A couple of months ago, in July 2007, the African Union (AU) launched in the United States its first diplomatic mission ever accredited to a country. This mission is a fundamental shift in the AU representation policy and practice abroad. In fact, so far, AU’s representation or external relations on the continent and outside were managed through Sub-regional representations (there is AU’s sub-regional representation for Western, Central, Eastern, Southern and Northern Africa), particularly technical institutions whose primary responsibility has generally nothing to do with representation or liaison functions vested with them throughout Africa (in that regard, the AU’s representation in Central Africa is assumes by Interafrican Phytosanitary Council in Yaounde, Cameroon) and Permanent Representations to key international organizations in some diplomatic hubs (this is notably the case of AU’s Permanent representations to the League of Arab States in Cairo -Egypt-, to the UN Headquarters in New-York, and to the UN Office in Geneva).
Alongside these Permanent representations and Sub-regional representations, over the past years, the AU sent political missions to some African countries experiencing political crisis or instability (Côte d’Ivoire, Burundi, the Comoros, etc.). These missions are generally tasked with the monitoring and observation missions in countries experiencing political crisis and used as liaison offices with national authorities and different national stakeholders. In such contexts, AU monitoring and/or observation missions are kind of crisis diplomacy mechanisms.
The launching of this mission illustrates AU’s intention to become a significant player on the international scene and willingness to play a political and diplomatic role when it comes to African issues.
According to Amina Salum Ali, the AU’s Ambassador to the United States, the AU’s Representation, whose purpose is "to work with governments, Congress, international organizations, civil society in the Diaspora, and all friends of Africa and those who are focused to do business with Africa (…) would promote greater understanding between the peoples of the USA and Africa."
The African diaspora would also be one of the main targets and major duties of the Mission, the "biggest mandate" as Ambassador Ali said, with notably the promotion of relations between the African Union and the African Diaspora.
The opening of that mission in Washington has been under consideration at the AU for quite a long time, but according to the AU’s Ambassador, "sometimes it takes time; it takes resources, and it takes capacity, in terms of human capacity to be able to establish an office. So although the decision was taken since 10, 15 years ago, it was only last year we operationalized because we didn’t have enough capacity, enough resources."
Source: VOA
See also the following post