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Date
: 23/09/2003
Source: The Presidency
Title: Mbeki: 58th Session of UN General Assembly
ADDRESS BY THE PRESIDENT OF SOUTH AFRICA, MR THABO MBEKI, AT THE
58TH SESSION OF THE UNITED NATIONS GENERAL ASSEMBLY, New York, 23
September 2003
President of the General Assembly, Mr Julian Hunte
Secretary-General of the United Nations, Mr Kofi Annan
Your Excellencies
Ladies and Gentlemen
May I congratulate you, Mr President for assuming the mantle of the
Presidency of this Session of the General Assembly and also thank
the out-going President, Mr Jan Kavan.
I would also like to echo what other speakers have said about the
deaths of the dedicated United Nations (UN) workers who died in the
bombing of the UN Headquarters in Baghdad last month, including
Sergio Vieira de Mello, an outstanding international civil
servant.
When we met here last year, we were all concerned about what would
happen to Iraq. At the same time, we were concerned about what role
this organisation, the UN, would play in the resolution of the Iraq
affair. Dramatic events since then have provided answers to these
questions.
However, these dramatic events have raised important and disturbing
questions about the very future of the UN. Central among these is
the question - does the UN have a future as a strong and effective
multi-lateral organisation, enjoying the confidence of the peoples
of the world, and capable of addressing the matters that are of
concern to all humanity!
Quite correctly, as we meet here, this time, we are still
preoccupied with the issue of the future of Iraq. I am certain
that, in this regard, none of us wants to rehash the debate that
took place on this matter in the period after the last General
Assembly.
If for some time after that General Assembly we were concerned to
provide answers to questions about the role of the UN on Iraq,
today we have to answer questions about the impact of the Iraq
affair on the future of the UN.
Matters have evolved in such a manner that, to our limited
understanding, it seems extremely difficult to resolve the issue of
the role of the UN in Iraq, unless we answer the question about the
future of the UN as the legitimate expression of the collective
will of the peoples of the world, the principal guarantor of
international peace and security, among other global issues.
Put differently, we could say that what is decided about the role
of the UN in Iraq will, at the same time, decide what will become
of the UN in the context of its Charter, and the important global
objectives that have been taken since the Charter was
adopted.
This is not a case of the tail wagging the dog. Rather, history has
placed at our feet an urgent and practical test case that obliges
us to answer the question - what do we, collectively, want the UN
to be! What do we do to distinguish the trees from the woods!
In this regard, we must make the point directly that, as South
Africans, we are partisan activists who campaign in favour of such
a strong and effective UN. We do so because of the place our
country and people occupy in the contemporary world.
That place is defined by the fact that we are a developing country,
whose central challenge is the eradication of poverty and
underdevelopment, a challenge we share with the rest of the African
continent of which we are an integral part.
Mr President, we believe that everything that has happened places
an obligation on the UN to reflect on a number of fundamental
issues that are of critical importance to the evolution of human
society. We are convinced that this General Assembly would
disappoint the expectations of the peoples of the world, and put
itself in jeopardy if, for any reason whatsoever, it does not
address these issues.
Accordingly what I might say, Mr President and Your Excellencies,
might not constitute what is considered normal discourse in terms
of the work that the General Assembly has to do, consistent with
its rights and duties as defined by the UN Charter, and the
conventions that have emerged since the Charter was adopted.
However, I trust that what I will say will not fall on deaf ears.
But I must also make the point that everything I will say is not
intended to attack or praise any particular country or group of
countries.
We speak as we do because we represent a people who are most
sensitive to the imperatives of what the world decides, given our
experience during a period when apartheid South Africa was,
correctly, a matter of focused and sustained interest by the UN and
the peoples of the world, including ordinary folk even in the most
marginalized areas of our globe.
This organisation, and all of us, singly and collectively, has
spoken and speaks frequently about the phenomenon of globalisation.
Correctly, we talk of a global village, driven by recognition of
the fact of the integration of all peoples within a common and
interdependent global society.
Certainly, humanity is more integrated today than it was when the
UN was established more than fifty years ago.
I believe that there is no need for me to present any information
to substantiate this commonly accepted and obvious
conclusion.
However, many have drawn attention to the fact that whereas
objective social processes have led to the emergence of the global
village, all our political collectives have not yet succeeded to
design the institutions of governance made necessary by the reality
of the birth of this global village.
Correct observations have also been made that the use of the image
and concept of a village does not imply that the residents of this
village are equal.
The reality is that the same processes that bring all us closer
together in a global village, are simultaneously placing the
residents of the global village in different positions. Some have
emerged as the dominant, and the rest as the dominated, with the
dominant being the decision makers, and the dominated being the
recipients and implementers of these decisions.
To the same extent that our political collectives have not designed
the institutions responsive to the evolution of the global village,
so have they failed to respond to the imbalance in the distribution
of power inherent in contemporary global human society.
