Republic of South Africa, Dr Nkosazana Dlamini Zuma, to the Slovak Foreign
Policy Association, Bratislava, Slovakia
12 June 2007
"View of the Republic of South Africa on the Future of the African
Continent"
Programme Director
Honourable Slovak MFA State Secretary, Ms Diana Strofova
Honourable Members of SFPA Board of Directors
Honourable Members of Parliament
Representatives of Government and Political Parties
Members of the Diplomatic Corps
Slovak Scholars on Africa
Members of the Slovak Foreign Policy Affairs (SFPA)
Journalists and Entrepreneurs
Distinguished guests
Ladies and gentlemen
It is indeed a pleasure and privilege to be with you today. I wish to thank
the Slovak Foreign Policy Association (SFPA) for inviting me to address its
distinguished members on the future of our beloved continent, Africa.
Allow me to thank Minister Kubis for his invitation to visit this beautiful
country which due to its rich cultural heritage proudly boasts five United
Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organisation (UNESCO) World
Heritage sites. I am equally impressed with a beauty and cultural richness of
your city, situated at the confluence of the Danube and Morava Rivers. I trust
during my next visit to Slovakia I will see more of your beautiful country.
South Africa's relations with the Republic of Slovakia are good and growing
apace. Minister Kubis and I held constructive discussions on a wide range of
issues and agreed that we need to further widen and deepen our political and
economic ties. We signed a Memorandum of Co-operation between our two
Ministries, which provides for enhanced political consultations on a regular
basis on bilateral, regional and multilateral issues of mutual interest.
We also concurred that given the expanding nature of our respective
economies, South Africa and Slovakia need to actively explore ways and means to
further boost our economic interactions through the Joint Council for Economic
Consultations.
Ladies and gentlemen
We meet today at an interesting period in our histories; the 50th
anniversary of the establishment of the European Union (EU) and of the 50th
anniversary of Ghanaian Independence. The establishment of the EU, arguably the
most important development in shaping the present Europe was indeed a historic
evolution which advanced the integration of the continent by extending a zone
of stability and prosperity to more and more members after generations of
divisions and conflict.
Fifty years ago, Ghana (then called the Gold Coast) became the first
sub-Saharan country to gain its independence. The Ghanaian independence
inspired Africans to greater heights and opened the floodgates to political
liberation throughout Africa.
The first President of Ghana, His Excellency Kwame Nkrumah, proclaimed to
the world that the independence of Ghana was meaningless unless it was linked
to the total liberation of the African continent.
Indeed this kindled the fire of liberation that swept across the entire
continent. The Organisation of African Unity (OAU) came into being, premised on
unity and solidarity. Its main responsibility is to be the liberation of Africa
from colonial rule and the destruction of apartheid.
The end of apartheid in South Africa and the inauguration of Nelson Mandela
brought an end to the anti-apartheid and the anti-colonial struggles. The
African continent was free at last and was free forever except for Western
Sahara still struggling for self-determination.
Speaking at the OAU Summit in Tunis in June 1994, then President Nelson
Mandela expressed this position very passionately when he stated that:
"Finally, at this summit meeting in Tunis, we shall remove from our agenda
the consideration of the question of apartheid in South Africa.
"Where South Africa appears on the agenda again, let it be because we want
to discuss what its contribution shall be to the making of the new African
renaissance. Let it be because we want to discuss what materials it will supply
for the rebuilding of the African city of Carthage.
"One epoch with its historic tasks has come to an end. Surely, another must
commence with its own challenges. Africa cries out for a new birth, Carthage
awaits the restoration of its glory.
"If freedom was the crown which the fighters of liberation sought to place
on the head of mother Africa, let the upliftment, the happiness, prosperity and
comfort of her children be the jewel of the crown.
"There can be no dispute among us that we must bend every effort to rebuild
the African economies."
With the end of apartheid, the major challenges facing the continent were no
longer the anti-colonial and anti-apartheid struggles.
This generation had to define its own mission according to the new
challenges facing Africa in a globalised world. Africa at the time was said to
be a hopeless, dark continent. It was totally marginalised, poor and
underdeveloped.
It is up to Africans to turn it into a continent of hope, a continent of
possibilities, to pull it from the margins of the world and to transform it
into a vibrant and prosperous continent.
