Title of article :
The Role of the United Nations, the African Union and Africa’s Sub-Regional Organizations in Dealing with Africa’s Human Rights Problems: Connecting Humanitarian Intervention and the Responsibility to Protect
Abstract :
This article examines the basis for humanitarian intervention (HI) in the United
Nations Charter, the African Union (AU) Charter and in a number of African subregional
institutions. It traces the historical development of HI and argues that,
while the right to HI emerged more than 100 years ago, that right also emerges
from the Genocide Convention. The article argues that this treaty connects HI to
the developing norm of the responsibility to protect (R2P) and examines the extent
to which R2P is garnering wider support around the world. It focuses on the UN,
and the various AU and sub-regional institutions and instruments that sanction
HI. It assesses whether intervention can be authorized even in the absence of a
UN Security Council mandate and examines the principles, application and interrelationship
of R2P and HI in the African context. It traces the use of these norms
in Africa, including in the various sub-regional structures, and evaluates the AU’s
political will and capability to deal with conflict and human rights abuse.