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Date
: 02/10/2006
Source: The Presidency
Title: Mbeki: Toast remarks in Honour of India Prime Minister M
Singh
Toast remarks of the President of South Africa, Thabo Mbeki, in
honour of the Prime Minister of the Republic of India Manmohan
Singh, on the occasion of the official dinner, Presidential Guest
House, Pretoria
Your Excellency, Dr Manmohan Singh, Prime Minister of the Republic
of India and Mrs Kaur
Our Deputy President
Your Excellencies, Ministers and Deputy Ministers
Your Excellencies, Ambassadors, High Commissioners and Members of
the Diplomatic Corps
Corporate leaders of India and South Africa
Distinguished guests,
Ladies and gentlemen:
We are delighted that you, Your Excellency, your wife and your
delegation have honoured us with this historic visit. On behalf of
the people and government of South Africa, I am privileged once
more to convey a warm welcome to you and all our dear Indian
friends.
Your Excellency, we are indeed very happy that your official visit
today coincides with an important day in the calendar of the Indian
nation. We are therefore privileged to share with you the
celebration of the 137th birthday of that incomparable human being,
Mahatma Gandhi, as well as the Dusharah Festival which is
celebrated to mark the victory of God Rama over Ravana, symbolising
the triumph of good over evil.
I would like to take this opportunity to wish you, Your Excellency,
your delegation, the people of India as well as all Hindus, here in
South Africa and all over the world, the very best on this
important day.
Your Excellency, although this is your very first visit to our
shores, we know that throughout your life, as is the case with many
Indians, you have had a very intimate relationship with the people
of this country, as well as our struggle against the repugnant
system of apartheid.
Indeed, our links have been forged through our common struggle
against colonialism and apartheid, which were given concrete
expression by our common hero, Mahatma Gandhi, as well as many
South African Indians who make us proud by having unshakable roots
in both South Africa and India and by being among the most
patriotic of our people.
Yesterday we had the opportunity of reliving some of the great
feats that have immortalised Mahatma Gandhi, a rare human being
whose phenomenal courage, humility and resolute spirit straddled
the Indian Ocean and became an unbreakable thread that wove our two
countries together.
It is quite fitting, therefore, that we should be meeting here in
South Africa today, on Mahatma Gandhi's birthday. Your Excellency,
permit me also to wish you a belated Happy Birthday, which you
celebrated last week.
South Africa will always honour India as one of the most consistent
and principled supporters of our struggle for liberation. It was
India, even as she was barely independent and free herself, that
utilised every conceivable opportunity to draw international
attention to the evils of oppression and racial injustice,
occupying an honoured place within the world family of nations as a
strong voice of morality, national liberation, social justice and
human dignity.
Your Excellency, we are indeed very happy that our bilateral
relations are becoming stronger every day. Although our bilateral
trade has grown significantly since our freedom in 1994, I believe,
Your Excellency, that the current trade figures do not reflect the
full potential of existing commercial opportunities that could
still considerably boost our bilateral trade.
I am pleased that we have agreed that much more needs to be done to
exploit these opportunities to expand both trade between, and
investment in each other's economies. We are very pleased that the
India-South Africa CEO Forum was established, confident that this
vital institution, which also met during the Prime Minister's
visit, will make an enormous contribution to help our countries
achieve our shared economic objectives.
As you are aware, Your Excellency, two of the important foundations
for our bilateral relations are the historic 1997 Red Fort
Declaration on Strategic Partnership between South Africa and India
and the Delhi Declaration of 2003.
We are proud that this bilateral partnership is based on shared
values, a strong and common commitment to shared prosperity, social
justice and co-operation for a global order that is marked by
peace, security and equity. As Strategic Partners and as we should,
our countries have been engaging each other on the political,
economic, educational, cultural, social and defence areas, as well
as through people-to-people contact.
In reflecting on our strategic partnership and our engagement, it
is clear that we have made considerable progress but we need to do
more, further to strengthen this partnership. This conviction
motivated us to adopt the Tshwane Declaration we signed today,
which commits us to develop our bilateral partnership to an even
higher strategic level.
Today, the institutional relationship between our two countries is
both rich and diverse, giving us the possibility significantly to
increase our mutually beneficial co-operation across a broad front
of activities. To date, our two countries have signed about thirty
agreements and Memoranda of Understanding.
But, Your Excellency, as we have agreed, these agreements are not
an end in themselves. We have therefore agreed to do everything
possible to give substance to the content of these agreements and
speedily implement them to the mutual betterment of our peoples.
Consistent with the idiom of Mahatma Gandhi, we reiterate today:
"The difference between what we do and what we could do would
suffice to solve most of the world's problems."
Your Excellency, I would like to take this opportunity to thank you
most sincerely for the manner in which, during the visit to our
country, you have inspired all of us to do the things we must do
practically to strengthen our relations across the board.
In this regard, Your Excellency, I would like to thank you, your
government and the sister people of India for engaging in practical
programmes to help us address one of the biggest challenges facing
our country. This is in the area of human resource development
under the Indian Technical and Economic Co-operation Programme
(ITEC); through the scholarship schemes offered by the Indian
Council for Cultural Relations (ICCR) and through other various
bilateral mechanisms, thus contributing to skills development and
capacity building in South Africa.
Your Excellency, both India and South Africa share the common
understanding that global economic relations continue to be
characterised by huge inequalities, with large sections of the
world yet to reap the benefits of globalisation. In this context,
the sad suspension of the Doha Development Round negotiations has
been a severe disappointment, and we need to do all we can to
overcome this grave setback, which dates back to the unfinished
business of the Uruguay Round.
We are proud that together with Brazil we have formed a trilateral
partnership India-Brazil-South Africa (IBSA) and we were honoured
to share your company and insights last month in Brasilia, on how
to strengthen South-South relationships.
Further, Your Excellency, we are privileged to have India as an
ally as we work together in multilateral fora, especially to
address such important challenges as reforming the United Nations
and the Bretton Woods institutions and fighting international
terrorism. We are encouraged that India continues to be a reliable
partner in our on-going efforts for the renaissance of our
continent, and in this regard value your partnership with the
African Union and its programme, the New Partnership for Africa's
Development (NEPAD).
Your Excellencies, ladies and gentlemen:
Please join me in a toast to the good health and prosperity of His
Excellency, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and Mrs Kaur and to the
long-lasting friendship, co-operation and partnership between the
peoples of India and South Africa. To friendship!