Republic of South Africa, Dr Nkosazana Dlamini Zuma at the African
Union-African Diaspora Ministerial Conference, Gallagher Estate, South
Africa
16 November 2007
Honourable Chairperson, His Excellency Mr Kofi Osei-Ameyaw
President of the Republic of South Africa, Mr Thabo Mbeki
Honourable African Union (AU) Commission Chairperson, Professor Oumar
Konare
Honourable Foreign Ministers from different countries
Renowned Caribbean Pan-Africanist, Ambassador Dudley Thompson
CARICOM Assistant Secretary General, Ambassador Colin Granderson
South African Minister of Education, Ms Naledi Pandor
Goodwill Ambassador for Africa, Ms Miriam Makeba
Colleagues from the AU, the Caribbean and Latin America
Fellow Cabinet and government colleagues
Distinguished delegates
Ladies and gentlemen
It gives me great pleasure to warmly welcome you all to South Africa. We
have been pleased that so many people were willing to travel so far to be here
at the southernmost tip of this incredible continent! We are deeply honoured to
have in our presence a dedicated and a long-standing member of the Pan
Africanist Movement and renowned Caribbean Pan-Africanist, Ambassador Dudley
Thompson.
Your presence here will indeed inspire us to take Pan Africanism to greater
heights! It is indeed humbling to host such an historic and distinguished
gathering of the African family from various corners of the globe. A special
welcome to those who have come from outside the African continent, and of
course no-one is a stranger here and this is really a homecoming since Africa
occupies pride of place as the landmass where all humanity has had its origins
and from where our ancestors in successive waves moved to different places and
different times.
This part of South Africa is also home to the Cradle of Humankind, the
Sterkfontein caves, where some of the earliest hominids have been found that
remain as a record of humanity's presence on Earth. South Africa is also home
to some of the earliest rock formations that are found in Barberton not far
from here.
South Africa is also home to some of the most interesting rock paintings
produced by the San peoples in the caves of the Drakensberg Mountains; this is
evidence of the early artworks of humankind. South Africa's diverse landscape
is also home to a variety of wildlife and unique plants and flowers especially
along the coastlands and these are not found anywhere else in the world.
Even in the coastal desert of Namaqualand, there are to be found an array of
plants and species which makes it among the richest deserts on earth. Here the
plants and animals live in symbiotic relations that have helped them to adapt
to the extreme environment and to develop their own survival strategies.
But even as we acknowledge that this is a country of breathtaking landscapes
where two oceans meet and many people and cultures have mingled and coalesced,
it is also a country where our people have had to overcome great injustice. It
is a country where new monuments are being built in honour of our fallen heroes
and where place names for the first time are beginning to reflect histories
that the apartheid government had spent decades trying to destroy.
Apartheid and segregation indeed brought about the widespread impoverishment
of black people who were deprived of land, education, rights, justice and
transformation has meant that every aspect of our people's lives has to be
looked at to bring about democracy in all spheres and deracialisation of the
economy; to create a single and equal education system, to address the massive
backlog in housing, education and health infrastructure as well as access to
clean water and sanitation.
Certainly we are making progress, but there is a great deal that we still
need to do to bring about greater access to all our people for a better quality
of life. This is a country of great challenges but also of immense
possibilities. Our struggle and victory have placed a special responsibility on
all of us. I certainly hope all delegates will spend some time experiencing our
country in all its splendour.
South Africa in its twin quest of renewal and in contributing to a new world
has accepted the honour to host the African-Caribbean Diaspora engagements and
dialogue as part of our contribution to continental freedom and development,
but also for the freedom and development of Africans and people of African
descent all over the world.
This Ministerial Meeting is part of the fulfilment of the mandate given to
us by the AU at its Summit in January 2006. We want to express our profound
gratitude to the AU Commission for its guidance throughout this consultative
process, and especially to Chairperson Professor Konare for his astute
leadership.
Today let us pay particular tribute to the millions of African people
abducted and enslaved and to those who sacrificed their lives in fighting for
national liberation in Africa and in the Diaspora. We also recognise that it
has been Pan Africanist thinking that has guided us and that in our present age
has found practical expression in this particular initiative of the African
Union.
In our present day and age, it is also the scourge of contemporary racism
and the deliberate marginalisation of African people and people of African
descent that brings us together. Among our tasks must be to help to ensure that
the outcomes of the World Conference against Racism (WCAR) of 2001 be fully
implemented on a world scale.
The onus is on this Conference to come up with concrete and implementable
programmes and mechanisms on how Africa and its Diaspora, collectively and
individually, can help to address this and other collective tasks. Let us also
take full cognisance that our work here over the next three days is in
preparation for the Global Summit of 2008.
In conclusion, let us bear in mind that the quest for a new Africa and a new
world is as much about identity and culture as it is about history, politics
and economics. A sustainable social and economic future can only be the product
of people who are proud of who they are, who recognise their cultural ties and
assert themselves with confidence in the world.
Our meeting here is thus also an act of affirmation and a shared
consciousness that we are part of a collective project to build on this
cultural definition arising out of a shared heritage and to assert an identity
that seeks to further liberate us in the present and in the future.
Most importantly, let us pay attention to our youth because our efforts here
today are aimed also at future generations the youth of our countries who own
the future and yet who now need to know the commonalities we share, the areas
of co-operation we envisage and the cultural identity that comes from our
overlapping histories, collective struggles and sharing birthmarks that come
from our Mother Africa.
I am reminded of the words of Frantz Fanon in a letter he wrote to the
youth. He mourned that as colonised people we had been stopped in our tracks
and I quote: "Every urge towards an expression of our nation that is in
conformity with its history, faithful to its tradition, and linked to the very
sap of its soil finds itself limited, stopped, broken."
Now as a free continent and as African people of the free world, let us
ensure that indeed this engagement with ourselves, this dialogue about Africa
and Africans of the Diaspora ought to be part of a collective expression of our
solidarity that is indeed in conformity with our history, faithful to our
tradition and of course linked to the very sap of our soil the African
motherland and every other related space that Africans have claimed as their
own or marked with their presence over centuries.
Let us plant new seeds even as we replenish old roots for our children and
the generations to come!
I thank you.
Issued by: Department of Foreign Affairs
16 November 2007
Source: Department of Foreign Affairs (http://www.dfa.gov.za)