Peace and Security Council

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

African Union

This article is part of the series:
Politics and government of
the African Union


Institutions of the African Union
Casablanca Group
Union of African States
Organisation for African Unity
African Economic Community
African Unification Front

Executive
Assembly
Commission
Chairman
Conference and Events
Peace & Sec.
Pol. Affairs
Infra. & Energy
Soc. Affairs
HR, Sci., & Tech.
Trade and Industry
Rural Econ. & Agri.
Economic
Legal Counsel
Executive Council
Rep. Committee

Legislature
Pan-African Parliament
President
Bureau
Secretariat
List of members
Permanent Committees
Rural Econ., Agri., Resources, Eviron.
Monetary & Financial
Trade, Customs, & Immigration
Cooperation, IR, & Conflict
Trans., Industry, Comm., Energy, Sci., & Tech.
Health, Labour, & Social
Educ., Culture, Tourism, & HR
Gender, Family, Youth, Disabilities
Justice & Rights
Rules, Privileges, & Discipline

Judiciary
Sirte Declaration
Constitutive Act of the AU
Law
Charter on Rights
Court of Justice
Court on Human and Peoples' Rights
List of judges

Advisory bodies
Peace and Security Council
Economic, Social, and Cultural Council
Specialized Technical Committees
Rural Econ., Agri.
Monetary & Financial
Trade, Customs, and Immigration
Industry, Sci. & Tech., Energy...
Transport, Comm., Tourism
Health, Labor, Social
Edu., Culture, & Human Resources

Financial bodies
AEC Pillars (Abuja Treaty)
CEN-SAD
COMESA
EAC
ECCAS/CEEAC
CEMAC
ECOWAS
UEMOA
WAMZ
IGAD
SADC
SACU
AMU/UMA
African Central Bank
African Monetary Fund
African Investment Bank
New Partnership for Africa's Development
African Peer Review Mechanism

Decentralised bodies
Agencies of the AU

AU-related topics
Elections
Enlargement
Foreign relations

Other countries · Politics Portal
view  talk  edit

The Peace and Security Council is the organ of the African Union in charge of enforcing Union decisions. It is patterned somewhat after the United Nations Security Council.

Members are elected by the Assembly of the African Union so as to reflect regional balance within Africa, as well as a variety of other criteria, including capacity to contribute militarily and financially to the Union, political will to do so, and effective diplomatic presence at Addis Ababa.

The Council is composed of fifteen countries, of which five are elected to three-year terms, and ten to two-year terms. Countries are immediately reeligible upon the expiration of their terms.

[edit] Members

In March 2004 the following countries were elected to the council: [1]

Members were elected to two-year terms unless otherwise noted.

In January 2007 the following members were elected, all for three year terms:[2]

[edit] References

[edit] External Links