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Date
: 25/08/2004
Source: Department of Foreign Affairs
Title: N Dlamini Zuma: Opening plenary of SA-UK Bilateral
Forum
STATEMENT BY THE MINISTER OF FOREIGN AFFAIRS OF THE REPUBLIC OF
SOUTH AFRICA, DR NKOSAZANA DLAMINI ZUMA, AT THE OPENING PLENARY OF
THE 2004 SA-UK BILATERAL FORUM, Cape Town, 25 August 2004
Foreign Secretary, Mr Jack Straw,
Ministers
Distinguished Members of the UK and South
African Delegations
Ladies and Gentlemen:
I am pleased to welcome you to the city of Cape Town, a town that
first had its origins in the encounter between European and African
more than 350 years ago.
I would like to thank you for travelling an immense distance to be
with us, but of course in our modern and information age, the
distance in time is not as great as it once was and the trip is not
nearly as unpleasant.
A journey to the Cape for the European traveller in earlier times
meant the endurance of a long sea voyage and the possibility of
being swept away in what became known to sailors as the Cape of
Storms. The encounter between European and African was one of
coloniser and colonised, characterised not by bonds of friendship
or by cultural coalescence, but by clashes between peoples and
colonial imposition.
In his important work, Frontiers, Noel Mostert, the well-known
historian describes this encounter as "the frontier between white
and black", and "the product of two of the greatest human odysseys
and endeavours, the terrestrial one of Africa and the maritime one
of Europe. It was an encounter moulded by the many interwoven
frontiers which affected Europeans and Africans as they came to
that historical rendezvous."
Today our encounter is no longer as that of coloniser and
colonised. Instead we meet here as free people of free countries.
We are strengthening our relations because both our history and our
present have led us to believe that we are bound to cross-new
frontiers together. The two human odysseys and endeavours that
first characterised our relationship are no longer tied to the
conflicts of the past.
Instead, in these new times it is a shared commitment to improve
the lives of our people and to build a better reality that bring us
together. The crossing of frontiers common to all now move us to
work together and to move forward in this new world, continuously
addressing and adapting our approaches to the concerns of all our
people and to make progress in a desired direction to reach a
common destination.
This firm friendship that now binds us together first had its
foundations in the Anti-apartheid movement. We are grateful for the
support that ordinary British people gave to our cause for freedom.
Now in this historic year of the 10th anniversary of our freedom,
we can say that the relationships between our two countries are
flourishing.
This will be the 6th sitting of the Forum since its inception in
1997. I would like to extend a special welcome to those Departments
that have not participated before, like Arts & Culture and
Health. Their participation will serve to extend our areas of
co-operation and to give more impetus to our relations.
Over the years, our Forum has developed into more than simply a
gathering of Ministers and officials. As both the High
Commissioners here will tell you, contact between our governments
already takes place at these levels on a regular basis.
However, what is distinctive about the Bilateral Forum is that it
is our chosen instrument for managing and giving strategic
direction to this interaction. The Forum adds value by affording us
an opportunity to take stock of our cooperation, to resolve
problems that might have arisen in a previous year and to set the
agenda for the coming year. This Forum also serves to coordinate
our work, to tap into new possibilities and both to maintain and
also to intensify the considerable momentum that has developed in
this unique bilateral partnership.
In doing our work, it is also important that we take account of the
priorities and approach of both the UK and SA Governments.
At the core of all SA policies and programmes is the fundamental
challenge of ending poverty and underdevelopment and of creating a
better life for all our people. Part of this challenge is to
integrate our 'dual' economy, which as a result of apartheid and
colonialism, has been divided into one, which is flourishing and
developing and another one, which is poor and underdeveloped.
In pursuit of this, President Mbeki, in his State of the Nation
address earlier this year, committed our government to the
implementation of a list of detailed delivery targets, most with
specific timeframes attached. All South African government
departments derive their policy objectives from these priorities.
Much of this agenda falls within the scope of this year's bilateral
Forum. I trust that the break-away deliberations will look at how
we might give further impetus to the programme of action outlined
by President Mbeki.
It is also in pursuit of these same objectives that we are engaged
in African development initiatives through our regional bloc and
communities, through the African Union and through the new
partnership for Africa's development.
The dual economy analogy can, of course, also be drawn at the
international level. Next year the international community will
meet to review our progress in achieving the Millennium Development
Goals that we set four years ago, and to consider what measures we
need to take to get back on track. As Chair of both the G8 and the
expanded EU in 2005, the UK will be in a unique position to drive
forward our combined efforts to address some of these economic and
social challenges. We expect that this will be an important feature
of our various talks on international issues today and
tomorrow.
Looked at very broadly, one might say that a shift in focus is
currently taking place in governance in SA. While emphasis was in
large part placed on building institutions and policy development
during the first decade of democracy, implementation and delivery
have become the major focus for this second decade.
Consequently, there will be an increasing focus on provincial and
local governments - the primary drivers of service delivery. This
shift in focus needs to be reflected in co-operation between the UK
and SA where appropriate. I would also like to see South Africa and
the United Kingdom engaging in trilateral co-operation with other
African countries to advance NEPAD priorities and the Millennium
Development Goals.
After Foreign Secretary Straw makes his opening remarks, we will
break up, and during the course of the afternoon, six separate
Ministerial bilateral will take place. In addition to this, three
senior officials level Working Groups, on Africa, on Development
Cooperation and on Economic Matters will be convened both today and
tomorrow morning. Thereafter at the Closing plenary, Ministers and
the Chairs of the Working Groups will report back on what they have
accomplished during the Forum.
As we meet, we would like the emphasis of our discussions to move
towards problem-solving and to tangible outcomes, measurable goals
set together and to joint projects agreed upon. Most importantly,
we need follow-up actions that are to be taken between now and when
we meet again next year.
Before handing over to Foreign Secretary Straw, I would like to
wish everyone well in these deliberations.
May our discussions here today strengthen our friendship and be the
starting point for new odysseys and endeavours that we take into
the future together.
I thank you.
Issued by: Department of Foreign Affairs
25 August 2004