By Zephania Ubwani ,The Citizen Reporter
Arusha. East African leaders yesterday vowed to combat terrorism with unwavering determination.
They resolved to spare no effort or resources in the war against terrorists and other perpetrators of crime within the region.
“We are united to implement counter terrorism
measures as a matter of urgency”, they said at the end of their one-day
summit at the Arusha International Conference Centre (AICC).
The 12th Extraordinary Summit of the East African
Community (EAC) Heads of State condemned the recent terrorist attacks in
Kenya and urged all five member states come up with appropriate
measures to neutralise the threat posed by al Shabaab militants from
Somalia. Insurgency and other transnational crimes featured at the
summit hosted by President Jakaya Kikwete and attended by presidents
Yoweri Museveni of Uganda and Uhuru Kenyatta of Kenya. Burundi and
Rwanda were represented by First Vice President Prosper Bazombaza and
Prime Minister Pierre Damien Habumuremyi, respectively.
Addressing the plenary session, President
Kenyatta, who is the current chair of the EAC Summit, said East Africans
were not living in isolation in the world which that is now too
familiar to the terrorist attacks. He added that the people in the
region must be prepared to address the looming threat. He particularly
cited Al Shabaab militants from Somalia, who have been blamed for a
string of murderous attacks in Mombasa and Nairobi.
“Somalia is our neighbour but law and order has
eluded that country for two decades,” he said, noting that the East
African region was also concerned by the on-going bloody conflict in
South Sudan.
The Kenyan minister for EAC Affairs and current
chair of the EAC Council of Ministers, Ms Phyllis Kandie, told the
Summit that the magnitude of terrorist attacks the region has endured in
recent times called for increased vigilance.
“The growing threat of terrorism means peace and security are critical for regional integration,” she said.
The regional leaders, according to a communiqué
issued at the end of the Summit, reiterated their unwavering
determination to collectively work together to combat terrorism in
eastern Africa and the Great Lakes Region and called on the security
agencies to intensify their cooperation aimed at combating terrorism and
insurgency.
The Summit directed the EAC Council of Ministers
to implement counter-terrorism strategy as a matter of urgency “with a
view to safeguarding fundamental rights and freedom of the people of
East Africa”. The communiqué, read by EAC Secretary-General Richard
Sezibera, said the process for the admission of South Sudan into the
bloc had been postponed until September or October “in order to allow
her (Juba) undertake national preparations and consultations”.
Both sides of the conflict in South Sudan whose
recent fighting has led to the killing of tens of thousands of people
and the displacement of more others were urged to resolve their
differences peacefully.
The Summit appointed Justice Emmanuel Ugirashebuja
from Rwanda the new President of the East African Court of Justice
(EACJ) to replace Justice Harold Nsekela from Tanzania, whose tenure
ends in June.
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