the official dinner in honour of HE Kofi Annan, Secretary-General of the United
Nations, Tuynhuys, Cape Town
14 March 2006
Your Excellency Mr Kofi Annan, esteemed Member of the Order of the
Companions of OR Tambo and Mme Nane Annan,
Honourable members of the delegation of the Secretary-General,
Deputy President of our Republic Phumzile Mlambo-Ngcuka,
Honourable Ministers and Deputy Ministers,
Your Excellencies Ambassadors and High Commissioners,
Distinguished guests,
Comrades, ladies and gentlemen
The natural order of things permits that only a few human beings ever have
the possibility and responsibility to lead the global family of nations.
Through the ages, many who have had this possibility have derived their
authority from the coldly brutal ability of their nations to impose their will
on the peoples of the world, because of their irresistible economic and
military power.
As Secretary-General of the United Nations, we and billions of others
throughout the world have, for many years, looked up to and accepted you as our
leader, ever ready to respond to your gentle guidance as we engaged in daily
struggle to define the road map that would lead us to the creation of the
humane societies for which all human beings yearn.
We found it easy to accept your leadership because we knew that you did not
have the instruments of power that would oblige us to bend to your will,
against our will.
We respected your leadership because we knew that you would base your own
ability to be our guide on your respect for our own dignity as sovereign human
beings and states, and therefore our ability to think for ourselves and act
rationally in the interest of all humanity.
We were confident that you would never relate to us as objects of policies
elaborated by the powerful, with our role being merely to submit to the will of
others who were superior to us because they disposed of unbridled powers of
coercion.
Esteemed Secretary-General, whenever you have spoken and acted as our
leader, we have understood that you sought to dare us to aspire towards the
creation of a better world. You sought to inspire us to share your dream â the
dream of a new world characterised by the true political, economic and social
liberation of all human beings.
Your high position may not have made it possible for you to petition the
nations to treat your noble dreams, the powerful substance of your moral
leadership, honourably, by citing what the Irish poet, William Butler Yeats,
said in his moving poem entitled, âHe wishes for the Cloths of Heavenâ. The
poem reads:
âHad I the heavens' embroidered cloths,
Enwrought with golden and silver light,
The blue and the dim and the dark cloths
Of night and light and the half-light,
I would spread the cloths under your feet:
But I, being poor, have only my dreams;
I have spread my dreams under your feet;
Tread softly because you tread upon my dreams.â
Had I the power to command you, Mr Secretary-General, I would direct that
you stand up now, in front of this eminent audience and repeat after W B Yeats,
for our nation and all nations to hear your challenge:
âHad I the heavens' embroidered clothsâ¦
I would spread the cloths under your feet:
But I, being poor, have only my dreams;
I have spread my dreams under your feet;
Tread softly because you tread upon my dreams.â
Secretary-General, you assumed office on New Yearâs Day, 1997. When you
conclude your second term on 31 December this year, you will have led the
nations of the world during a decade that encompassed the closing years of the
second millennium and the 20th century, and the opening years of the third
millennium and the 21st century.
Inevitably this transition could not but arouse expectations that as we rang
out the old, we also rang in the new. It was inevitable that some would ask
whether you, the Secretary-General of the United Nations during this supposedly
epoch-making transition, had done anything to ring in the new!
But you also took office just over seven years after the collapse of the
Berlin Wall in 1989, a moment identified by the historians as marking the end
of the Cold War and the beginning of a new world order.
