Regional Integration, Opportunities and Challenges, Africa Day,
Johannesburg
25 May 2007
This year we celebrated the 50th anniversary of the independence of Ghana,
an event that was to have a profound impact on millions of people throughout
our continent.
It is also the fifth anniversary of the founding of the African Union. As we
meet today to celebrate the 40th anniversary of Africa Day, I am reminded of
the pain, conflict, the shame of poverty and human degradation, the optimism
and confidence of millions in our continent, as so poignantly proclaimed by
President Mbeki in his inauguration speech to the South African Parliament. I
quote:
"I am an African. I am born of the peoples of the continent of Africa.
"The pain of the violent conflict that the peoples of Liberia, Somalia, the
Sudan, Burundi and Algeria experience is a pain I also bear. The dismal shame
of poverty, suffering and human degradation of my continent is a blight that we
share.
"The blight on our happiness that derives from this and from our drift to
the periphery of the ordering of human affairs leaves us in a persistent shadow
of despair. This is a savage road to which nobody should be condemned. This
thing that we have done today, in this small corner of a great continent that
has contributed so decisively to the evolution of humanity, says that Africa
reaffirms that she is continuing her rise from the ashes.
"Whatever the setbacks of the moment, nothing stops us now!
Whatever the difficulties, Africa shall be at peace!
However improbable it may sound to the sceptics, Africa will prosper!
Whoever we may be, whatever our immediate interest, however much we carry
baggage from our past, however much we have been caught by the fashion of
cynicism and loss of faith in the capacity of the people, let us say today:
Nothing can stop us now!"
President Mbeki (Africa the time has come)
As we seek to meet these challenges we have to look critically at a number
of important factors including:
* the dominance of one major power and the absence of a balance of power in
the global system
* the continuing move to unilateralism and the weakening of the multilateral
system
* the stark failure of attempts at United Nations reforms
* failure to challenge the hegemony of neo-liberalism
* the failure to develop a response to globalisation, which will ensure that it
benefits all
* uneven development between and within countries
* increasing marginalisation and increasing poverisation of many
countries
* failure of development round of World Trade Organisation (WTO) talks
* unprecedented international division of labour.
No amount of measures will stop the tide of Africans, desperate to escape
poverty and underdevelopment, from seeking to find better pastures in Europe.
Europe canât be an island of prosperity in a sea of poverty.
Failure of reform of Bretton Woods Institutions
Our dream of making the 21st century the African century
"We must recognise that global poverty constitutes the deepest and most
dangerous structural fault in the contemporary world economy and global
societies. It constitutes the most challenging structural fault. Logically,
this means that the correction of this fault has to be at the centre of the
politics, policies and programmes of progressive thinking."
President Mbeki, we hope to achieve this in conditions of the accelerated
pace of globalisation. Whilst globalisation is creating immense opportunities
of growth and wealth creation for some, it has produced an abundance of poverty
for millions. Increasingly the world is being constructed into two contrasting
global villages.
In 2000 the historic Millennium Summit Declaration proclaimed that "we
believe that the central challenge we face today is to ensure that
globalisation becomes a positive force for all the world's people. For, while
globalisation offers great opportunities, at present its benefits are very
unevenly shared, while its costs are unevenly distributed. We recognise that
developing countries and countries with economies in transition face special
difficulties in responding to this central challenge. Thus, only through broad
and sustained efforts to create a shared future, based upon our common humanity
in all its diversity, can globalisation be made fully inclusive and
equitable."
The summit resolved to, inter alia, halve by the year 2015, the proportion
of the world's people whose income is less than one dollar a day and the
proportion of people who suffer from hunger and, by the same date, to halve the
proportion of people who are unable to reach or to afford safe drinking
water.
By the same date, to have reduces maternal mortality by three quarters, and
under-five child mortality by two-thirds of their current rates.
To have, by then, halted and begun to reverse, the spread of HIV and AIDS,
the scourge of malaria and other major diseases that afflict humanity.
Despite recent studies showing improved economic performance in sub-Saharan
Africa, nowhere else is the need for reform of the international system more
urgent that in Africa.
Kofi Annan: "With the number of chronically hungry people on the rise around
the globe and living standards in some countries diminishing instead of
improving, the world is falling a long way short in its drive to achieve the
Millennium Development Goals."
What is Africa's reality?
* Over 40% of sub-Saharan African people live below the international
poverty line of US$1 a day.
* Thirty four of the world's 41 highly indebted poor countries are in
Africa.
* The cost to Africa of servicing its foreign debt of United States 349 billion
in 1997 amounted to 21,3% of its earnings from the export of goods and
services.
