We have detected that the browser you are using is no longer supported. As a result, some content may not display correctly.
We suggest that you upgrade to the latest version of any of the following browsers:
close notification
Date
: 02/09/2004
Source: Department of Foreign Affairs
Title: N Dlamini Zuma: Johannesburg +2 Conference
ADDRESS BY THE MINISTER OF FOREIGN AFFAIRS OF THE REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA, DR NKOSAZANA DLAMINI ZUMA, AT THE NATIONAL CONFERENCE ON
SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT JOHANNESBURG, 2 September 2004
Minister Marthinus van Schalkwyk
Government Officials
Distinguished Guests
Ladies and Gentlemen
Thank you for inviting me to speak at this National Conference on
Sustainable Development, which is also the Second Anniversary of
the World Summit on Sustainable Development.
Two years ago, thousands and thousands of people of the world
representing 172 Governments, including 100 world leaders,
participants from major groups and 4000 members descended on our
Continent and on the shores of this wonderful country of
megadiversity, breathtaking landscape and beautiful sunsets.
They did as they had done in Stockholm at the United Nations (UN)
Conference on the Human Environment in 1972 where they declared in
Stockholm:
"Man is both creature and moulder of his environment, which gives
him physical sustenance and affords him the opportunity for
intellectual, moral, social and spiritual growth. In the long and
tortuous evolution of the human race on this planet a stage has
been reached when, through the rapid acceleration of science and
technology, man has acquired power to transform his environment in
countless ways and on an unprecedented scale. Both aspects of man's
environment, the natural and the man-made, are essential to his
well-being and to the enjoyment of basic human rights, the right to
life itself."
Twelve years ago they had graced the shores of Brazil at the Rio
Earth Summit where they said in the opening lines of Agenda
21:
"Humanity stands at a defining moment in history. We are confronted
with a perpetuation of disparities between and within nations, a
worsening of poverty, hunger, ill health and illiteracy, and the
continuing deterioration of ecosystems on which we depend for our
well being. However, integration of environment and development
concerns and greater attention to them will lead to the fulfilment
of basic needs, improved living standards for all, better protected
and managed ecosystems and a safer, more prosperous future. No
nation can achieve this on its own; but together we can - in a
global partnership for sustainable development."
On arrival in South Africa, they heard this from our President
Thabo Mbeki as he opened the Civil Society Forum on the WSSD:
"The decisions that must be taken at the World Summit must answer
the question concretely whether we, the present generations of the
common humanity that emerged from the Cradle of Humankind, have the
will to ensure that, after us, humanity will live on for millions
more years.
We have to answer the question whether we have the will and the
common sense to ensure that we treat the planet as a common
renewable resource, a friend and partner whose health is a
necessary condition for the health of humanity itself.
We have to answer the question whether we have the wisdom so to
organise human society that we ensure that billions across the
globe live in conditions of peace, freedom, equality and a decent
life, free from poverty and want and ignorance.
As we meet here in Johannesburg, we have to answer the question
whether we have done what needed to be done to advance the
objectives contained in Agenda 21. We have to answer this question
openly and honestly so that we have the possibility to do what has
not been done, and to renew and restore the enthusiasm and momentum
towards sustainable development.
Since the international community adopted the Agenda 21 ten years
ago, we have seen millions of people drawn into the ranks of
billions others who are very poor. We have seen less and less
capital committed to sustainable development, especially in the
poor countries of the South. We have seen lack of technology
transfers and the trade doors being shut on the face of the peoples
from developing countries."
As he welcomed the Heads of State and Government, he had this to
say:
"During the period we have engaged one another at the World Summit
on Sustainable Development, we have achieved much in bringing
together a diverse and rich tapestry of peoples and views, in a
constructive search for a common path that will move all of us
forward faster, towards a world that practically respects and
implements the vision of sustainable development. The matter rests
with all of us gathered here this morning whether, when we conclude
our work as we meet on this Continent that is the Cradle of
Humanity, we will be able to say truthfully, that we have taken
decisions that will meet the objectives we set ourselves when we
decided to convene the World Summit on Sustainable
Development."
South Africa was indeed honoured to be the Host of the World Summit
on Sustainable Development. President Mbeki articulated our
feelings as the host country when he wrote about the Summit:
"As Africans, we were proud and privileged to host the leaders and
representatives of the peoples of the world as they met to consider
their response to the urgent challenge of sustainable development.
At the same time, we were convinced that the ordinary people of our
country understood that for a new and brighter world of hope to be
born required that these leaders and representatives should convene
in conference, freely to agree among themselves about what they
needed to do together".
