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Opening
of the 76th ordinary session of the OAU Council of
Ministers, Durban, 4 July 2002:
Address
by Deputy President Jacob Zuma
Honourable Ministers,
Members of the Diplomatic Corps,
Distinguished guests,
Ladies and gentlemen,
On behalf of the government and people of South
Africa, let me bid
you a warm welcome on the eve of the 38th Summit of the
OAU and the launch of
the African Union.
Distinguished delegates, we are also honoured to be
hosting you for
this Summit, as we prepare to launch the African Union
at the dawn of the
African Century.
We are humbled by the privilege to host you in this
country, given
the immense support given to us by our brothers and
sisters in the
continent, as we struggled for our freedom. During
those days, we placed
great trust in the OAU and paid undivided attention
to its meetings and
activities.
It is important to note that the birth of the African
Union
represents continuity in the pan-African movement
towards unity, and that
the two institutions complement each other in a manner
that will allows us
to achieve our objectives.
When it was established in 1963, the main mandate of
the OAU was to
unite the African people, fight colonialism,
imperialism and all forms of
racial oppression, including the most inhumane one -
apartheid, thereby
promoting the independence of the African nation
states.
The struggles waged by our people under the banner of
the OAU were
aimed at freeing and restoring the dignity of the
African people. The unity
and solidarity of our peoples from Cape to Cairo, and
from Madagascar to
Senegal characterised the anti-colonial struggle.
Today, we are able to
celebrate this major achievement of the OAU.
Those achievements of the OAU have laid the perfect
foundation for
the African Union, which will seek to consolidate the
gains of the OAU, and
foster unity and cohesion in confronting the
challenges facing the continent
One of these challenges is the pockets of conflict in
some parts of
the continent, which the AU is gearing to deal with
firmly and resolutely
for the good of the continent and all of us. We must
however acknowledge
that there are processes under way to resolve these
We are encouraged that the people of the DRC are
engaged in a
historic dialogue that will lay the basis for enduring
peace in that country
as well as in the Great Lakes region.
The Angolans have laid foundation for peace and
stability in their
country through the Luenna Cease-fire Accord. The
people of Burundi have
ushered in a Transitional Government that has laid the
basis for national
reconciliation and unity. Intense negotiations are
taking place to between
the armed groups and the transitional government to
bring about a cease-fire
agreement.
Guided by the principles and values of the founding
fathers of the
OAU. We have also made major strides in broadening the
base of democracy on
the continent. The peoples of the Comoros, Lesotho and
Sierra Leone have
recently concluded elections.
These are but just the latest examples of the
democratisation
process that is taking place in the continent. They
signify that the forward
march towards democracy and good governance is
unstoppable and irreversible.
The recent decision of the OAU Central Organ taken in
Addis Ababa
with regard to Madagascar is a clear indication of a
new way of doing
things, and Africa's commitment to good governance.
Ladies and gentlemen, while being encouraged by the
progress being
made in the continent, it is important to note that
the unequal power
relations between the North and South are still a
cause for concern.
While the twin processes of globalisation and
liberalisation have
brought about unprecedented changes in the global
economic environment, our
experience of these phenomena to date is that if they
are left to their own
devices, they will increase the divide between the
developed North and the
developing South.
Indeed, since the advent of globalisation, the gap
between richer
nations and poorer nations has widened, and more and
more people in the
developing world live on less than a dollar a day.
Africa's share of world
trade is negligible just below 2%.
These challenges demand that we put a concerted effort
to ensure
that developed countries address key issues such as:
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The cancellation of the debt burden of the Highly
Indebted
Poor Countries,
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Taking extraordinary measures to ensure substantial
increase
in foreign direct investments in Africa,
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Greater market access for African exports, including
agricultural products,
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Access to technology in order to bridge the digital
divide.
The only development programme through which we can
negate the
marginalisation of Africa from the global economic
equation is the New
Partnership for Africa's Development, (NEPAD).
It is a comprehensive response to the challenges
facing the
continent, especially those of poverty and
underdevelopment. NEPAD has
presented Africa's case in the most convincing and
unprecedented manner. As
a project of the African Union, NEPAD will draw on the
conditions for
sustained economic growth and development, which the
Union will promote.
The AU's mechanisms for peer review and conflict
resolution reflect
commitment to democratisation, good governance, peace
and security as being
in the interest of Africans, irrespective of relations
with industrialised
countries.
On the other hand, growing support for the plan by the
political,
economic and civil society leadership in
industrialised countries draws on a
world-wide momentum for sustained market-based
development based on
recognition of the interdependence of the developed
and the underdeveloped,
of the richer and the poorer parts of the world.
Having secured the support and commitment from the
North, civil
society organisations and the business sector,
concrete action to mirror the
verbal commitment by all parties is vital. In this
context let me take this
opportunity to commend the efforts of our Heads of
States and Government who
have secured concrete support from the G8, in the form
of the 08 Plan of
Action for Africa.
As the Honourable Ministers would be aware, this
initial response of
the G8 and the European Union commits the developed
North to at least 120
specific actions to advance the NEPAD agenda.
The response encompasses eight spheres of social
activity, ranging
from peace and security and economic growth, to human
resource development,
gender equality and the fight against HIV/AIDS.
Such support gives us rope that a new partnership
between the North
and South is developing, based on mutual interest and
partnerships.
Chairperson, as we prepare to bid the OAU goodbye, and
welcome the
African Union, let us recall what one of post-colonial
Africa's founding
fathers, Kwame Nkrumah said nearly 50 years ago:
And I quote: "Thus may we take pride in the name
of Africa, not out
of romanticism, but as an inspiration for the
future... What our ancestors
achieved in the context of their contemporary society
gives us confidence
that we can create, out of the past, a glorious
future, not in terms of war
and military pomp, but in terms of social progress and
peace, far, we
repudiate war and violence.
The heroes of our future will be those who can lead
our people out
of the stifling fog of disintegration through serfdom,
into the valley of
light, where purpose, endeavour and determination will
create a
brotherhood," (end quote).
Brothers and sisters, a firm foundation has been laid
and the right
direction shown. How can we fail? We cannot fail. Ours
is to succeed and
accomplish the mission as clearly spelt out by our
founding fathers.
With this vision of a great African future in mind, I
declare this,
the seventy sixth Ordinary Session of the OAU Council
of Ministers, open.
Thank you.
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