African Charter of partnership between inhabitants and local collectivities
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The Charter and the African Union by Markoua DADJO,
Tantoa MIDANGA | |
The college of law professionals (organisation bringing together lawyers from Togo and Burkina Faso committed to conflict management in the Sahara) demonstrated during a regional meeting in Lomé that the values upheld by the principles of the Charter of Human Responsibilities are in accordance with the constitutional framework of the Charter of African Unity and the African Charter on Human and Peoples’ Rights. This meeting brought together 20 people from 4 different countries (Burkina Faso, Mali, Niger, Togo).
1. Determination to promote unity and the assertion of a common identity is highlighted in the foreword. 2. Reference to the development of cultural diversity can be found in the following sections:
3. Several clauses in the African Unity’s texts emphasise the importance of freedom and dignity.
In addition, several other examples illustrate that the principles and objectives of the Charter of Human Responsibilities synchronise perfectly with the constitutive Charter of the African Union and its complementary texts. There are two principles that are not specifically developed in the texts, which raise the question of the relation between material needs and immaterial aspirations as well as of the relation between current and future generations.
This meeting of legal advisors demonstrated that the principles of the Charter of Human Responsibilities are in complete harmony with the constitutive texts of the African Union and its complementary texts. As all these documents have been approved by the African states, the Charter promotion activities in Africa are legal.
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