Abstract:
Within the domain of respect for human and peoples’ rights by African states
there has been, until recently, little unity of purpose. The common standards
that African states have maintained in their laws and practices regarding
human rights have been their willingness to subscribe formally to international
and regional norms, while at the same time, to violate those
undertakings with near impunity. When the Protocol to the African Charter
on the Establishment of the African Court on Human and Peoples’ Rights
(Protocol) comes into force, it will provide for an African court having the
responsibility to hold states to their obligations and to establish continent-wide standards. Thus, within the domain of human rights, the states will
take a step closer to realizing common norms worthy of a continent which
has, as its fundamental underpinning and ethos, the notion of African unity.