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
: 08/12/2005
Source: The Presidency
Title: Mbeki: Comoros Donors Conference
Remarks by President Thabo Mbeki at the Comoros Donors
Conference, Mauritius
Thank you very much Director of Ceremonies, Prime Minister
Ramgoolam, Prime Minister of Republic Mauritius, President Azali of
the Union of Comoros, Leader of the opposition Paul Berengel of
Republic of Mauritius, good to see you. And distinguished
representatives of the International Organisations, the United
Nations (UN), the African Union (AU), the Arab League,
Francophone.
Let me join the Prime Minister of Mauritius in saying thank you
very much indeed to all of you for coming here.
We are indeed very pleased that you could take time to come to
Mauritius for what we believe is a very important Donor
Conference.
Our view is that what President Azali and the government of the
Comoros are asking for is actually very little. In terms of the
capacity of the international community to respond to this
challenge, I think we can, and hopefully we will today respond to
this challenge in full.
The statistics distributed by the government of the Union of
Comoros show that the population is 576 000; it is not many
people.
Here we have a small island state, one of the least developed
countries on our continent. It has major challenges as reflected in
the documents prepared by the government including the Growth
Poverty Reduction Programme 2006/2009. But I think what is
inspiring about the Union of the Comoros is what they have been
doing to overcome the process of instability that has lasted for 30
years.
I think I can say this President Azali, President Azali has been
pestering me over the last four weeks about the forthcoming
Presidential Elections and when I say President I understood you
the first time, he explains again about the critical importance of
these elections and that they have to succeed in particular with
Anjuan being the next candidate as our colleague here was
indicating. The critical importance here is that the elections must
happen. Therefore we need to create the conditions to make sure
that these elections take place and that they are indeed free and
fair.
We were joking about this with him earlier that if we did not
succeed last Sunday to find a Prime Minister when we went to
Abidjan he could then take over as Prime Minister of Cote
d’Ivoire.
I am mentioning this really to say; here is a small island state of
576 000 people, least developed, many challenges. You can see that
as you walk around Comoros.
There is a great determination to say we need to move beyond the
past, which is a past of instability; of all sorts of things that
went wrong. Let us now do the right thing .Here are these 576 000
people. They say to us here who represent billions can you please
help us to this tiny tiny amount of assistance just over 250
million Dollars.
Help us over this three year period so that we can reinforce this
democratic peaceful processes by bringing change, material change
to the lives of the people ,its two lags ,two things that must
reinforce each other.
Thank you very much for coming and I am quite sure that we shall
all of us be able to respond with the necessary generosity to this
appeal, surely if we cant help a nation a country of only 576 000
people then it means indeed the future of humanity must indeed be
very bleak.
But I am sure we are going to show by what we decide today that
indeed there is hope even for those among us who suffer from this
grinding poverty that anybody can see very clearly, very visibly in
the Comoros, but I think those people need this lag up as they
entrench democracy as they entrench stability and as they reconcile
amongst themselves, the step up that only the people here can
give.
Thank you very much indeed for coming and let’s make the
necessary progress.