Africa has of course experienced a few hundred coups since its first state became independent in 1957.
For many years, the leadership of Africa almost accepted coups as a routine method of transferring power. But that started to change in July 1999.
At its summit in Algiers that month, the Organisation of African Unity approved an historic resolution to outlaw coups.
Departing quite radically from its 36-year-old policy of non-intervention in the affairs of member states, the OAU leaders decreed that henceforth governments that came to power by coups, or other unconstitutional means, would be suspended from the organisation.
The OAU suspended the governments of Cote d'Ivoire and the Comoros soon after that. In the latter case, it began protracted negotiations to defuse the intra-party conflicts which had sparked several coups over the years.
When the African Union (AU) took over from the OAU, it also took over the anti-coup policy and strengthened it, at least on paper, by giving itself much more explicit powers to intervene in countries to stop extreme violence and abuses of power.
Last year the AU - with the South African government very much to the fore - reversed, by diplomacy, a coup in S‹o Tomé and Pr’ncipe, the Atlantic ocean island state near Bioko, the island where Equatorial Guinea's capital Malabo is located.
http://www.thestar.co.za/index.php?fArticleId=372493&fSectionId=233&fSetId=257A foreign-planned coup against the government of Equatorial Guinea has just been thwarted (March 9, 2004) and the entire continent of Africa wants to see the mercenaries get a dose of their own medicine, ie swing by the neck until they are dead. The mercenaries are alleged to hold South African passports but that did not stop the government of South Africa from ratting them out and then not agitating for their release.
South African Foreign Affairs Minister Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma said that her department was in no rush to assist the South Africans in Zimbabwe, or at least seven others among those under house arrest in Equatorial Guinea.
“They are not exactly innocent travellers finding themselves in a difficult situation,” she was quoted as saying.
http://www.examiner.ie/breaking/2004/03/11/story137872.htmlThe Caribbean should follow suit.
CARICOM should outlaw coups.
Now would be a good time to start, and I am SURE that they could ask Africa for assistance if need be.
"Even the US and Britain cannot do what they are doing to other countries. In Zimbabwe it is very impossible," he said.
http://allafrica.com/stories/200403190204.html