* Africa with almost one-sixth the world's population accounts for only
one-fiftieth of global trade- and its share is diminishing.
* The high mineral commodities change prices and the discovery of new oil
reserves can change the bleak picture.
* Only 76% of Africa's children attend primary school and only 26% go on to
secondary school.
* Less than four percent receive tertiary education, compared with 51% in
developed countries.
Despite the recent commitments to increase overseas development assistance
(ODA) to Africa, in absolute terms, bilateral ODA flows to African economies
have dropped in the last decade and is well short of the estimated $50 billion
a year requires to reach the Millennium Development Goals.
Capital flights continue
Brain drain continues
Clearly the vast majority of sub-Saharan African countries will not meet the
MDGs.
What is to be done?
The consolidation of the African Agenda serves as a pillar upon which we
seek to achieve our developmental goals. This requires a long-term commitment
to the successful restructuring of our Regional Economic Communities (RECs),
strengthening of the AU structures and organs, including the implementation of
the New Partnership for Africa's Development (Nepad) and ensuring peace,
stability and security in Africa within the framework of the AU Post-Conflict
Reconstruction and Development policy (PCRD).
The vehicle for achieving the aims of Nepad is the African Union, which was
launched in Durban 2002 to replace the Organisation of African Unity
(OAU).
The key institutions have been operationalised:
* the Assembly
* the Executive and Permanent Representative Committee
* Pan-African Parliament (South Africa has five representatives). We are
hosting the Headquarters of Pan African Parliament (PAP).
Work is progressing on operationalising the other institutions:
* Economic Social and Cultural Civil Society
* Court of Justice
* African Central Bank
* African Monetary Fund
* African Investment Bank
Sub-regional structures are the building blocks of Nepad.
Today I will speak about integration in Southern African Development
Community (SADC). I am sure that in many ways it reflects what is happening in
all our Regional Economic Communities (RECs).
SADC is the primary vehicle for South African policy and action to achieve
regional integration and development within all priority development sectors.
SADC is recognised as a building block of the African Union (AU) and serves as
a key Nepad implementing agent. It is an objective of the South African
government to seek to enhance the capacity of SADC in order for it to provide a
framework within which each member state would have the opportunity to reach
its full potential in terms of peace, security, stability and economic and
social development, as well as civil society participation and gender
equity.
SADC's Regional Indicative Strategic Development Plan (RISDP) is the
regional expression of Nepad priorities and objectives, which will ensure that
the SADC's development agenda works in tandem with the AU. RISDP is also
brought into relation to the SADC organ on politics, defence and security
co-operation is concerned with regional defence and security matters, including
issues such as drug trafficking, conflict prevention and post-conflict
reconstruction.
The Extraordinary SADC summit held in Midrand on 23 October 2006 was
convened for the specific purpose of reviewing the status of regional economic
integration in Southern Africa, and to propose measures to accelerate the
implementation of the SADC economic integration agenda. The summit reaffirmed
its commitment to regional economic development and underlined the need to
mobilise resources in order to address issues of infrastructure, food security
and other supply side challenges within the Southern African region.
The summit noted that it is through the development of supportive
infrastructure that the regional trade potential can be harnessed to the
benefit of the people of the region. The summit recognised the need for
complementary instruments and policies to support the regional economic
integration process, in order to achieve high and sustainable economic growth
and development in order to eradicate poverty. To this end, the summit urged
all member states to formulate policies to forge convergence of SADC economies.
The summit reaffirmed the need to ensure that the process of deepening
integration in SADC must always observe the principle of member states' equity,
balanced development and mutual benefit.
The summit also noted that SADC's trade patterns consisted mainly of
commodities, to which end there was a need to diversify the economies of SADC
member states and increase intra-regional trade and growth. In addition, the
summit noted that the establishment of the SADC Free Trade Area within SADC
must take cognisance of developmental integration elements such as
infrastructure, poverty alleviation and sustainable development. Of particular
significance, the Summit concluded that the SADC Free Trade Area programme was
on course and that it will be launched, as planned, by 2008.
The summit underscored the need for SADC to scale-up the implementation of
its regional integration agenda. The summit reiterated that RISDP and SIPO are
the main instruments for scaling-up regional integration in SADC.
President Mbeki articulated the priority areas within SADC as follows:
* promotion of macro-economic convergence around agreed indicators
* progress in terms of infrastructure development cooperation programmes
* spatial development initiatives and sectoral programmes
* achievement of some level of harmonisation of industrial development
strategies and competition policies, as called for in the SADC Trade
Protocol
* elaboration of a detailed and realistic activity matrix necessary to create
the SADC Free Trade Area, to include processes to achieve balanced, mutually
beneficial regional economic integration.
