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AU summit extended amid divisions | |
(about 3 hours later) | |
An African Union (AU) summit in Ethiopia has been extended to a fourth day amid disagreements on the issue of creating a United States of Africa. | |
Many leaders said the proposal by Libyan leader Colonel Muammar Gaddafi would add a layer of bureaucracy that the continent does not need. | |
But they did agree on changing the name of the AU Commission to AU Authority. | |
Col Gaddafi had used his inaugural address as rotating head of the AU to push his long-cherished unity project. | |
The Libyan leader said closer integration between African states should start immediately. | |
In the long grass? | |
He envisages a single African military force, a single currency and a single passport for Africans to move freely around the continent. | |
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But other African heads of state said the Libyan leader's plan was not practical. | |
African leaders said they would study the legal implications of the unity proposal, make a report and meet again in three months time. | |
In other words, says BBC's Mark Doyle in the Ethiopian capital, Addis Ababa, they are kicking the ball into the long grass to slow it down. | |
He says the outcome is a political fudge, as no member wishes to alienate the leader of oil-rich Libya. | |
One participant in the closed-door meeting of the 53-country union said the Libyan leader appeared to admit defeat and laid his head on the table in despair. | |
Our correspondent says waiting reporters next saw the Libyan leader sweep out of the room accompanied by his protocol man, who had a uniform like that of an airline pilot - but with more gold braid. | |
Liberian President Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf said: "He didn't walk out, he just got tired." | |
She denied to the BBC that the outcome was a fudge and said it was a step on the path to a United States of Africa. | |
Legal implications | |
Leaving the talks in the early hours of Wednesday, Senegal's President Abdoulaye Wade said leaders had had a "very rich" discussion that they would resume later in the day. | |
South African President Kgalema Motlanthe appeared upbeat, telling AFP news agency: "A day will be arrived at where there will be a single authority in charge of Africa." | |
Liberian President Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf denied Col Gaddafi had stormed out | |
The BBC's Elizabeth Blunt in Addis Ababa says changing the name of the AU Commission - which is the administrative branch of the organisation - to the AU Authority sounds like a mere formality and a change of notepaper. | |
But, she says, it has legal implications as the commission is written into the constitution of the AU. | |
Our correspondent understands that any amendment to that charter would have to be agreed by two thirds of AU leaders and ratified by their national parliaments. | |
Before arriving at the summit, Col Gaddafi circulated a letter saying he was coming as the king of the traditional kings of Africa. | |
Last August, he had a group of 200 traditional leaders name him the "king of kings" of Africa. | |
The summit's main agenda - to boost Africa's energy and transport networks - has been pushed largely to the fringes, weighed down by the grim realities of the global economic downturn. |