| AU wish-list for 2012 | |
|  | Revamped international partnerships to bring more benefits to Africa | 
|  | Peace and security | 
|  | Good governance and a better democratic process | 
|  | Fewer internal trade barriers leading to an Africa-wide free trade zone | 
|  | Greater involvement in African affairs for the diaspora | 
|  | Improved food security | 
 The unrest could affect Mauritania, Mali, Niger, Nigeria, Chad,  Cameroon, Central African Republic, Sudan, Congo, Uganda, Kenya,  Ethiopia, Eritrea, Djibouti and Somalia, the report says. Clearly, the  AU has to do more than just supervise goings-on in Sudan and its new  neighbour, South Sudan. 
 
 The AU also pledged to "review the mechanism for democratic process in  Africa" after the wake-up call from the uprisings in the Arab world,  including North Africa, a year ago, Ali said. 
 
 The AU will press member states to sign a charter ratified by the AU  assembly in 2007, which aims to strengthen democracy and good governance  in Africa, she said. 
 
 The charter was inspired in part by concern that “unconstitutional  changes of governments” are a key cause of insecurity and “violent  conflict” in Africa, and by a determination to “strengthen good  governance through the institutionalization of transparency,  accountability and participatory democracy”. 
 
 As of November last year, 38 of the AU’s 54 member states had signed the  charter, but only 10 had ratified it. It is notable that nearly all the  countries in the areas of Africa that are “likely to experience  increasing instability and warfare” have signed the charter, with the  exception of Somalia and Eritrea in the east and Cameroon in the west. 
 
 Food security 
 
 The AU will take steps to establish “food reserves” that give areas that  face drought a “cushion” against famine, said Ali. She also voiced  fears that parts of west Africa could be hit by drought this year,  highlighting the need to rapidly establish food reserves – a tough  challenge in a time of high food prices and an economic crisis in  Europe, which has hit Africa. 
 
 Africa also has to “secure access to markets and competitive prices for  farmers” or “risk inciting unrest” and food riots, the Foresight Africa  report says. 
 
 AU officials will push in 2012 to establish a free trade zone that spans  the length and breadth of the continent, Ali said. It would boost  commerce between countries, a key step towards development. 
 
 At present, less than 15 percent of African trade stays on the continent - the rest is sold abroad. 
 
 The last item on the AU wish-list is greater involvement of the African  diaspora, said to outnumber Africans at home, in the continent’s  affairs. 
 
 The AU is due to host an African diaspora summit in May, Ali said. 
 
 Ali stressed the importance of the diaspora to the continent:  remittances represent a larger revenue source for Africa than overseas  development aid.