We speak here of power in all fields of human activity, including
the political, economic, military, technological, social,
intellectual, and so on.
Left to its internal and autonomous impulses, the process of
globalisation will inevitably result in the further enhancement of
the domination of the dominant and the entrenchment of the
subservience of the dominated, however much the latter might resent
such domination.
Among other things, this paradigm means that, naturally, the
powerful will set the agenda for all residents of the global
village. Again naturally, they will do this to advance their own
interests.
This will include the perpetuation of their dominant positions, to
ensure the sustenance of their capacity to set the agenda of the
global village, in the interest of their own neighbourhoods within
this global village.
Inherent within this is, necessarily, reliance on the use of the
superior power of which the dominant dispose, to achieve the
objective of the perpetuation of the situation of the unequal
distribution of power.
In this situation, it is inevitable that the pursuit of power in
itself, will assert itself as a unique legitimate objective,
apparently detached from any need to define the uses of such power.
This also signifies the deification of force in all its forms, as
the final arbiter in the ordering of human affairs.
However, from the point of view of the disempowered, the struggle
to ensure the use of such power to address their own interests
becomes a strategic objective they cannot avoid. Necessarily this
means that power would have to be redistributed. This would be done
to empower the disempowered, and to regulate the use of power by
those who are powerful.
And yet, by definition, the disempowered should not reasonably
expect that their disempowerment gives them any possibility to have
a decisive influence over the powerful. Logically, they should not
entertain any dreams that they have the means to oblige the
powerful to regulate the use of their power to achieve results that
benefit all humanity, regardless of the impact of this on what the
powerful might define as their national interest.
Thus we come back to what I said earlier. Because we are poor, we
are partisan activists for a strong, effective and popularly
accepted UN.
We take these positions because there is no way in which we could
advance the interests of our people, the majority of whom are poor,
outside the context of a strong, effective and popularly accepted
UN.
An autonomous process of globalisation, driven by its own internal
regularities, can only result in the determination of our future
within the parameters set by those who enjoy the superiority of
power. The powerful will do this in their interest, which might not
coincide with ours.
When this organisation was established fifty-eight years ago,
necessarily, its objectives and institutions reflected both the
collective global concerns as then perceived, and the then balance
of power.
Among other things, our esteemed Secretary General, Mr Kofi Annan,
has drawn attention to the fact that the UN started off as an
organisation of 51 states and is now composed of 191 states.
Undoubtedly, the perceived and real collective global concerns of
our day are, to some extent at least, different from those that
prevailed more than fifty years ago, when this organisation was
about a quarter of its present size.
For more than a decade, this organisation has been involved in
discussions about its transformation. Once more, the Secretary
General has reflected on this challenge. The truth is that our
discussion has gone nowhere. Earlier this morning the Secretary
General announced steps he will take to facilitate the adoption of
decisions that will help all of us to effect the necessary and
inevitable transformation of the UN. We support the decisions he
announced.
One of the matters that must be addressed is the issue of the
accepted national right to self-defence, and the implications of
the exercise of this right in the light of the historic
responsibilities of the UN to guarantee international peace and
security.
In this regard, all of us face a challenge specific to our times.
It arises out of the process of globalisation and the emergence of
a global village. These phenomena have, among other things,
resulted in the globalisation of the threat to the peace and
security of all our states, not necessarily emanating from states
that are bound by the rules we must all observe as members of the
UN.
The global resolve to defeat such organisations as Al Qaeda has
emerged out of our understanding that international aggression
should not necessarily be expected to emanate from formal and
recognised state institutions.
We have all come to understand that, emanating from non-state
institutions, such threat, as was most painfully demonstrated on 11
September 2001, would express itself as the most inhumane and
despicable terrorism.
Our collective experience, stretching from New York and elsewhere
in the United States on 11 September 2001, reaching back to Nairobi
and Dar-es-Salaam in Africa earlier still and more recently to Bali
in Indonesia, to Morocco, to the conflict between Israel and
Palestine, to Algeria, India, Russia and elsewhere, and even our
own country, this experience tells us that this organisation, the
UN, working in defence of the collective interest of the people
peoples of the world, must ensure that we act together to defeat
the threat of terrorism, collectively defined.
At the same time, we have to take on board the conviction among
some of our member states that they constitute special and
particular targets of this global terrorism. Understandably, the
argument is advanced that it would be unreasonable and irrational
to expect such states not to act to deter such terrorist actions
against themselves.
None of us can defend international rules that prescribe that
anyone of us should wait to be attacked, knowing, in specific ways,
that we were going to be attacked by identified terrorists, and
then act against those who had attacked us, with such horrendous
cost as was experienced by the United States during the September
11 attacks.
I do not imagine that anyone of us would seek to impose such a
costly and unsustainable burden on any our member states, which
would also violate the self-defence provisions of Article 51 of the
UN Charter, to which our Secretary General has correctly drawn our
attention.
