Foreign Affairs Cabinet secretary Amina Mohamed’s candidature for the position of the African Union (AU) Commission chair has been received positively by African leaders.
President Uhuru Kenyatta separately held bilateral talks with eight Heads of State and Government to drum up support for the CS and the leaders indicated their receptiveness to Kenya’s candidature for the top post of the AU Commission.
According to the PSCU, met the leaders on the margins of the African Union Extraordinary Summit on Maritime Security and Safety and Development in Africa in Lome, Togo.
They included Presidents Faure Gnassingbé (Togo), Ibrahim Boubacar Keïta (Mali), Alpha Condé (Guinea), John Dramani Mahama (Ghana) and Idriss Déby (Chad) who is also the Chairman of AU.
Others were Presidents Alassane Ouattara (Ivory Coast), Denis Sassou Nguesso (Congo Brazzaville) and Prime Minister Abdelmalek Sellal of Algeria.
In an interview in Lome, CS Amina said Kenya was considered a good member of the African community of nations and that was why “there was a lot of receptiveness to our candidature”.
But she pointed out that the AU Commission chair was an elective position and required energy and commitment to winning it.
“And that is why it was important for the President to have discussions with the leaders on the candidature even though he had sent out letters to them,” the CS said, adding that the leaders discussed not only her candidature but also other issues of importance Kenya and their respective countries.
The Foreign Affairs Cabinet Secretary said she was vying for the position because it was time for Kenya to provide a candidate that will unite the continent.
“My credentials, especially in building consensus and carrying out reforms, are critical in bringing everybody together,” Amina said.
The minister’s credentials include being the first woman to lead the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in Kenya.
She was elected president of UNCTAD 14 for the next four years, was the chairperson of the historic WTO 10th Ministerial Conference and co-chairperson of the ministerial segment of the first TICAD summit to held in Africa.
She is the first woman to have chaired the three most important bodies of the World Trade Organisation; the Trade Policy Body, the Dispute Settlement Body and the Governing General Council of the WTO.
She has served as president of the conference on disarmament, and the first African and the first female chairperson of the Council of the International Organisation for Migration.
In 2010, CS Amina was elected president of the UN International Conference on Transnational Crime in Vienna, Austria for a two-year period.
In 2011, she was appointed by the UN secretary-general as UN Assistant secretary general and Deputy Executive Director of the UN Environment Programme (Unep).
On October 3, Uhuru nominated CS Amina to vie for the position of AU Commission chair.