SADC has adopted a time frame for its integration process:
* the formation of a Free Trade Area by 2008
* the completion of negotiations of the SADC Customs Union by 2010
* the completion of negotiations of the SADC Common Market by 2015
* the diversification of industrial structures and exports with more emphasis
on value addition across all economic sectors by 2015
* increase in intra-regional trade to at least 35% by 2008
* increase in manufacturing as a % of Gross Domestic Product (GDP) to 25% by
2015.
The Regional Indicative Strategic Development Plan is indicative benchmarks
and not prescriptive.
As such, the target dates could be aspired to, and should not be cast in
stone. We must use our political will to effectively and efficiently to provide
the momentum-driver in the area of trade/economic liberalisation and
development, which will provide for the free movement of goods, services and
factors of production, and intra-regional investment and foreign direct
investment.
We are concerned at the lack of momentum-drivers regarding the development
of efficient infrastructure and services to facilitate the free movement of
people, goods and services across the region. This falls primarily within the
ambit of member statesâ sovereignty, which states are unwilling to compromise
despite the necessity to accrue regional benefits through integration.
In all SADC member states, and in particular South Africa (because of its
centrality in the regional development and integration process), there is an
urgent need to focus the implementation of RISDP towards spatial development
initiatives (development corridors, growth triangles, growth centres and
transfrontier conservation areas).
There is an urgent need for a closer alignment and mutual reinforcement of
South Africa's multilateral and bilateral priorities within Southern Africa.
The aim of this approach should be to give actual effect to South Africa's
stated intention that its efforts in Southern Africa should be aimed at 'â¦the
maximisation of the potential of each SADC member state in terms of security
and stability; economic and social development and civil society interactionâ¦';
in support of the revitalisation of the SADC development and integration
agenda, in particular the effective operationalisation of RISDP, Strategic
Indicative Plan of the Organ (SIPO) and Nepad'.
It is imperative that attention be given to the implementation of all SADC
Protocols. This implies an aggressive action plan that will examine the extent
to which South Africa has achieved implementation. Furthermore, this must be a
priority in multilateral and bilateral engagements with SADC countries.
The objectives of the Southern African Development Community (SADC) is to
promote sustainable and equitable economic growth and socio-economic
development through efficient productive systems, deeper integration and
co-operation, good governance, and durable peace and security, in order for
Southern Africa to emerge as a competitive and effective player in
international relations and the world economy. To this end, SADC pursues a
development integration approach, recognising the political and economic
diversities of the constituent member states, including their diverse
production structures, trade patterns, resource endowments, development
priorities, institutional affiliations, and resource allocation mechanisms.
SADC strives for the achievement of balanced and equitable regional
integration as a fundamental condition for:
* The sustained and sustainable development of the Southern African
region.
* The shared success in freeing the ordinary working people of the region from
the scourges of unemployment, poverty and underdevelopment.
* Creating a firm basis for the region successfully to respond to the
challenges of globalisation, including strengthening South-South relations of
equitable and mutually beneficial co-operation.
* The creation of the possibility for Southern Africa to make its necessary
contribution as a region to the vitally important project of African
integration and unity.
* The regions' related capacity to contribute to the emergence of a new world
order that would fully restore Africa and the African Diaspora to their
rightful place among the world community of nations.
SADC therefore serves as the primary vehicle for South African foreign
policy and action to achieve regional development and integration within
Southern Africa.
In November 2006, President Thabo Mbeki remarked:
"â¦we must make the point that this integration is not an end in itself. It
is an important part of the objective shared by SADC member states, as rapidly
as possible to reduce poverty and underdevelopment, improve the lives of all
our people and achieve balanced and shared growth and development for the
countries of our region. It therefore follows that the steps we must take along
the path to integration cannot be measured just against technical indicators
but by the extent to which they contribute to our shared developmental
goals".
In May 2006, the Economic Commission for Africa Report Assessing Regional
Integration in Africa (ECA) stated that Regional Economic Communities (RECs) in
Africa lacked dynamism because of the actions and inactions of their member
states. According to ECA, a deeper understanding of the situation in the RECs
was feasible only after exploring how regional integration processes are viewed
and implemented at the national level. ECA found that agreed integration
objectives were not adequately internalised, and that delays in ratifying
protocols were inclined to hamper the timely implementation of decisions.
Broad-based support for integration was lacking, relegating civil society and
the private sector to the role of being spectators to the process. To this end,
it was ECA's conclusion that African governments should review their
organisational structures in order to implement their regional agreements.
ECA also found that, in the majority of African countries, regional
cooperation did not proceed beyond signing treaties and protocols.
