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: 09/07/2003
Source: The Presidency
Title: Mbeki: Toast at luncheon in honour of President George W
Bush
TOAST OF THE PRESIDENT OF SOUTH AFRICA, THABO MBEKI, AT THE
OFFICIAL LUNCHEON IN HONOUR OF PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH,
Presidential Guest House, Pretoria, 9 July 2003
Mr President,
Mrs Laura Bush,
Honoured members of the United States delegation,
Distinguished guests,
Ladies, gentlemen and friends:
I am delighted to extend a very warm welcome to you Mr President,
Mrs Laura Bush, Barbara Bush and the rest of the US delegation. I
am also pleased, Mr President, to congratulate you on your 57th
birthday, which you celebrated last Sunday.
I am happy that during your short visit to our country we have
managed to discuss a number of issues that confront both our
countries and the world in an open and friendly manner.
Mr President:
You have come to a country that has old and valued links to yours.
The very first patriots in our country, who mobilised our people
for the democratic victory we secured in 1994, were educated in
United States universities in the 19th century.
In the 20th, when we needed the support of the peoples of the world
to attain our liberty, the people of the United States stood side
by side with us. In the aftermath of our democratic victory, your
country, Mr President, has worked with us to overcome a
centuries-old legacy of racist domination and apartheid, which it
continues to do.
As the eminent representative of such a people, Mr President, we
could not but receive you as a friend and an honoured guest. Thank
you very much for calling on us, accompanied by your dear wife and
daughter and your distinguished compatriots.
You have graced our shores, the cradle of humanity, at an important
moment in the history of our continent during which, as Africans,
we envisage the real possibility of the dawn of a new age.
We know that we face formidable challenges on the road to that new
day. But we are convinced, Mr President, that millions of Africans
share a common determination to succeed.
To achieve that success, we need the continued support you have
already demonstrated. Acting in partnership, I am confident that
our peoples have the possibility to make a valuable contribution to
the rebirth of the continent from which slaves were transported
across the oceans from Goree Island, which you visited in Senegal,
and from elsewhere on our eastern and western shores.
Mr President:
A significant number of our compatriots live and work in your
country, contributing to the development of the United States, and
enjoying the benefits it offers. Many of your citizens, whose
ancestors were transported as slaves out of Africa, feel a close
affinity to our country and continent, in the same way that we feel
close to them.
A growing number of your compatriots, both black and white, live
and work in our country, contributing to the historic effort to
create a new South Africa and a new Africa.
What these ordinary Americans and South Africans are doing at both
ends of the Atlantic Ocean surely says to both of us that we, as
governments, should join hands in the common striving to help bring
about a better life for all. We are greatly strengthened by the
knowledge that we have you as our partner and friend.
Ladies and Gentlemen, please rise and raise your glasses - to the
health of President and Mrs Bush, and friendship between the
peoples of South Africa and the United States of America. The
President!