Summarise in your own words:

CHAPTER III: Competence of the Court
Article 28: Jurisdiction of the Court
The Court shall have jurisdiction over all cases and all legal disputes submitted to it in accordance with the present Statute which relate to:
(a) the interpretation and application of the Constitutive Act;
(b) the interpretation, application or validity of other Union Treaties and all subsidiary legal instruments adopted within the framework of the Union or the Organization of African Unity;
(c) the interpretation and the application of the African Charter, the Charter on the Rights and Welfare of the Child, the Protocol to the African Charter on Human and Peoples’ Rights on the Rights of Women in Africa, or any other legal instrument relating to human rights, ratified by the States Parties concerned;
(d) The crimes contained in this Statute, subject to a right of appeal.
(e) any question of international law;
(f) all acts, decisions, regulations and directives of the organs of the Union;
(g) all matters specifically provided for in any other agreements that States Parties may conclude among themselves, or with the Union and which confer jurisdiction on the Court;
(h) the existence of any fact which, if established, would constitute a breach of an obligation owed to a State Party or to the Union;
(i) the nature or extent of the reparation to be made for the breach of an international obligation.

Article 28 of Chapter III outlines the jurisdiction of the Court, stating that it has the authority to hear cases related to the interpretation and application of various legal documents, including the Constitutive Act, African Charter, and other human rights instruments. The Court can also address crimes outlined in the Statute, questions of international law, acts of Union organs, and other matters specified in agreements between States Parties. Additionally, the Court can determine if there has been a breach of obligation owed to a State Party or the Union, and decide on the reparations for such breaches.