘risk’ for the people
involved.
It follows that the issue to be debated in the communities is not about
‘sensitisation’ or ‘mobilisation’ of the communities about the ‘benefits of the
political federation’. The issue should be about the leaders taking bold and
irrevocable decision to dissolve the existing colonial borders that separate the
peoples of East Africa. This will be an empowering process that will, for the
first time in colonial and post-colonial history give an opportunity to the
people of East Africa to decide their fate. Having done that, the leaders will
then engage ‘experts’ from the communities and from the elites to draft an East
African constitution that will devolve powers to local state levels as well as
defining those at a federal level after the people have decided the political
question. Such State constitutions of the different communities will also be
written to incorporate the wishes of the respective communities, (including the
rights of minorities in each state), which need not be the same.
The ultra-nationalist will argue that the steps proposed above will ‘take us
back’ to ‘tribalism’. In fact these ultra-nationalists are the very ones that
practice political tribalism even in their political parties to entrench
themselves in power by claiming to ‘represent’ the ‘people’ even when they have
to buy their votes to do so! Removing borders will reunite colonially created
‘tribes’ and reinstate cultural-linguistic communities that are a feature of all
modern nations. Most European constitutions recognise cultural and linguistic
identities of the people in their states. African post-colonial states because
of the colonial character are the only exception in this regard. Thus the
Interim Constitution that will come in force for the short period while new
states are being formed will provide for certain short-term institutions and
measures, which will replace the former ‘national institutions’ without letup
for any anarchy. These will include:
- The creation of the Presidential Council of State that will recognise the
existing political heads of state who are currently in position of leadership at
the time of the declaration who will act in rotation for a year each until
constitutional and legal mechanisms have been put in place for the election of
the head of state of the Federation of East Africa on a popular basis in 2010 or
such date as will be decided by the Council of State.
- Traditional Leaders and Elders Council, which will have the functions of
advising the Presidential Council of State and the East African Federation
Parliament, especially on matters of state formation having regard to the
cultural and linguistic heritages of the people of East Africa and other matters
of importance to the people of East Africa.
- An East African Interim Federal Parliament out of the existing territorial
parliaments by each parliament turning itself in an electoral college to elect
100 of their members (on equal gender representation) to join the existing East
African Legislative Assembly to constitute a 327-Member East African Federal
Parliament-MEAP to legislate on matters submitted to them by new institutions
that will emerge as a transition to the emergence of new constituent states
- An East African Constituent Assembly drawn from all the nationalities and base
communities identified by the Traditional Leaders and Elders Council in
consultation with the Presidential Council of State as well as some of the
members of the existing parliaments who do not find their way into the East
African Parliament to discuss a new Federal Constitution based on the new state
formations
- An East African Armed and Security Forces under one command structure from the
existing three armies and security agencies. One third of each of the three
armies will be posted to the other three existing states. These forces will
ensure the security of the new federal sate as the communities set about
recreating new constituent states under a new constitutional arrangement as well
as ensuring a peaceful transition.
Other administrative and security measures will be taken in conformity with the
need to transition to a new political system. These will include the merging
existing Central banks into one East African Central Bank with the
responsibility to manage the three currencies, which will continue to relate
through the market until one of the currencies emerges as the strongest able to
serve the communities in the new Federation. The issue of a monetary union would
have been confronted directly through the market and the common market would
also have arisen out of the existence of one market created by the fusion of the
states into one customs union with the common external tariff, which is
currently being worked on, protecting the whole East African market externally
and not internally. No single industry inside East African Federation will be
protected, but will operate on a competitive basis. Only those enterprises that
are able to provide goods and services cheaply will get the entire market.
The above process of state formation leading to the political federation of East
Africa, although slower, would have solved the four stage approach proposed in
article 5(2) of the East African Treaty. The approach would also have done away
with the ‘fast-tracking’ process that has ignored the sovereign rights of the
people of East Africa to participate and own the process of political
unification. In our view instead of bureaucratic approaches to political
federation, the people of East Africa should have participated in creating new
states, which they can own. This is in conformity with the new enlightened view
of international law, which recognises the rights of indigenous communities over
their resources and governance institutions. It is also in line with the
Pan-African principles adopted by the Fathers of African Independence both in
Africa such as Kwame Nkrumah of Ghana and those in the Diaspora such as Marcus
Mosiah Garvey, among others.
It is for this reason that we differ with Professor Shivji in his approach
regarding the way a Pan-African unity project could be achieved. In his paper,
Prof Shivji, poses the question as to who would constitute the ‘driving forces’
for a new anti-imperialist Pan Africanism. He further poses the question as to
where we must begin. He proposes that the place to begin to ‘resurrect a
Pan-African discourse and ‘to turn Pan Africanism into a category of
intellectual thought’ is to follow Mwalimu Nyerere’s path, which he articulated
in his speech on ‘the dilemma of a Pan Africanism’, in which he posed a
challenge to students and the staffs of the African universities. Nyerere’s
‘dilemma’ was to find out ‘who will have the time and the ability to think out
practical problems of achieving this goal of unification if it is not those who
have an opportunity to think and learn direct responsibility of day-to-day
affairs.’ His response was that the universities could move in this direction
themselves in serving the interests of the nation and those of Africa at the
same time.
From this formulation, Professor Shivji draws the conclusion that ‘linking our
intellectual life together indissolubly to generate a Pan-Africanist discourse
is the task of the post neoliberal generation of African intellectuals.’[1]
While I agree with both former President Nyerere and Professor Shivji that an
anti-imperialist intellectual and discourse is necessary to the project of
achieving Pan-African political unification, there is no doubt that such an
intellectual capacity has always existed since Pan-Africanism begun to be
articulated on the continent. In our view, what is lacking is not the capacity
to ‘think’ about its achievement, but the determination to implement the desire
of the people of Africa for unity. We the present generation of intellectuals
should discover why it is that the idea of Pan-Africanism, which was ably
propounded by the founders of Pan-Africanism, has never been implemented? Our
role is to link ourselves to our communities and ensure that their sovereign
rights are promoted and protected. It is only then that a Pan-African federation
can be realised.
Source: http://www.pambazuka.org
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