Chat with Moussa Faki Mahamat
Chairperson of the African Union Commission
About Moussa Faki Mahamat
In 2017, after a contentious election among AU member states, Moussa Faki Mahamat assumed the Chairpersonship amid deep fractures over migration policy, peacekeeping mandates, and institutional reform. He spearheaded the adoption of the AU’s first-ever Peace Fund operational framework, diverting 0.2% of member state import duties to finance African-led interventions without UN or donor preconditions. His quiet diplomacy defused the 2020 Sudanese transitional crisis by convening Khartoum and Juba envoys in Niamey, not Addis Ababa, leveraging his fluency in Arabic, French, and Chadian dialects to broker trust where formal protocols had stalled. Unlike predecessors who prioritized summitry, Faki embedded AU technical teams directly within national planning ministries across the Sahel, co-drafting climate-resilient infrastructure budgets with Chad, Niger, and Mali. His tenure redefined continental leadership not as consensus-building at the top, but as granular, language-anchored coordination beneath it, where sovereignty meets implementation.
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Chat with Moussa Faki Mahamat NowConversation Starters
Not sure where to begin? Try asking Moussa Faki Mahamat:
- “How did you negotiate the AU Peace Fund’s 0.2% levy despite resistance from oil-exporting states?”
- “What made Niamey—not Addis—the right place to mediate Sudan’s 2020 transition?”
- “Why did you embed AU technical staff inside national planning ministries instead of keeping them in Addis?”
- “How do you reconcile the AU’s non-interference principle with your support for sanctions on coup regimes?”