African Union Hosts Critical Peace Summit as Regional Conflicts Intensify

African leaders meet at AU summit to address escalating conflicts in DRC, Sudan and Sahel region, announcing a breakthrough DRC-Rwanda peace deal while facing challenges in funding and external interference.
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Leaders Gather to Forge Path to Stability

The African Union (AU) is convening a high-stakes peace summit in Addis Ababa this week as multiple conflicts threaten regional stability. With crises escalating in the eastern Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), Sudan, and the Sahel region, leaders from across the continent are gathering to develop coordinated conflict-resolution strategies.

DRC-Rwanda Breakthrough

In a significant development during the summit, the AU announced a landmark peace agreement signed between DRC and Rwanda on June 28, 2025. This deal addresses long-standing tensions in mineral-rich eastern DRC, where violence has displaced over 6 million people. The agreement includes joint border patrols and establishes a framework for resource-sharing.

Addressing Multiple Fronts

Beyond the DRC crisis, the summit is tackling:

  • The civil war in Sudan, where fighting has created Africa's largest displacement crisis
  • Jihadist insurgencies in the Sahel region threatening coastal states
  • Political instability in West Africa following recent coups

AU Commission Chairperson Moussa Faki Mahamat emphasized: "We cannot achieve Agenda 2063's development goals while bullets fly. This summit is about African solutions for African problems."

Operational Challenges

Despite progress, challenges remain. The AU Peace Fund remains under-resourced, with only 65% of the $400 million target secured. Additionally, divisions emerged during closed-door sessions regarding the role of external actors like Wagner Group in regional conflicts.