We also have no choice but to deal with the brute reality that the
reform process of the UN and all its organs, and other
multi-lateral organisations, has to recognise the reality of the
imbalance of power as represented by different countries and
regions.
At the same time, we must proceed from the position that such
distribution of power is not necessarily in the interest of the
peoples of the world, or even in the interest of those who, today,
have the power to determine what happens to our common world.
This includes acceptance of the fact that, depending on the place
we occupy in the global community, we have different priorities.
Among other things, the rich are concerned about ways and means to
maintain the status quo from which they benefit. Practically, this
means that all matters that threaten to destabilise this status quo
must, necessarily, be anathema to such people.
Such matters will therefore be an issue of principal concern to
them. Necessarily and understandably, they will then seek to get
the rest of the world to accept their assertion that the
maintenance of the status quo must be a universal human
preoccupation, precisely the kind of issue that the UN must take a
united position.
On the other hand, the poor are interested to change their
condition for the better. Accordingly, they will not accept the
maintenance of the status quo, which perpetuates their poverty.
Accordingly, among other things, the poor billions of the world
will argue for action by the UN to ensure the transfer of resources
to themselves, which will enable them to extricate themselves from
their condition of poverty and underdevelopment, consistent with
the implementation of the Millennium Development Goals, the
objectives of the Johannesburg World Summit for Sustainable
Development, and other international agreements.
Inevitably, this will run counter to the propositions of those who
are more powerful than themselves, the governments, peoples and
countries that keep them afloat with development assistance. These
will require, whether this is stated or not, that the recipients of
this assistance should understand that such assistance can dry
up.
This could happen if the impoverished recipients do not accept the
outcomes prescribed by those who provide the means for poor
governments to discharge their responsibility to provide the barest
of normal services and goods expected of any government everywhere
in the world, provided that they use the resources they have
received to confirm the priorities set by the donors.
Important shifts in the global balance of power and global
objectives have taken place since the UN was established
forty-eight years ago. This organisation has not substantially
changed in terms of its structures and mode of functioning to
reflect these changes. This has served as a recipe for an
inevitable crisis, a disaster waiting to occur.
And so as we meet today, we are confronted by global challenges
that this global organisation cannot solve. Impelled by the urgent
issues of the day, some of the powerful will not wait for all of us
to respond to the problems we have raised, and which they
face.
They will act to solve these problems. Their actions will make the
statement that that they do not need the UN to find solutions to
these problems.
Simultaneously, this will make the practical statement that the UN
is irrelevant to the solution of the most burning problems of our
day.
The disempowered will continue to look to this organisation,
understanding, correctly, that they are too weak to advance their
interests singly, outside of the collective voice of the UN.
In this regard, they expect that the UN will be informed by its
founding documents and other solemn decisions it has taken since it
was established, all of which have been approved by successive
sessions of the UN General Assembly, at least.
Global poverty and underdevelopment are the principal problems that
face the UN. Billions across the globe expect that this General
Assembly will address this challenge in a meaningful manner. The
masses of people of our world expect that the statements we will
make at this Assembly, as representatives of various governments,
will indicate a serious commitment to implement what we say.
The poor of the world expect an end to violence and war everywhere.
They want an end to the killing that is taking too many Israeli and
Palestinian lives. They want the Africans to stop killing one
another, continuing to convey the message that we are incapable of
living at peace among ourselves. They desire the realisation of the
democratic objective, universally, that the people shall govern.
They believe that we are seriously committed to the objective of
the eradication of poverty and the provision of a better life for
all. They think that we mean it when we say that we will not allow
that the process of globalisation results in the further enrichment
of the rich, and the impoverishment of the poor, within and between
countries.
They believe us when we say that our collective future is one of
hope, and not despair. They are keenly interested to know whether
our gathering, the UN General Assembly, will produce these
results.
For us, collectively, to meet these expectations, will require that
each and everyone of us, both rich and poor, both the powerful and
the disempowered, commit ourselves practically to act, in all
circumstances, in a manner that recognises and respects the fact
none of us is an island, sufficient unto ourselves. This includes
the most powerful.
The latter face the interesting challenge, important to themselves
in their national interest, that the poverty and disempowerment of
the billions will no longer serve as a condition for their success
and their possibility to prosper in conditions of peace.
What we have said today, may not be heard because we do not have
the strength to have our voice heard. Tomorrow, we may be obliged
to say - no more water, the fire next time! As the fires burn, the
UN will die, consumed by the flames. So will the hopes of the poor
of the world die, as they did at Cancun, Mexico, not so long
ago.
We must act together to say in our words and in our actions, as
countries and as the UN, there will be water next time, and not
fire!
I thank you.
Issued by: The Presidency, 23 September 2003
Source: Department of Foreign Affairs (http://www.dfa.gov.za)