Specifically, there was no inclination by member states to integrate the
objectives of the treaties within the required timeframes, or with the
requisite commitment in national development plans, or in the sectoral
programmes of appropriate line-function ministries and departments. ECA found
that the inability to translate REC goals into budgets and national plans could
also be attributed to lack of commitment to integration. Where political
commitment existed, it was easier for a country to draw up its national
development plans, strategies, and programmes with regional considerations and
with the regional market as the point of reference.
Despite all weaknesses, obstacles and challenges, there is a major
transformation process that is taking place on the African continent that is
anchored on key principles of African ownership and leadership, self-reliance
and a new partnership with the developed and developing world that is based on
mutual respect, responsibility and accountability.
The regional process of economic integration must be viewed within the
context of the continental efforts towards economic and political integration.
It will be recalled that the AU Heads of State and Government at their meeting
held in Sirte, Libya in July 2005, reaffirmed that the ultimate goal of the
African Union is to realise a full political and economic integration leading
to the United States of Africa. The Union Government was envisaged to have
identifiable goals based on a set of clear, shared values and common interests.
In order to effectively drive the African integration agenda, South Africa must
ensure that the regional and continental processes are complementary and
mutually supportive.
The AU summit held in Banjul, Gambia in July 2006 recognised the pace of
integration on the continent must be accelerated. Africa cannot become a
full-fledged member of the international community without having achieved its
own monetary and economic integration.
An African Foreign ministers meeting was held in Durban from 8 to 10 May
2007, to prepare for the grand debate summit to be held in Ghana at the end of
June 2007.
This effort of African leaders to wrestle Africa out of its present
conditions of underdevelopment has found its ultimate expression in the New
Partnership for Africa's Development (Nepad).
The Nepad sectoral programmes cover many priorities such as agriculture,
science and technology, human development, industrialisation, transport,
environment, economic integration etc. Taken in totality, they address the
important objectives of selfâreliance and the internal and regional
integration, conflict prevention, management and resolution, political,
economic and corporate governance, protection and promotion of democracy and
human rights and people-centred development.
Chairperson
Kofi Annan: "We will not enjoy development without security, we will not
enjoy security without development and we will not enjoy either without respect
for human rights."
Africans also have to deal with democracy, good governance and human rights.
However we believe that democracy cannot be force-fed, but must develop with
the realities of each country.
Through the African Peer Review Mechanism (APRM), Nepad introduces a
voluntary instrument for monitoring compliance with the principles, priorities
and objectives of the Constitutive Act and other decisions of the African Union
(AU). It provides a mechanism for peer learning and the sharing of information
and best practice. Participation in the APRM is voluntary. 24 countries have
joined. Two countries have been reviewed. SA is presently being reviewed.
Chairperson
According to the latest Amnesty International report
Our world is as polarised as it was at the height of the Cold War and in
many ways far more dangerousâ¦.
The politics of fear is fuelling a downward spiral of human rights abuses in
which no rights are sacrosanct. The United State America (USA) administration
is treating the word as one giant battlefield for its war on terror."
We must interrogate this report to determine whether it is correct and what
the consequences will be on our developmental agenda. International paradigm
today:
End of the Cold War:
* emergence of a hegemonic super-power
* no peace dividends in the post Cold war period
* 11 September 2001 yet another decisive moment
* ascendancy of Neo-Conservatives
* National Security Strategy Document (Nov 2001)
We are now confronted with concepts such as:
* axis of evil
* rogue states
* failed states
Any country that falls within any one of these categories will be vulnerable
to unilateral preventative action and regime change.
To justify such actions, which are in violation of the UN Charter and
International law, concepts have been introduced such as:
* clash of civilisations
* religious crusades
* Islamo- Fascism
What then is the reality that we have to confront presently?
* no common vision of global security
* disregard for the United Nations Charter and international Law
* environmental degradation, energy security, HIV and AIDS and other infectious
diseases.
* the transformation of the very nature of war as witnessed in Afghanistan and
Iraq. Space war is also becoming a reality
* globalisation of crime and drug syndicates
* unprecedented growth of Anti-Americanism and the consequent unprecedented
spread of terrorism and their potential links with weapons of mass
destruction.
It is in this context that we must look at African conflicts
African conflicts
* Burundi
* Sudan
* Cote d'Ivoire
* Somalia
* Western Sahara
* Zimbabwe
* Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC)
Organisational structure
* Peace and Security Council
* African Standby Force
* Committee of the Wise
* Early warning
Chairperson
Can we have a "better South Africa, a better Africa, a better world" if we
do not fundamentally restructure the global political and economic
governance.
