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Date
: 18/08/2004
Source: Department of Foreign Affairs
Title: S van der Merwe: Cape Town Press Club
ADDRESS BY THE DEPUTY MINISTER OF FOREIGN AFFAIRS, MS SUE VAN DER
MERWE, TO THE CAPE TOWN PRESS CLUB, Cape Town, 18 August 2004
ALL ROADS LEAD TO THE PAN AFRICAN PARLIAMENT
Distinguished Guests
Ladies and Gentlemen:
Forty-four years ago in this very town, the British Prime Minister,
Harold Macmillan sounded an ominous warning to a joint session of
the apartheid Parliament of South Africa with the following
prophetic words:
"The wind of change is blowing through this (African) continent,
and, whether we like it or not, this growth of national
consciousness is a political fact. We must accept it as a fact and
our national policies must take account of it."
One wonders what Prime Minister Macmillan would say today if he
were here to be told that the Pan African Parliament (PAP) is
coming to South Africa.
It was at the third ordinary session of the Assembly of the African
Union held in Addis early in July this year that this extraordinary
and unanimous decision was made by Heads of State and Government.
It was extraordinary for us in South Africa because only ten years
into our democracy, African leaders placed their hopes in our hands
and through this far-reaching decision they expressed their
confidence in our abilities to be the permanent home of this
crucial continental forum.
This was the African renaissance moment that we had been waiting
for. Macmillan's "winds of change" were indeed blowing southward.
And in this too, we heard echoes across a hundred years of W.E.B.
Du Bois and Marcus Garvey in the African Diaspora as well as Kwame
Nkrumah, Julius Nyerere, and our own Nelson Mandela who had during
his time in office spoken of "an African renaissance whose time had
come."
It is worth recalling that the a year after Macmillan uttered his
now famous lines the world witnessed the inception of the
Non-Aligned Movement (NAM) that arose from the need of the
marginalised countries of the world to have their voices heard. The
principles of the Movement included respect for the sovereignty and
territorial integrity of all nations and the settlement of
international disputes through peaceful means.
Two years later saw the formation of the Organisation of African
Unity (OAU) where Africans came together to cement their political
unity and believing too that economic independence resided within a
collective of African states.
Now more than forty years later we believe that we do have the
opportunity to create a different and more desirable world than the
one we currently inhabit. Nothing is carved in stone. The freedom
to choose a different future is a real possibility. For us this
means the nurturing of an African continent, which is non-sexist,
prosperous and united.
We are convinced that the favourable winds of change are with us
and that the time is ripe for us to be able to succeed at
transforming the lives of African people for the better, to nurture
authentic spaces where we can all be ourselves.
The South African government and the national liberation movements
in exile have been part of global initiatives to live life
differently, to approach the world with a people-centred agenda, to
cultivate a caring community of nations and states whose concerns
for each other are characterised by mutual respect and recognition,
and where solutions to problems are sought through dialogue and not
war.
Today the Pan African Parliament is an expression of this spirit of
the NAM and the OAU at a political level. It is an embrace of
people-to-people interaction and it encapsulates the idea that as
part of our new democratic outlook, we have choices to make and
that there is a genuine alternative to a world of conflict. What
brings together African countries in support of this is the need to
deepen and nurture democracy at a continental level, to engage in
dialogue so as to avoid conflict and to resolve problems through
negotiations and settlements.
It is because of what our own history has taught us that we have
set our sights on contributing to a world that is just and
equitable, where democracy is entrenched and a human rights culture
actively encouraged and protected.
Our commitment is also driven by the idea that the PAP as a site
both real (political and geographic) and imagined (cultural and
philosophical) creates a new space for developing nations such as
ourselves to forge a collective identity and to act in our
collective interests to assert and position ourselves more
favourably in the global reality. In this way it helps to further
extend our freedom to be ourselves.
Thus not surprisingly President Mbeki aptly called it an "African
Parliament of Liberators" and he welcomed the decision by declaring
that:
"It is our responsibility, acting together with all other patriotic
forces in Africa and the African Diaspora, to ensure that we
mobilise the masses of the people to act as their own liberators,
taking advantage of the current African and global conjuncture that
presents us with the possibility to achieve the age-old dream of
the genuine, all-round emancipation of the African people."
He further explained that: "As the hosts of the PAP we have a
responsibility to create the best possible conditions for this
assembly of the peoples of Africa to carry out its work."
But what were the significant stepping-stones that led us to take
on this task of hosting the PAP? There have been a number of
landmarks worth mentioning on our road to the present.
* For us, since the attainment of our democracy in 1994, this
moment was the first real African homecoming. Because, for the
first time in this second wave of democracy to sweep the African
continent, the African people now had it within their own grasp to
decide jointly on their political futures, to pave the way to
permanent peace and stability through entrenching democracy. We
have within our hands the know-how and skills to build our own
economies and to bring about social and cultural advancement.
* Consciousness of our role in the world had led us to embrace an
African agenda, and to strive for the renewal of our continent. We
recognise that our national liberation had been crucial for an
entire continent whose future was at stake. Our task would have to
be to ensure an end to the impoverishment of the African continent
of which we are part and to embark on processes that would lead to
continental prosperity and sustained development.