President Thabo Mbeki, then Deputy President at the adoption of Democratic
South Africa's new constitution in 1996, had this to say in his speech entitled
"I am an African":
"I am an African.
"I owe my being to the hills and the valleys, the mountains and the glades,
the rivers, the deserts, the trees, the flowers, the seas and the ever-changing
seasons that define the face of our native land.
"My body has frozen in our frosts and in our latter day snows. It has thawed
in the warmth of our sunshine and melted in the heat of the midday sun. The
crack and the rumble of the summer thunders, lashed by startling lightening,
have been a cause both of trembling and of hopeâ¦
"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 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 can stop 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 err today and
say - nothing can stop us now!"
This sums up the view of South Africa on the future of the African
continent. We have declared the 21st Century the African century.
The African Union (AU) was born out of this determination that "whatever the
setbacks of the moment", "whatever the difficulties", Africa will be at peace
and that, however improbable it may sound to some, Africa will prosper.
In 2002 the African Union was launched in Durban, South African.
The Constitutive Act of the AU states, amongst other things, that this
organisation is:
"Inspired by the noble ideals which guided the founding fathers of our
Continental Organisation and generations of Pan Africanists in their
determination to promote unity, solidarity, cohesion and co-operation among the
peoples of Africa and African States
"Recalling the heroic struggles waged by our peoples and our countries for
political independence, human dignity and economic emancipation
"Determined to take up the multifaceted challenges that confront our
continent and peoples in the light of the social, economic and political
changes taking place in the world
"Guided by our common vision of a united and strong Africa and by the need
to build a partnership between governments and all segments of civil society,
in particular women, youth and the private sector in order to strengthen
solidarity and cohesion among our peoples"
Among its objectives is the
* acceleration of the political and socio-economic integration of the
continent.
* promotion of peace, security and stability on the continent.
* promotion of sustainable development at the economic and cultural levels as
well as the integration of Africa's economies.
* promotion of gender equality.
Africa has also taken a decision to strive for gender parity. Women are a
central component of our population. Without them being agents for change,
Africa will not reach its full potential.
The AU will be five years old in July. It has established its own Peace and
Security Council which is continuously in session in Addis Ababa through our
permanent representatives. It meets at Ministerial and Summit level as the
situation dictates.
We have just established the Council of the Wise which is a body of eminent
African personalities not in government. This body has to act in response to
the early warning of an evolving problem in our states. This intervention has
to be done very early to prevent conflict.
We are in the process of establishing an African Standby Force. This will
consist of five Brigades. One Brigade each from the five sub regions of the AU,
namely North, West, Central, East and Southern regions. This will then form our
rapid response in peace keeping whilst waiting for the ever slow, sluggish
response of the United Nations Security Council (UNSC) to African problems.
The Pan African Parliament which has its seat in the Republic of South
Africa has been established. Initially it is a consultative parliament with no
legislative powers. It is to develop common values of good governance, respect
for human rights, values of peaceful resolution of conflict etc. This will be
reviewed after five years.
The judges of the African Human Rights Court were chosen in July last year.
Soon this court will be functioning. We are also in the process of establishing
a Court of Justice.
Eventually we shall establish the following financial institutions:
* the African Central Bank
* the African Monetary Fund
* the African Investment Fund
The Economic Social and Cultural Council need strengthening. These are the
important institutions of the African Union (AU).
Recognising the crucial need for sustainable development, the New
Partnership for Africa's Development was developed: Nepad. Nepad identifies
some priorities for the African continent in order to deal with poverty and
underdevelopment. These are:
* peace security and stability
* respect for human rights and good governance
* infrastructure development
* transport
* energy
* information Communication Technology (ICT)
* water and sanitation infrastructure
* agriculture - food security
* human resource development
* education, training and skills development
* health
* market access
* expansion of industrial base - value addition
* gender party.
The underlying principles of Nepad are:
* Partnership: While Nepad is foremost a partnership between and amongst
Africans, it seeks to accelerate sustainable development in Africa through
partnerships with the South, and to forge a new partnership with the developed
North that changes the unequal relationship with Africa.
