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Address
by Minister Dlamini Zuma to the South African Institute
of International Affairs, Johannesburg,
30 January 2001
Chairperson
Dr Greg Mills
Excellencies
Members of the Diplomatic Corps
Distinguished Guests
Ladies and Gentlemen
It
is indeed my singular honour and privilege to deliver
the 7th Foreign Minister's Annual address here at
the South African Institute of International Affairs.
Since
its inception in 1994, following the democratic changes
in our country, this address provides us with an opportunity
to highlight past and ongoing achievements and developments
over the previous year, on the one hand, and to discuss
first hand the plans and vision of the Department
of Foreign Affairs for the year ahead, on the other.
I
would like to depart slightly from that tradition
this evening since it is the first address in this
new century and new millennium, and speak more generally.
In
his New Year message to the nation, President Thabo
Mbeki said that "the year 2001 should, for us,
mark the commencement of the African century".
He maintained "
for us as South Africans
the determination to make this an African Century
means many things in terms of what we ourselves must
do".
For
us to be able to deal with the challenges of African
Renaissance and the African Century it is necessary
to pause and look back into the history, both the
bright and positive and the dark and melancholy periods,
that have shaped and defined us as Africans.
Genetic,
palaeontological and linguistic evidence indicates
that anatomically modern humans existed only in Africa
until about 100,000 years ago, when some migrated
from the continent and progressively populated the
entire globe. It is therefore clear that Africa is
the cradle of humanity and advanced civilisation.
We
need only to look at the architectural heritage as
presented by Egyptian sphinxes and pyramids, Tunisian
city of Carthage, Zimbabwe ruins as well as the old
city of Timbuktu in Mali to mention a few.
The
intricate sculptures of Makonde of Tanzania, the Benin
Bronzes of Nigeria the beautiful paintings of the
Drakensburg, various artistic creations of the Egyptians
demonstrate to us a continent with a great past. Africa
is a continent that boasts of old highly organised
kingdoms from the Ashanti to Monomotapa to that of
Timbuktu.
This
is part of our heritage, of our history which we should
be proud of, a history which should inspire us and
generations to come, a history which should assure
us that we indeed have capacity to overcome the present
obstacles to the restoration of Africa as a great,
prosperous continent.
The dark side of our history cannot be forgotten because
it is part of what defines and shapes our present
position as Africans.
Slavery
robbed the continent of its finest and fittest sons
and daughters. It was the most barbaric and cruel
manifestation of racism. It is my belief that it is
only if you define a people as of an inferior race
that you can trade them as slaves.
Colonialism
and imperialism not only lead to carving up of the
continent amongst certain European countries but it
also meant Africans, through violent oppression and
divide and rule were denied freedom, self determination
and access to education. Their culture was despised
and destroyed, their languages were suppressed, their
ethics and values were replaced by European values,
languages and religion. We were thus denied of our
identity.
However
all was not lost, the great African armies in Isandlwana
in South Africa and Sudan defeated the mighty armies
of the British Empire. There were also heroic struggles
of the peoples of the continent, which saw progressive
decolonialisation of the African countries and defeat
of Apartheid in South Africa and Ian Smith in Zimbabwe.
The
Cold War meant that democracy was not given a chance.
Progressive independent minded leaders were assassinated
and replaced with dictators and authoritarian regimes
that served nothing but the interest of the former
colonial powers.
At
the close of the 19 th Century we were reduced to
a continent lacking dignity, although we still had
pride.
There is no dignity in homelessness, there is no dignity
in hunger, no dignity in poverty. No dignity in a
continent that is devastated by preventable diseases,
a continent which has the majority of the poor. There
is no dignity in turning children into killing machines,
child soldiers, no dignity in a continent where women
are turned into beasts of burden. There is no dignity
in ignorance. There is no dignity in genocide and
ethnic strife. There is no dignity in under development.
Then
came the dawn of the new Century we began to see signs
of the rebirth of our continent. We clearly saw the
beginnings of the African Century.
The
democratic changes that have swept across the length
and breadth of our continent; the creation and strengthening
of democratic institutions; the resolve of the African
leaders to isolate and banish any leader who takes
power through a coup; is a revolutionary step which
none of the other organisations have taken not even
the UN. The challenge is to defend democratic gains
and remain vigilant against the enemies of democracy
if not reversals may occur as we have seen in countries,
which we thought were stable democracies.
The
greatest challenge is how to create and maintain inclusive
democracies, how to avoid distribution of power and
resources along ethnic and religious lines because
we have seen that this invariably leads to instability
since those who are excluded will naturally fight
tooth and nail to achieve what they believe is rightly
theirs.
The
DRC, Angola, Sierra Leone, Sudan are challenges that
we are grappling with and we are encouraged by the
fact that African leaders are trying to solve these
problems themselves. The silence of the guns between
Ethiopia and Eritrea and the rebirth of the State
of Somalia, though hesitant, are indeed indications
that the African Century is in the making.
Unity
in diversity in South Africa after such a bitter struggle,
the reconciliation efforts after the most tragic genocide
in Rwanda, the efforts of Former President Mandela
in Burundi all speak of a continent that cannot fail
to achieve its rebirth.
The
restructuring of SADC and the Free Trade Protocol
herald our onward march towards deeper regional integration.
Coupled with the launch of the COMESA Free Trade Area
and the launch of the ECOWAS Passport and ECOWAS Travellers
Cheque, clearly demonstrate progress towards the African
Economic Community envisaged in the Abuja Treaty.