George Monbiot in his latest book, The Age of Consent: a manifesto for a new
global order, correctly points out that up until now:
"Everything has been globalised except our consent. A handful of men in the
richest nations use the global powers they have assumed to tell the rest of the
world how to live."
He tells us that this age of coercion needs to be replaced by an age of
consent and that we need to discover the means of introducing a new world
order, in which the world's institutions are run by and for their people."
We seek to transform the global exercise of power in a world order that is
characterised, inter-alia, by:
* Unilateralism versus rules based global system (erosion of
multilateralism)
* Networks and alliances based on specific issues (e.g. coalition of the
willing)
* Narrow national interests and the tendency to make the fight against
terrorism the overarching framework for dealing with the complex problem
humanity faces, often supersede adherence to international law and has a major
negative impact on Africa's stability, security and developmental agenda.
A major study, "The rule of Power or the rule of Law by the Institute for
Energy and Environmental Research and the Committee for Nuclear Policy
concluded that the USA has violated, compromised or acted to undermine in some
crucial way every treaty that we have studied in detail, including the nuclear
non-proliferation treaty, the Comprehensive Test Ban treaty and the
Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty. According to the report, the USA is devising a
way from regarding treaties as an essential element in global security to a
more opportunistic standoff abiding by treaties only when it is
convenient".
* Unequal world trading and financial systems
Kofi Annan (Sept 2006)
"We face a world whose divisions threaten the very notion of an international
community upon which the UN stands for. The events of last 10 years have not
resolved but sharpened the challenges of our unjust world economy, world
disorder and contempt for human rights and the rule of law".
Why?
President Mbeki: "Perhaps the mistake we made was to assure that
contemporary distribution of power in human society would permit this outcome
seen that regardless of this fundamental consideration, it would be possible
for the concerns of the poor to take precedence on the global agenda and the
global programme of action. However, "because of the space the powerful occupy,
relative to the power equation, what they decide will necessary constitute the
global decision of what constitute the central, principal and most urgent
threat and challenge to human society, necessitating various changes in the
global system of governance. What they will decide will translate into a set of
obligatory injunctions issues by the United Nation, which all member states
will have to accept and implement".
We comforted or perhaps deluded ourselves with the thought that this
organisation is the most universal and most representative organisation in the
world. Afraid to ask the question is it?
The challenge facing Africans is how do we make the UN the "most universal
and representative organisation" so that the fundamental challenges we have
identified can be successfully dealt with.
The challenge, inter alia, demands urgent reforms to make the UN more
relevant to current realities. There is a need to transform all the organs of
the UN to enable it to become more streamlined, efficient, effective,
transparent and representative.
We therefore firmly support the restructuring of the UN and all its related
institution, the General Assembly (GA), the Security Council, the Bretton Woods
Institutions - Economic, Cultural and Social Council (ECOSOCC), World Health
Organisation (WHO), and the World Trade Organisation (WTO).
Africa must also intensify all efforts for the transformation of other
multilateral institutions- the Non-Aligned Movement, the Commonwealth, The
Socialist International, Group of 77 (G-77) plus China
Conclusion
The new world order that is emerging is unsustainable. In the interest of
humanity we must address the concerns of the billions of people in the world
who are marginalised.
The Millennium Declaration identified fundamental values that were essential
to international relations in the twenty-first century, these included:
* Freedom. The right to live in dignity, free from hunger and from the fear
of violence, oppression or injustice.
*·Equality. All must have the opportunity to benefit from development.
* Solidarity. Distribution of costs and burdens fairly in accordance with basic
principles of equity and social justice.
*Tolerance. Respect for diversity of belief, culture and language. Differences
should be cherished as an asset of humanity. Promote a culture of peace and
dialogue among all nations.
* Respect for nature. Prudent management of all living species and natural
resources, in accordance with the precepts of sustainable development. Only in
this way can the immeasurable riches provided to us by nature be preserved and
passed on to our descendants. The current unsustainable patterns of production
and consumption must be changed in the interest of our future welfare and that
of our descendants.
* Shared responsibility. Responsibility for managing worldwide economic and
social development, as well as threats to international peace and security,
must be shared among the nations of the world and should be exercised
multilaterally.
The United Nations must play the central role.
"â¦all Africa has this single aim; our goal is a united Africa in which the
standards of life and liberty are constantly expanding; in which the ancient
legacy of illiteracy and disease is swept aside; in which the dignity of man is
rescued from beneath the heels of colonialism which have trampled it."(Albert
Luthuli accepting the Nobel Peace Prize 1961).
Forty six years later what has been achieved? What remains to be done?
Issued by: Department of Foreign Affairs
25 May 2007