* Accountability: Nepad recognises the importance of good political, economic
and corporate governance in creating the conditions for development, with
African governments embracing greater accountability to their constituents. The
African Peer Review Mechanism (APRM) is not only good for accountability, but
for sharing best practice and for strengthening the identified weak areas. To
date 26 countries have joined, while Ghana, Rwanda and Kenya have been
reviewed. Reviews of South Africa and Algeria are almost completed.
* Ownership: Nepad is a long-term vision that is African led and owned.
Ownership is promoted through broad and deep participation by all sectors of
society, and by tapping into indigenous knowledge or expertise to define needs
and solutions.
Nepad complements the Constitutive Act by providing a holistic,
comprehensive and integrated strategic policy framework and programme of
action. According to a 2005 report by the Economic Commission for Africa
entitled: "Progress towards Good Governance in Africa", there are four
identifiable positive trends on the road to creating capable states in
Africa:
1. Democratic transition: Many African countries have made significant
strides, evolving from authoritarian or military regimes to more democratic
arrangements.
2. Political inclusiveness: Many African countries are seeking to ensure that
the executive and legislative arms of government reflect the profile of their
people in regional, ethnic, racial and religious terms.
3. Voice and accountability: New avenues are being created across Africa to
allow citizens to participate in the political process to express their demands
without fear of retribution.
4. Public financial management and accountability: More countries are running
smaller deficits, meeting their targets for revenue mobilisation, managing
their tax systems more effectively, improving fiscal transparency and creating
institutions and arrangements for better auditing of public funds.
However, the challenges remain immense.
We need to heed the global warnings of scientists examining the effects of
climate change. If not considered at the outset, these will hinder our efforts
towards sustained development. Scientists have forecast a 2 to 4,5 degrees
Celsius warming by 2050 which would cause substantial change in the capacity of
humanity to sustain itself and a report of the American United Nations
University Millennium Project foresees that this would result in falling grain
yields, water tables and expanding desertification on the African
continent.
Yet the same report argues that, had local initiatives and self-help
projects been tied more closely to government budgets and natural resources
management training and planning co-ordinated at a continental level, Africa
would have been better able to fortify itself. For instance, despite Africa
having one third of the world's major water basins, it is forecast that over
the next 20 to
30 years, 25 African countries are expected to experience water scarcity.
Proper systems should be put in place to upgrade rain-fed systems and thus
making greater use of renewal water resources management.
Another challenge is that Africa's population will continue to grow.
The recent World Population Ageing Report provides a description of global
trends 1950 to 2050. This report argues that by 2050 Africa will have the
fastest growing population of young people. In 15 countries, mostly in Africa,
"persons under 25 years of age are expected to be the majority of the
population." At the same time, the oldest population will be mostly in Europe
where age groups over 50 years of age will predominate.
If this is a clear sign of things to come, we need to ask as to what this
mean does for the future, for Africa's future. Indeed this abundance of human
capital should form the base of our own success coupled with an abundance of
natural resources.
The young population will be our important resource. We need to invest in
that resource. That is why human resource development is so important for our
continent. We should be able to turn that young population into a pool of
skilled human resource capital that will boost Africa's own development.
The abundance of oil especially in the Gulf of Guinea and in Central Africa,
Angola Chad, Sudan, Sao Tome and Principe should allow Africa to leapfrog into
sustainable development. The abundance of raw materials, especially metals and
the constant demand of this and the high price means African Economies can
grow. The challenge is to begin to add value and then export steel instead of
iron ore, aluminium instead of bauxite, jewellery instead of raw diamonds
etc.
The partnerships among African countries are the most important. In the past
we have relied too much on the North for development aid and foreign direct
investment (FDI). The FDI has not materialised to the extent that it meets our
expectations. The development aid has decreased despite the commitments made of
0,7% of Gross Domestic Products (GDP). Other than the few countries that have
benefited from debt relief, the official development assistance (ODA) has
actually decreased.
Market access has also not been realised. The Doha Development Round is not
bringing results. The United States of America and the European Union (EU) have
not made enough movement in the matter of agricultural subsidies. Our
partnership with the North - useful and essential as it is - has been
disappointing. The commitments made in Kananaskis, Canada and subsequent
meetings by the G8, have hardly been implemented.
On the other hand, we have been strengthening our South-South co-operation.