The
signing of the Constitutive Act of the African Union
is one more step towards the realisation of the vision
of the founder fathers of the OAU for a United States
of Africa. How is the African Union going to be different
from the OAU?
The OAU is essence has been concentrating on political
issues and issues of stability. The leadership of
the continent therefore has not been seized with the
economic and developmental issues.
The
African Union is going to deal with all issues. There
will be Technical Committees, which will deal with:
· Rural Economy and Agriculture;
· Monetary and Financial Affairs;
· Trade, Customs and Immigration;
· Industry, Science and Technology, Energy,
Natural Resources and Environment;
· Transport, Communication and Tourism;
· Health, Labour and Social Affairs.
The
development of the Millenium Action Plan by Presidents
Obasanjo, Bouteflika and Mbeki on behalf of the OAU
is an indication that the African leaders have decided
to take the destiny of the continent in their hands.
Their efforts in Davos at the World Economic Forum
to sensitise the corporate leaders to the African
challenges are commendable. This plan will enable
the continent to put its own road signs on the long
journey towards realising the African Century.
The
hosting of Rio + 10 on the African Continent bears
testimony to the contribution that Africa wishes to
make on environmental issues. It is indeed a difficult
but essential challenge to preserve the environment
for future generations.
The
World Conference Against Racism and Xenophobia and
other Forms of Intolerance later this year in South
Africa will firstly be a catharsis for injustices
of the past, and will look at the contemporary forms
of discrimination and work out how whilst acknowledging
injustices of the past, we can come out with a forward
looking achievable programme.
It
is befitting that it is to be held in South Africa
and on the African continent because it is in this
very South Africa and in Africa that the worse forms
of racism were experienced. This is where the struggles
were fought and won but Africa has shown an enormous
capacity to forgive. Not other continent has been
able to reconcile and live with the perpetrators of
racism, killings etc. without hunting them down and
bringing them to justice. In fact we see Nazi war
criminals more than fifty years later still being
hunted and tried. Maybe because Africa is the cradle
of humanity it finds it in its heart easy to forgive.
I do believe that indeed we should forgive but not
forget. This is our contribution to the building of
a better world for the sake of humanity.
Africa
is going to continue to struggle for democracy not
only in our country but also in the international
multilateral organisations like the World Trade Organisation,
the World Bank, the International Monetary Fund and
the United Nations particularly the Security Council.
South
Africa and the Continent shall continue to fight for
solidarity amongst nations and amongst people. It
should surely be demeaning to any of us to know that
a child somewhere is dying of hunger. Or of a preventable
disease. We shall strive for a more caring society.
We
shall continue to struggle against sexism. One of
the hallmarks of the African century should surely
be the emancipation of women. The struggle for a non-sexist
society should be as important as the struggle against
racism.
Can
South Africa and Africa achieve the African Century
on its own? It is clear that we have to build partnerships
at various levels:
·
Level of National Government , Business, and Civil
Society;
· Level of bi-lateral co-operation between
nations;
· Level of multilateral organisations.
Africa
has to build partnership with multilateral organisations.
To this end we all descended on the eternal shores
of the Nile to build partnerships with the European
Union. The success of the Cairo meeting will only
be judged by the strength and usefulness of the partnership.
The
aim of the South South Summit was to strengthen partnerships
amongst developed countries.
The
China Africa Summit held in Beijing was the beginning
of a partnership between Africa and China as opposed
to individual countries having bilateral relations.
The
Franco African Summit is an example of ongoing partnership
with France. Africa and Japan have also been building
a partnership which as witnessed the first visit of
a Japanese Prime Minister to be hosted under the beautiful
African skies.
The
G8-Summit and the meeting of Presidents Bouteflika,
Obasanjo and Mbeki in Tokyo illustrate the form of
partnership that needs to be nurtured. America and
Africa need to have a strong partnership. These are
a few examples of the partnerships which of course
have to be evaluated from time to time. We are for
instance beginning to see some movement on the debt
relief even though its not enough but is a good start.
At
the Millenium Summit, there was a consensus that the
development challenge of Africa is the biggest challenge
facing the world, in the 21st Century.
The
biggest guarantors of success and defenders of our
gains should be the masses of our people. (For our
initial partnership is with them). They should be
mobilised around all these challenges:
·
Democracy and Human Rights;
· Good Governance;
· Accountability;
· Fair Distribution of Resources;
· People Centred Development;
· Non-Sexism;
· Non Racialism;
· Eradication of Poverty.
They
should not be seen as passive recipients but active
agents for change.
The
path to the African Century is not smooth, it is full
of obstacles and stones, subjective and objective.
However, many of the problems are neither inevitable
nor insurmountable.
I
would like to conclude by quoting from President Mbeki's
speech to the Ghana, South Africa Friendship Association.
"All
of us gathered here today, as well as many others
in every part of the continent and in the Diaspora,
are therefore faced with this challenge of transforming
our continent, so that the assertion that the 21 st
century will be an African Century, does not turn
into a beautiful but false prophesy.
The
21 st century must be a hundred years in which when
we define the continent as rich, developed and prosperous,
it would not be wish for some distant prospect, but
a reality and existence that in the past have only
appeared in dreams".
This
is the challenge of our time! I am convinced that
we will rise to this challenge.
I
thank you.
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