Africa: AU and Member States Chart Path for Women, Peace, and Security Agenda and Highlight National Progress in Cotonou Meeting

Africa: AU and Member States Chart Path for Women, Peace, and Security Agenda and Highlight National Progress in Cotonou Meeting


The Political Affairs, Peace and Security Department (PAPS) of the African Union Commission, through its Gender Peace and Security Programme (GPSP) and FemWise-Africa Secretariat, in partnership with Nett4Peace and GIZ, successfully convened Member States in Benin for the Annual Coordination Meeting on the Women, Peace, and Security (WPS) Agenda, marking 25 years since UN Security Council Resolution 1325 (UNSCR 1325). The high-level gathering brought together AU Member States that have adopted National Action Plans (NAPs) on UN Security Council Resolution 1325 (UNSCR 1325), providing a strategic platform to assess implementation progress, exchange best practices, and develop accelerated strategies to address emerging challenges including climate insecurity, digital threats, and persistent gender inequalities in peace processes.

Held at a critical juncture – 25 years after UNSCR 1325’s adoption – the meeting aligned with the AU’s continental study assessing WPS Agenda implementation in Africa. The study evaluates progress, identifies barriers, and highlights local solutions while addressing emerging challenges like political transitions, climate change, and digital security threats. Its findings will strengthen policy coherence, improve financing, and amplify women’s leadership to inform actionable recommendations for inclusive security strategies across the continent.

Delegates underscored the urgent need to translate Women, Peace, and Security (WPS) policy commitments into tangible action, particularly in addressing evolving conflict dynamics, terrorism, climate-related insecurity, gender-based violence, and the weaponization of digital technologies. Participants reaffirmed the critical role of governments in implementing WPS commitments, emphasizing the need for greater policy alignment, sustainable funding, and women’s meaningful participation in conflict prevention and peacebuilding. These discussions directly informed the AU’s ongoing continental study, ensuring its recommendations address implementation gaps while accelerating impact across the continent.