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Date
: 16/06/2005
Source: Department of Foreign Affairs
Title: Dlamini Zuma: Group of 77 and China Second South
Summit
Statement by her Excellency Dr Nkosazana Dlamini
Zuma, Minister Of Foreign Affairs Of the Republic of South Africa
to the Second South Summit, Doha, Qatar
Our Esteemed Host and the Emir of the State of Qatar, His Highness
Sheikh Hamad bin Khalifa Al-Thani;
Honourable Prime Minister of Jamaica, Mr PJ Patterson, Chair of the
Group of 77 and China
; Excellencies, Heads of State and Government and Leaders of
Delegation;
President of the 59th Session of the United Nations General
Assembly, His Excellency Jean Ping, Foreign Minister of
Gabon;
Distinguished delegates;
Ladies and Gentlemen
It is an honour for me to address the Second South Summit of the
Group of 77 and China on behalf of President Thabo Mbeki and the
People of South Africa.
We wish to express our gratitude on the Government and the People
of the State of Qatar for their hospitality. We also wish to thank
the honourable PJ Patterson, for his leadership of the Group of 77
and China.
Honourable Chairperson,
Five years ago when we met at First South Summit in Havana, Cuba,
we recommitted ourselves to a stronger multilateral system, a
strengthened system of South-South cooperation, and sought new ways
to intensify dialogue with the countries of the North.
Considering global developments since Havana, our meeting here
today has taken on even greater significance. No one can doubt that
the multilateral system is under great strain.
As President Mbeki stated in Havana, South-South co-operation must
also encourage an extensive system of bilateral relations to
strengthen our collective capacity to represent ourselves relative
to the countries of the North.
"This should not simply be a matter of increasing our bargaining
strength, it should also address the central issue of the
elaboration of a word agenda for human centred development," said
President Mbeki.
Since Havana, we have met in various capitals in an effort to build
on this people-centred development agenda. For example, we convened
in Johannesburg for the World Summit on Sustainable Development, in
Doha for the World Trade Organisation (WTO) Development Round, and
in Monterey to discuss Finance for Development.
Africa has developed the New Partnership for Africa’s
Development (NEPAD) as its collective people-centred development
programme. We have put together all of the ideas and what is now
needed is the requisite resources to implement what we have agreed
upon.
The human, financial and technological resources are the critical
elements. Whilst we should look to the North for debt cancellation,
increased development aid and the completion of the Doha
Development Round, it is just as important to strengthen our own
South-South Co-operation.
Among us, we have all the natural resources that we need for
development-oil, gas, most of the strategic mineral resources,
agricultural resources, some of the cutting-edge technologies
especially in information and communication technology (ICT) and
other areas. We have the human resources and we have the markets as
well.
What is crucial is that whilst co-operating with the North, we must
strengthen South-South co-operation in order to turn these natural
resources into wealth.
We can develop our human resources, share technology, invest and
trade amongst ourselves. We also need to link the Millenium
Development Goals (MDGs) to the Beijing Platform of Action, which
is an agreed programme to put women at the core of a people-centred
development agenda. Tourism is very important for jobs, but more
importantly for knowing one another’s countries and for
people to people co-operation. Of course we are doing some of these
but we need to strengthen and intensify South-South co-operation.
We have already initiated efforts to build on our co-operation in
areas such as health, human resource development, and technology
sharing, and to consolidate our partnerships at sub-regional and
regional levels.
For example, the Asia-Africa strategic partnership and the India,
Brazil, South Africa tripartite alliance and the Caricom-AU, to
mention a few.
The challenge that remains for this Summit is to accelerate
cooperation in our development mechanisms to bind together the
countries of the South. We face the same challenges and share
similar aspirations for economic development, the eradication of
poverty, and the combating of communicable diseases such as
malaria, tuberculosis and HIV and AIDS.
Honourable Chairperson,
The dialogue with the North, including the G8 has improved over the
last few years. The flow of financial capital, debt cancellation
and opening of markets in the North would help us to attain the
MDGs. The Meeting of the G8 countries scheduled for Gleneagles,
Scotland, is important to the advancement of the agenda of the
South, especially in light of the resource needs for the
implementation of initiatives such as the NEPAD (Africa Action Plan
adopted in Kannanaskis, Canada).
In this year’s meeting, the G8 is expected to address debt
cancellation for developing countries, since they have announced
the cancellation of the debt of 18 of the poorest countries, and 22
other to follow. We hope this dialogue will in time produce more
concrete results. More importantly, developing countries also need
predictable inflows of resources to meet their basic needs and
achieve sustainable development.
Honourable Chairperson, In September our leaders will travel to New
York for the Summit to Review the Millennium Declaration and the
Implementation of the MDGs.
We wish to thank Secretary-General Kofi Annan for having prepared a
report for this Summit.
The President of the United Nations (UN) General Assembly, His
Excellency Jean Ping, has presented Member States with a draft
outcome document that captures many of the concerns of the
developing countries.
A number of critical decisions about the survival of the UN and the
strengthening of the multilateral system will have to be taken at
the September Summit. The UN still reflects the political landscape
of 1945. The need for reforming the UN has been recognised and
discussed for many years. A reformed UN will benefit the South more
than the North if approached in a comprehensive way. In this
regard, UN reform must include the strengthening of the General
Assembly and Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC) and sensitising
the Bretton Woods Institutions to the UN development agenda.
We believe that development must be at the centre of the decisions
taken in September. Together with the decisions on development, the
September Summit will also have to take crucial decisions on peace
and security, such as the reform of the Security Council, including
its working methods and the expansion of the Council in both
permanent and non-permanent categories.
The reform of the major organs of the UN is long overdue and we
believe it must be done in an inclusive and democratic manner. The
African Union, in its determination that the marginalised people of
Africa should be fully represented in all the decision-making
organs of the UN, acted with unity of purpose to engage in the
current UN reform process. African member states forged a common
African position on the reform of the UN, also known as the
Ezulwini Consensus.
The collective strength of the G77 affords us the means to ensure
that reform is affected. The people we represent look up to us to
meet the challenges of poverty and insecurity in a comprehensive
way and to ensure that human rights are dealt with in an impartial
and non-selective manner. Whilst we serve our people and therefore
cannot avoid national interests, we must look at the needs of
humanity as a whole. Arriving at a reform package that serves all
of humanity will always be difficult so we might as well seize the
opportunity to do it now. We, the countries of the South, cannot
afford to miss this historic opportunity. We owe it to future
generations to bequeath to them a better UN than the one we
found.
Thank you.
Issued by: Department of Foreign Affairs
16 June 2005