
ADDISA ABBA-(MaraviPost)-The 39th African Union Heads of State Summit wrapped up on Saturday in Ethiopia’s capital, with leaders from across the continent tackling water shortages and ongoing wars in several regions.
Banda was the biggest winner having being Awarded for Excellence in serving humanity.
This year’s summit focused on “Assuring Sustainable Water Availability and Safe Sanitation Systems to Achieve the Goals of Agenda 2063.”
Presidents, former heads of state, and other top officials spent three days talking about how to fix Africa’s water problems and stop the fighting in places like Sudan and eastern Congo.
Dr. Joyce Banda attended the summit after getting invitations from both the African Union and UN Women.
Water Problems Top the Agenda, Leaders at the summit said water security needs to be treated as a top priority.
They tied it directly to economic growth, public health, and dealing with climate change effects that are already hitting the continent hard.
The AU plans to make some big decisions on water and sanitation that could change how African countries develop over the next few years.
Millions of people across Africa still don’t have clean water or proper toilets.
This affects everything from kids getting sick and missing school to businesses struggling to operate.
Wars and Conflicts Get Attention
The summit also dealt with the wars still going on in Sudan, the Democratic Republic of Congo, the Sahel, and Libya.
Leaders talked about finding African solutions to African problems and getting more help to people caught in the fighting.
The push for home-grown answers shows that African countries want more control over how they handle peace and security issues.
Award for Grassroots Work
During the summit, the African Women Leaders Network gave an Award of Excellence to Dr. Joyce Banda, First female and Former President of Malawi.
The award recognized her years of work helping rural villages, city neighborhoods, and fishing communities.
The honor shows how important it is to have leaders who understand what’s happening on the ground and can bring those voices to big meetings like this one.
“This isn’t just about me. It’s about all the communities across Malawi and Africa who need development and peace,” Dr. Joyce Said said after getting the award.
What Comes Next
Now that the summit is over, countries will start putting the decisions on water, peace, and economic ties into action.
What happens next will matter a lot as Africa keeps working toward the goals set out in Agenda 2063, which maps out where the continent wants to be in the coming decades.
The African Union was set up in 2002 and now has 55 member countries working together on peace, unity, and development across the continent.