* Together with other OAU member states, we were seized with the
task of transforming of the OAU (an organisation focused on
eliminating colonialism and minority rule, into the AU, the new
continental body focused on achieving sustainable economic
development. It was this continental effort at transformation that
culminated in the Inaugural Summit of the AU in July 2002, with
South Africa becoming its first Chair.
* The most recent AU summit took important decision on, amongst
other things, the establishment of ECOSOC, the Economic, Social and
Cultural Council, on an agreement that the African Court of Justice
be combined with the Human and People's Rights Court and further,
South Africa successfully led the campaign to ensure appropriate
and adequate representation of the African women in all the AU
structures.
Another land mark for continental advancement is the
* The New Partnership for Africa's Development (NEPAD), which is
the development programme of the AU that will expedite economic
growth and in this way tackle head-on the twin problems of poverty
and underdevelopment. NEPAD introduced a voluntary instrument for
monitoring compliance with the principles, priorities and
objectives of the Constitutive Act and other decisions of the AU -
the African Peer Review Mechanism.
* The APRM serves to provide a mechanism for peer learning and the
sharing of information and best practice. It is designed to be a
corrective measure rather than a punitive one. It is anticipated
that in time all African countries accede to peer review. 5
countries have already begun the process of peer review, starting
with Ghana and including South Africa. Our review will be done in
the first quarter of next year.
* We worked hard to ensure the development and adoption of the
Common Defence and Security Policy, which led to the establishment
of the Peace and Security Council (PSC) of which South Africa is a
member. South Africa was chair of the PSC during July 2004.
These have been some of the high points along the way of which the
PAP is but a part, but this background ought to assist in placing
the Parliament within a bigger picture of continental change.
South Africa also contributed to ensuring the successful
inauguration of the Pan African Parliament in Ethiopia in March
2004. The establishment of this key political organ of the African
Union is a crucial and necessary step towards Africa taking control
of its own political future.
In South Africa we have prioritised the formation of this
Parliament because we recognise that the prerequisite to sustained
economic development is indeed the cultivation of democratic
culture - that should have as its cornerstones political stability,
democratic governance, conflict prevention and resolution.
Thus far, 45 member states of the 53 AU states have signed and
deposited their instruments of ratification of the PAP
Protocol.
For interest sake, they are: Algeria, Angola, Benin, Botswana,
Burkina Faso, Burundi, Cameroon, Chad, Egypt, Equatorial Guinea,
Ethiopia, Gabon, Gambia, Ghana, Kenya, Libya, Lesotho, Madagascar,
Malawi, Mali, Mauritania, Mauritius, Mozambique, Namibia, Nigeria,
Niger, Rwanda, South Africa, Sahrawi Republic, Senegal, Seychelles,
Sierra Leone, Sudan, Tanzania, Togo, Tunisia, Uganda, Zambia and
Zimbabwe.
The objectives of the PAP include - among others, the promotion of
the principles of human rights and democracy in Africa; encouraging
good governance, transparency and accountability in Member States;
promoting peace, security and stability and contributing to a more
prosperous future for the peoples of Africa by promoting collective
self-reliance and economic recovery. In the first five years of its
existence, the PAP will be advisory and not a legislative
authority.
South Africa's responsibility as host is to provide the venue -
that is the physical structure as well as the infrastructure in the
venue, office accommodation for parliamentarians and staff and the
residence of the President of the PAP. A temporary venue at
Gallagher Estate will serve as the seat of PAP while a permanent
venue is being constructed.
We are excited about the prospect of a permanent purpose-built PAP
building being constructed in the longer term. For this building to
be the pride of Africa and of our nation, its architecture ought to
be appropriate for the identity of a new Africa. In order to get
the most appropriate design and to ensure that every member state
is given an opportunity to contribute to its design, a
continent-wide architectural competition will be held. Other
countries may also contribute materials and art works to be part of
the completed building.
While these are simply some of the details around the PAP, it is
the road that has brought us to this moment that is important. The
PAP is a culmination of decades of African struggle and yet it is
also a new beginning since it provides an alternative vision of the
continent and of the world.
I arrived last night from a meeting of the officials of the
Non-Aligned Movement in Durban where the theme of the gathering is
"Multilateralism in the 21st Century". Among the messages I tried
to put across is that "Now is the time when our Movement (NAM)
ought to intensify its work towards the creation of a new
people-centred world and an egalitarian world society and that our
conscience dictates to us that we strive for nothing less than
self-determination."
This is the same week in which AASROC (Co-operation between Africa
and Asia) gets off the ground in Durban through looking at concrete
projects and plans for co-operation. Our Minister will be
addressing this meeting in preparation for the 50th anniversary of
the historic Bandung summit.
Certainly I believe that a new space is opening in our political
psyche and our physical reality in which the voices of the
marginalised can be heard.
The PAP is one such place within this new site of dialogue and
democracy that has tremendous potential. We have to nurture it and
see to its infancy and future growth, so that it can walk and not
simply crawl - and so that it can take its proud position on an
international stage as one among other international bodies that
seek to articulate a different future for the world.
Macmillan's winds of change are once more blowing across the
African continent and our task is to direct this wind and take its
advantage so that it moves to the realisation of our common
continental and global dreams of peace, prosperity and
people-centeredness.
I thank you.
Issued by: Department of Foreign Affairs
18 August 2004