Commenting on this event 10 years later, in 1999, the US âTimeâ magazine
said: âWho are we without the wall? For decades, the ugly scar across the face
of Berlin offered a navigational beacon to the governments of the world. It
reminded them of who they were and who they were not, and differentiated friend
from foeâ¦
âThe tearing down of the wall was a dramatic, unplanned historical triumph
that closed the book on an era. It redefined, mostly for the better, the way
millions of people would live their livesâ¦
âBut 10 years later, those who lived east of the wall are left wondering what
its demise really meantâ¦For the most part they have found that capitalismâs
lavish banquet is laid before a favoured fewâ¦
âThose who fought against communismâ¦now find themselves railing against the
godless consumerism that capitalism has brought in the wake of godless
communism. Even among the victors, the wallâs collapse has posed a troubling
challenge: it is a lot more difficult to define what we are, now that what we
are not is history.â
Caught in the great wash of these historic events, which did indeed define
the way we live, but which for billions was not better, we looked to you,
honoured Secretary-General, to lead us through what were bound to be turbulent
times.
Those among us who see every tomorrow as but the expression of a petty pace
in the evolution of human society, will not have realised that you were called
upon to lead the nations of the world at a time of global turmoil and an
inherent disequilibrium in the structuring of human affairs. At such an
historic moment, there could not be a new imperium that could order the
unfettered demons to be gone, and be obeyed!
In a 4 December 2003 article in the âLos Angeles Timesâ you said, âToday,
the common ground we used to stand on no longer seems solid. In seeking new
common ground for our collective efforts, we need to consider whether the
United Nations itself is well suited to the challenges ahead.â
Writing in the âWall Street Journalâ on 22 February 2005, you returned to
this topic and said: âThe UN cannot expect to survive into the 21st century
unless ordinary people throughout the world feel that it does something for
them â helping to protect them against (both civil and international) conflict,
but also against poverty, hunger, disease and the erosion of their natural
environment. And in recent years, bitter experience has taught us that a world
in which whole countries are left prey to misgovernment and destitution is not
safe for anyone. We must turn the tide against disease and hunger, as well as
against terrorism, the proliferation of deadly weapons and crimeâ¦â
Earlier in 2001, in your Nobel Lecture, when you and the United Nations were
justly awarded the Nobel Peace Prize, you said: âWe have entered the third
millennium through a gate of fire. If today, after the horror of 11 September,
we see better, and we see further, we will realise that humanity is
indivisible. New threats make no distinction between races, nations or regions.
A new security has entered every mind, regardless of wealth and status. A
deeper awareness of the bonds that bind us all â in pain as in prosperity â has
gripped young and old.
âIn the early beginnings of the 21st century â a century already violently
disabused of any hopes that progress towards global peace and prosperity is
inevitable â this new reality can no longer be ignored. It must be
confronted.â
In many ways, daily events underline the enormous pull of centrifugal
impulses in global human society, which communicate the message that the human
centre cannot hold, that things will fall apart and that mere anarchy will be
loosed upon the world.
As an African, part of a great Continent toiling towards its renaissance, I
am proud that a world leader, who is an African, UN Secretary-General Kofi
Annan, has had the courage to stand up against the seeming blood-dimmed tide,
to point humanity in another and more humane direction â that, despite the
representation of phenomenon as essence, a deeper awareness of the bonds that
bind us all, in pain as in prosperity, has gripped young and old, and that
humanity is indivisible.
Our esteemed leader, Kofi Annan, a servant of the peoples of the world and
an African nevertheless, has spread this noble dream under our feet, urging us
to work towards its fulfilment. Whatever we do next, we should tread softly
because we tread upon his dream and ours.
I am privileged to welcome the Secretary-General, his dear wife and his
delegation to our country and thank them for honouring us with their visit. I
welcome them on behalf of all our people, who will never forget the enormous
contribution made by the United Nations to our struggle to achieve our
liberation from the apartheid crime against humanity.
We therefore welcome you, Mr Secretary-General, as a liberator into the
midst of an army of liberators, where you rightly belong. Please consider this
free South Africa as forever your home.
Comrades, ladies and gentlemen, please rise and join me in a toast to the
good health and continued success of the Secretary-General of the United
Nations and Mme Nane Annan, and the revitalisation of the United Nations
Organisation as a true representative of the hopes and aspirations of âWe, the
peopleâ of the world.
The Secretary-General!
Issued by: The Presidency
14 March 2006