It was possible to develop a consensus in Johannesburg because
other Summits and Conferences had analysed issues of development in
great detail over more than a decade. For example, the Stockholm
meeting laid a foundation for North-South partnership on
environment and sustainable development. In the Rio Summit held in
Brazil, the international community forged the Agenda 21 that
became a blueprint for sustainable development, stating: "We are
committed to making the right of development a reality for everyone
and to freeing the entire race from want."
NEPAD, the New Partnership for Africa's Development, had been
adopted. A few months before the Johannesburg Summit, the
Conference on Financing for Development held in Monterrey, Mexico,
adopted a consensus on means of implementation for a development
agenda already well understood.
In Johannesburg, we finally came up with a comprehensive plan of
action that combines concrete targets, time frames and means of
implementation in addressing issues of poverty and underdevelopment
and thereby creating conditions for sustainable development. For
the first time, the international community negotiated and laid out
detailed and time-bound plans to address fundamental issues of
clean water and basic sanitation, access to energy, adequate
shelter and food security. It was understood that the achievement
of the Millennium Development Goals would not be possible without
the successful implementation of the Johannesburg Plan of
Action.
In April 2003, South Africa chaired the first session of the
Commission on Sustainable Development (CSD-11) after the WSSD. This
meeting adopted a forward-looking work programme for the
Commission, based on two-year implementation cycles. The 12th
Session of the CSD in April 2004 in New York was clear that many
countries mainly from sub-Saharan Africa and Small Island
Developing States, will not meet the targets unless they receive
further technical assistance and capacity building and gain access
to substantial additional resources.
Now two years later, we have a responsibility as an international
community to ensure that we make progress in attaining the goals we
have set out.
As South Africa, we have embarked upon a People's Contract to end
poverty and to broaden access for a better life. In the first ten
years, we have provided 1.9 million housing subsidies and 1.6
million houses have been built for the poor of our country. More
than 70% of households have been electrified. Now 9 million
additional people have access to clean water and 63% of households
have access to sanitation.
South Africa has recognised that advances in science, technology
and innovation are crucial for achieving the long-term goals of
sustainable development. We believe that the correct use of
appropriate technologies for sustainable development is critical
for the provision of basic services.
One of our main challenges is the development of a National
Sustainable Development Strategy (NSDS) to integrate into our
planning cycles at national and provincial level.
As custodians of the Johannesburg Declaration on Sustainable
Development and Johannesburg Programme of Action, the burden falls
on our shoulders to see that international targets that are set,
can also be met, so that there is advancement on these matters in
the overall context of sound environmental management. South Africa
remains committed to monitoring the implementation of a
Johannesburg Plan of Action. We shall continue to urge the
international community to remain faithful to the agreements set in
Johannesburg by assisting with implementation of its goals.
Yet by all accounts it does not seem that we will meet our goals
contained in the Johannesburg Programme of Action and the
Millennium Development Goals.
The questions that we have to ask ourselves as people of the world
are:
If we look at the environment, are there prospects for a
significant decrease in the emission of fuel and thus cleaning the
air of a major source of pollution?
If we turn our gaze towards the sea, are there more fishes than
there were before or are numbers of marine life steadily
declining?
If we examine our forests, are they flourishing as indeed they
should be, or are they increasingly been cut down and destroyed to
make way for commercial developments?
Then again what is happening to climate change?
What are we doing to ensure that conditions of intense heat and
extreme cold conditions do not prevail?
In the year 2004, we need to pose the question as to whether there
are more children attending school than there were in previous
generations? Do more people have access to basic sanitation and
clean drinking water than in days gone by?
Can we really be confident that we have in our grasp the attainment
of a prosperous world and a healthy planet, which we can proudly
bequeath to future generations?
These are some of the challenges still facing us today, two years
after Johannesburg.
In our view, the political will exists, but the most important
missing element is the resources to implement what we have agreed
upon.
The Monterrey Conference on Financing for Development agreed to
increase levels of ODA to developing countries, but nothing has
materialised. The Millennium Conference agreed to making more
funding being available for developing countries - where are these
funds? Why are international institutions not supportive as indeed
they should be to the needs of developing countries?
Clearly, Africa will not make it and in fact will lag behind in the
achievement of the Millennium Development Goals and those
objectives contained in the Johannesburg Programme of
Implementation.
What do we take responsibility for? What are we doing to promote
the renewal of sources of energy?
Clearly, there are enough resources in the world to carry out
plans. But these resources need to be redistributed from areas of
great abundance to areas of scarcity. This is at the heart of what
needs to be done to bridge the global divide between North and
South and between developed and developing nations.
These are the challenges that confront us now and that we must
address at both international and national levels.
I hope that this Conference will be able to work towards answering
these basic questions, for the fate of millions of people depend on
our answers.
I trust that the deliberations at this Conference will take us
forward to a common destination of sustainable development.
I wish you well.
Issued by: Department of Foreign Affairs
2 September 2004