Your Excellencies Heads of State and Government,
Your Excellency Mr Kofi Annan, Secretary General of
the United Nations,
Your Excellencies Ministers, Ambassadors and High
Commissioners,
Distinguished delegates and guests,
Premier of the Province of KwaZulu-Natal,
Mayor of the Metropolitan City of Durban,
People of Africa:
By forming the Union, the peoples of our continent
have made the unequivocal statement that Africa must
unite! We as Africans have a common and a shared
destiny! Together, we must redefine this destiny for a
better life for all the people of this continent.
The first task is to achieve unity, solidarity,
cohesion, cooperation among peoples of Africa and
African states. We must build all the institutions
necessary to deepen political, economic and social
integration of the African continent. We must deepen
the culture of collective action in Africa and in our
relations with the rest of the world.
Our second task is that of developing new forms of
partnerships at all levels and segments of our
societies, between segments of our societies and our
governments and between our governments. We must
mobilize all segments of civil society, including
women, youth, labour and the private sector to act
together to maximise our impact and change our
continent for the better.
As Africans, we have come to understand that there can
be no sustainable development without peace, without
security and without stability. The Constitutive Act
provides for mechanisms to address this change which
stands between the people of Africa and their ability
and capacity to defeat of poverty, disease and
ignorance.
Together we must work for peace, security and
stability for the people of this continent. We must
end the senseless conflicts and wars on our continent
which have caused so much pain and suffering to our
people and turned many of them into refugees and
displacees and forced others into exile.
We must accept that dialogue and peaceful resolution
of conflicts are the only way to guarantee enduring
peace and stability for our people. The Constitutive
Act provides for such mechanisms.
Together we have made one statement against
terrorism.
As Africans, we must put our resources together to
defeat terrorism with all its manifestations in the
interest of peace and stability for our people.
In the spirit of the Constitutive Act of the Union we
must work for a continent characterized by democratic
principles and institutions which guarantee popular
participation and provide for good governance. Through
our actions, let us proclaim to the world that this is
a continent of democracy, a continent of democratic
institutions and culture. Indeed, a continent of good
governance, where the people participate and the rule
of law is upheld.
Let us today, re-dedicate ourselves to those
fundamental principles we have adopted of human and
people's rights, of gender equality, of worker's
rights and the rights of the child.
In doing so, we shall have reminded ourselves that
realizing these would entail the eradication of
poverty and underdevelopment, that the right to
development is a human right, that to end hunger on
our continent, food security and nurturing agriculture
have to be central to our enterprise, that clean
water, and sanitation are as crucial to the health of
our people as are other ways of fighting communicable
diseases such as malaria, TB and AIDS.
To end ignorance on our continent, we shall invest in
education, in research in all fields and endeavour to
develop our capacities in science and technology.
A key challenge we have set ourselves is to end the
levels of unemployment that has been a characteristic
of our societies. To do this, there is no alternative
but to garner all our own resources both on the
continent, and elsewhere, to invest in factories,
mines, agriculture and infrastructure. No longer
should Africa be simply an exporter of raw materials
to the west. We aspire to produce and manufacture the
highest quality products for our own use and for
export. In order to do this we shall have to invest in
training our own working people. If we are to sustain
our development, then we shall have to increase trade
among ourselves.
Time has come that Africa must take her rightful place
in global affairs. Time has come to end the
marginalisation of Africa. We call on the rest of the
world to work with us as partners.
This is a moment of hope for our continent and its
peoples. We shall act together to build a brighter
future, working together with all of us, governments,
parliamentarians, trade unions, private sector, civil
society, religious communities, cultural workers, for
a better future for the peoples of Africa.
We congratulate all the leaders gathered here for
the work they have done to bring us where we are
today.
Long live African Unity. Long live African Union.