Your Excellencies, Ministers,
Your Excellency, Mr Amara Essy,
Your Excellencies, Ambassadors and High Commissioners,
Distinguished Guests,
Ladies and Gentlemen:
On behalf of the government and people of South Africa,
I would like to extend a very warm welcome to all of you
to South Africa and the 3rd Extra-Ordinary
Session of the African Union Executive Council.
I am very happy that so many of you have come here, to
help accelerate the pace of the important work that would
ensure that we build strong structures and put together
the necessary mechanism so that our continental
organisation, the African Union (AU), is better able to
face the many challenges confronting all our countries and
peoples.
Once again, this demonstrates your continued and
abiding faith in, and commitment to our continental body
as well as your determination to strengthen our unity.
With just over a month left before the 2nd
Ordinary Session of the Assembly of the African Union in
Maputo, Mozambique, I am confident that this gathering
will assist all of us to ensure that this important Summit
Meeting takes us forward towards making the Union fully
operational.
We have successfully concluded our business relating to
the Amendments to the Constitutive Act. I would like to
thank all who made this possible. I am confident that the
process has helped to improve the structures and processes
of the Union, to prepare it to carry out its tasks more
efficiently and effectively.
As we discuss the various issues on the agenda
particularly the various Organs of the African Union, I am
sure that we would be guided by the need to achieve the
central objectives of this continental body, which are
democracy, peace, stability, development and prosperity.
In this context, in considering the recommendations
relating to the Commission, we will be mindful of the
critical role of this institution as the engine that must
ensure that our Union and continent move forward with the
necessary speed and determination.
Further, we are aware that the Common African Defence
and Security Policy will guide the work of the Peace and
Security Council. As such, we need to take into account
the already established common ground as reflected in
existing instruments, treaties and agreements that have
been signed and ratified.
These include work that we have done regarding such
issues as those of terrorism, landmines, small arms as
well as humanitarian law. At the same time, this gives us
an opportunity and poses a challenge to this leadership to
set new standards, not only for the continent and the
African people, but also for the international community.
We also have an opportunity to discuss the
operationalisation of the Peace and Security Council. I
would like to thank those member states that have already
ratified the Protocol establishing this important
structure and encourage those that are still in the
process of doing so to do so without further delay.
In this regard, I trust that we will specifically
consider the African Standby Force, which would be crucial
to all future peace initiatives on the continent. As we
know, the African Standby Force shall be established in
order to enable the Peace and Security Council to perform
its responsibilities with respect to the deployment of
peace support missions and interventions pursuant to
article 4(h) and (j) of the Constitutive Act.
All of us are aware of the challenges that face our
continent with regard to peace and stability. We are aware
of the debilitating negative consequences of conflicts and
wars. We know that may of our countries are poor and
underdeveloped and partly because many of our people have
seen too much conflict, death and displacement.
Accordingly, we are agreed that we must continue to
spare no effort to banish forever the wars and conflicts
that are a serious obstacle to our common programme for
the development of our countries and continent.
We are indeed happy that we have made progress with
regard to the conflicts in Cote d’ Ivoire, Burundi, DRC,
Sudan, Madagascar and Angola. We will continue to work
together with the people of the Central African Republic
to find a permanent solution to their problems.
The progress that we have made in most of these
countries demonstrates in fact clearly that, as Africans,
we can and must continue to solve our own problems,
relying, in the main on our own efforts, determination and
resources, however meagre these resources may be.
In addition, I would like to compliment everyone on the
work that is being done to speed-up the process of the
formation of the structures of the African Union –
ECOSOCC, the Pan-African Parliament, the Court of Justice
and the Financial Institutions as well as their Protocols,
their Rules of Procedure. This includes the important
matters of their hosting, costs implications and other
related issues.
Indeed, numerous countries have indicated their
willingness to host the different Organs of the African
Union. I would like to urge those countries that have not
yet considered the matter to finalise their own proposals
and inform the Commission of their intentions.
As we deliberate on these matters, I believe it is
important that we also remember our decisions and
discussions in Durban on various health issues and the
commitment we made to capacity building. We have a duty to
deliver on these issues, even in the face of the pressing
matters regarding peace and security in the different
regions of the African Union.
Undoubtedly, part of our on-going challenge is the need
to strengthen our Regional Economic Communities, ensuring
that they function effectively and efficiently because, as
we all know, these are important building blocks of the
African Union and it is through them that we are able to
advance the NEPAD programmes.
Chairperson, I look forward to the discussions on the
ways and means of including the African Diaspora in the
activities of the African Union. We all recall that when
we discussed the amendments to the Constitutive Act we
realised that there was a serious shortcoming on the
omission of this important part of the African people.
I think we appreciate that these are so many of our
own, all over the world, who are enthusiastic and willing
to make their contribution to the regeneration of their
mother continent. This, they want to do, because their
roots run very deep into the African soil.
This afternoon the Speaker of our National Assembly
formally handed to us as the Chair of the African Union,
the Report of the Commission on Human Security. I believe
that we will have to take steps to make the Report
available to all our member states, as well as our
Commission. I am certain the Report will further
strengthen our work as we strive to build people-centred
societies.
Recent international events have confirmed the need for
us as Africans to do everything we can to rely on our own
capacities to secure our continent’s renaissance. The
African Union and its development programme, NEPAD, are
the central instruments we have chosen to help us achieve
this objective. A heavy responsibility therefore rests on
your shoulders, as our Executive Council, to ensure that
we succeed in our purposes.
I thank you and look forward to our Maputo Assembly
meeting where, I am confident, we will benefit from the
hard work you are now engaged in. I trust that you will
enjoy both your work and your stay in South Africa.
I thank you.