The co-operation between Africa and China handled properly in a win manner, has
a lot of potential both for China and Africa. Co-operation between the African
Continent and Asia are also being revitalised since the Africa-Asia Summit in
Bandung in 2005. This has a lot of potential.
The Africa - South America summit in Nigeria in 2006 ushered in the dawn of
a new era of co-operation in Africa - South America relations.
The global African Diaspora Conference due to take place in South Africa
next year is going to put the relations between Africa and its diaspora on a
different footing and raise levels of co-operation.
The India-Brasil-South Africa Forum, IBSA, is an important contribution to
South South relations.
Africa has vast amounts of arable land. We can grow enough to be
self-sufficient. The challenge again is whether individually and collectively,
we shall be able to develop our agro processing industries and export
value-added agricultural goods.
We have to find resources within our own continent to build our
infrastructure because none of the above will happen without developed
transport infrastructure to move goods and persons. We also need a developed
energy infrastructure for industry as well as ICT for communication.
All these are in line with the New Partnership for African Development
(Nepad).
The long delayed AU-EU Summit due to take place in December in Portugal is a
welcome development. Our view is that it will only be useful if it redefines
our relationship from a Donor-recipient relationship to a true partnership. If
it entrenches old relations as such, it will be of no use to us.
We believe that our relations with Slovakia can help to strengthen Nepad.
Slovakia has experienced high rates of economic growth and has a government
focused on all its citizens' upliftment and sharing in the country's economic
growth. We believe that there are valuable lessons to be learnt and best
practices to be shared between our two countries that could be of mutual
benefit.
We also share a common concern as regards security sector reform that could
benefit both our work globally and on the African continent in particular.
Ladies and gentlemen:
Africa is endowed with every tourist attraction we can think of. This
infrastructure also needs to be developed.
Africa is indeed a continent of hope and possibilities. Its future depends
on what we, the Africans, do with it and its possibilities.
South Africa's involvement is informed by our belief that Africa has to be
peaceful secure and stable and that this can only be achieved if we the
Africans take the lead. Confident that Africa shall prosper, South Africa has
become amongst the biggest, if not the biggest investor in Africa.
We are at the forefront of the launch of the Pan-African Infrastructure
Development Fund. It is aimed at "creating a platform for basic infrastructure
for accelerating growth for sustainable development in Africa." We hope to
launch the Fund during the forthcoming AU Summit in Ghana at the beginning of
next month.
The fund will initially focus on infrastructure sectors: transportation
(roads, rail, ports, and airports), telecoms, water and energy (gas and
electricity). Target size of the fund will be an initial US$1 billion with
final fund size to be in the region of US$3 billion and the initial targeted
investors are public sector pension funds on the African continent.
This domestic investment coupled with resource mobilisation is an investment
in Africa's future.
The writer Frantz Fanon tells us that each generation must discover its
mission, fulfil it or betray it. South Africa is determined to fulfil its
mission of making the 21st century an African century.
The history of suffering, of conflict of oppression and discrimination, of
slavery has meant that Africans have had to overcome so much and still have
much to overcome, but this means that we can better contribute to the
termination of such practices.
I am reminded of the words of the African writer, Ben Okri, when he argues
that our task must also be to prepare for an Africa where:
"butterflies and iguanas thrive, while elephants turn into endangered
species, and while even lions growl in their dwindling solitude.
"There is no such thing as a powerless people. There are only those who have
not seen and have not used their power and will. It would seem a miraculous
feat, but it is possible for the unvalued ones to help create a beautiful new
era in human history.
"New vision should come from those who suffer most and who love life the
most. The marvellous responsibility of the unheard and the unseen resides in
this paradox.
"Nature and history are not just about the survival of the fittest, but also
about the survival of the wisest, the most adaptive and the most aware."
It is this wisdom and an awareness of what needs to be done that makes us
confident that the future is indeed in our hands as we prepare the ground for
the Africa of the future and the world of tomorrow.
Part of our responsibility is to ensure that this is a more inclusive world,
a world order characterised by peace and dialogue and a mutual understanding of
how we bring about development, not simply for the North or for the South, but
for all to share the benefits of a common globe.
I thank you.
Issued by: Department of Foreign Affairs
12 June 2007
Source: SAPA