Audio By Carbonatix
EU and African leaders have signed a declaration promoting free trade and democracy at a summit in Lisbon beset by rows over trade deals and Zimbabwe. As the Portuguese hosts hailed a "new chapter" in relations, Senegal's president railed against new EU-African trade deals proposed by the EU.
And Zimbabwe's President Robert Mugabe reportedly accused Europe of arrogance in criticising his human rights record.
The hosts have lauded the summit as heralding a new relationship of equals.
The 67 leaders gathered at the summit agreed to work together to forge a new partnership on issues including security, development, trade and good governance.
The BBC's Mark Doyle, in Lisbon, says the joint declaration is hugely ambitious in scope, and that clear differences remain on several issues.
Fragile economies
Angry words flew over trade deals - known as Economic Partnership Agreements - proposed to replace existing agreements due to expire at the end of the year.
"We are not talking any more about EPAs, we've rejected them," said President Abdoulaye Wade of Senegal.
Although some east African nations have already agreed to the deals, many other countries argue that they will damage their fragile economies.
The deals - to replace historical agreements which gave former European colonies preferential trade terms - demand that African countries open their markets to European goods in order to keep tariff-free EU access for their own exports.
The summit was seen as an EU attempt regain lost ground in Africa and combat growing Chinese influence in the continent.
But President Wade said that "Europe is close to losing the battle of competition in Africa".
Our correspondent says that while China has massively increased its investments in Africa, it does not tend to comment on issues such as democracy and human rights.
'Arrogance'
The point was evidenced by tensions over the presence of Mr Mugabe, widely criticised for human rights abuses and economic mismanagement in Zimbabwe.
Although he is banned from the EU, African leaders demanded he be invited to attend. UK Prime Minister Gordon Brown boycotted the meeting in protest.
On Sunday Mr Mugabe was reported to have lambasted four EU countries for "arrogance" in their criticisms, according to a copy of a speech at a closed meeting obtained by French news agency AFP.
His comments came in response to German Chancellor Angela Merkel's earlier assertion that his policies had "damaged Africa".
"It is important that people keep in mind that Africans fought for human rights from oppressive rule," said Mr Mugabe, who is regarded by many African leaders as the heroic liberator of Zimbabwe.
The meeting was the first EU-African summit for seven years. Previous attempts had collapsed over the question of Mr Mugabe's attendance.
Portuguese PM Jose Socrates, who earlier lauded the gathering as a "summit of equals", said it was an achievement in itself that the meeting had taken place.
Source: BBC
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Tags:
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Latest Stories
-
Xenophobic Attacks: First batch of Ghanaians evacuated from South Africa arrive
8 minutes -
Upper West Minister joins muslims in Wa for Eid al-Adha prayers
13 minutes -
TOR receives one million barrels of ‘Bonga Crude’ for refining operations
22 minutes -
National Chief Imam commends President Mahama for key development initiatives
28 minutes -
NADMO warns of possible demolition exercise at Sampah Valley after Weija dam spillage
34 minutes -
Dual citizenship: A privilege or a dangerous illusion?
49 minutes -
President Mahama announces road construction projects in Zongo communities
58 minutes -
SA officials claim only 10 of nearly 300 Ghanaian migrants repatriated were legally in the country
1 hour -
Volta MMDCEs demand extension of Ghana Card registration for school children
1 hour -
WHO urges ceasefire in Congo to contain Ebola as cases surge
1 hour -
New head of Hamas’ military wing killed in Gaza City strikes, Israel saysÂ
1 hour -
Dozens killed in Lebanon as Israeli troops expand ground campaignÂ
1 hour -
Rights group accuses UAE of training Colombian mercenaries for Sudan’s warÂ
2 hours -
DR Congo appeals to FIFA for World Cup ticket refunds amid Ebola travel restrictionsÂ
2 hours -
CUTS lauds BoG on suspension of proposed MTN new charges
2 hours