Date: 9/11/2006
Source: Department of Foreign Affairs
Title: Mbeki: United Nations Human
Development Report launch
Address of the President of South Africa, Thabo
Mbeki, at the launch of the United Nations Development Programme
(UNDP) 2006 Human Development Report, Kirstenbosch, National
Botanical Gardens, Cape Town
Programme Director,
The Administrator of the United Nations Development Programme, Mr
Kemal Dervis,
Director of the Human Development Report, Mr Kevin Watkins,
Ms Scholastica Kirimayo and esteemed members of the delegation from
the United Nations Development Programme,
Ministers and Deputy Ministers,
Premier of the Western Cape, Mr Ebrahim Rasool,
Mayor of Cape Town, Ms Helen Zille,
Your Excellencies, Ambassadors, High Commissioners and Members of
the Diplomatic Corps,
Distinguished guests,
Ladies and gentlemen,
On behalf of the Government of South Africa I would like to thank
Administrator Dervis and the UNDP for the accolade they have
bestowed on our country by choosing South Africa as the venue for
the global launch of the Human Development Report 2006, whose
theme, as has already been said, is 'Water and Human
Development.'
We were indeed very humbled to receive Administrator Dervis' letter
earlier this year in which he said: "Since South Africa has
introduced progressive legislation on water as a human right, the
Report introduces this as an important example to follow and
highlights the three crucial policy ingredients for progress that
are present in the South African case: a clear national plan with
well-defined targets, a strong national regulatory framework with
devolution to local authorities, and constant monitoring of
performance and progress."
Whatever will be our views about the analysis and recommendations
contained in the Human Development Report, I am certain that the
Report will make a valuable and constructive contribution to the
global efforts to achieve people-centred sustainable development by
helping us more effectively to respond to the important issue on
which it is focused, namely, "Power, poverty and the global water
crisis."
We are proud to say that over the years, we have relied, among
others, on the UNDP Human Development Reports for our programmes,
appraisals and further plans to address the challenge of building a
people-centred society and attaining the goal of a better life for
all.
Indeed, by virtue of the wealth of information and knowledge they
present, the Human Development Reports also provide an overview of
trends in the progress that humanity is making to overcome the many
threats, challenges and obstacles in our advance towards the
realisation of the objective of all-round human development.
As we know, the first Human Development Report was published in
1990. Since then, the Report has evolved steadily, in keeping with
the dramatic and often rapid changes that have characterised the
world. Yet, some realities have not changed at all. Today,
development is as much about people as it was in the early 1990s.
William H Draper III who was the Administrator of the UNDP in 1990,
said in his Foreword to the very first Human Development Report
that: "?we are rediscovering the essential truth that people must
be at the centre of all development. The purpose of development is
to offer people more options. One of their options is access to
income - not as an end in itself but as a means to acquiring human
well-being. But there are other options as well, including long
life, knowledge, political freedom, personal security, community
participation and guaranteed human rights. People cannot be reduced
to a single dimension as economic creatures. What makes them and
the study of the development process so fascinating is the entire
spectrum through which human capabilities are expanded and
utilised."
The imperative to expand and utilise this complete spectrum of
human capabilities collectively forms the basis for the four
indices that, to a very large extent, have been pioneered and
improved by the Human Development Report, namely the Human
Development Index, the Gender-related Development Index, the Gender
Empowerment Measure, and the Human Poverty Index.
As with the various options to promote human well-being regularly
advanced by the UNDP Human Development Reports, each of these
indices should not be read in isolation. Clearly putting people at
the very centre of international dialogue on sustainable
development, which is the stated purpose of the Human Development
Report, means maintaining a holistic approach to development. In
this regard, the attainment of a better life for all should drive
whatever we do to promote sustainable development.
This is very important because the poor of the world are
particularly passionate about the same options highlighted by
William H Draper III, and are entitled to "long life, knowledge,
political freedom, personal security, community participation and
guaranteed human rights."
We are happy that the Human Development Report for 2006 focuses,
correctly, on some of the central and critical aspects of
development which the more affluent members of the global community
may take for granted, namely, access to clean drinking water and
proper sanitation. Indeed, we cannot speak about development while
people subsist without clean water and proper sanitation, and thus
become exposed to numerous preventable diseases.
As in many other areas of our lives, we have a duty to fight
against domestic and global apartheid in terms of access to water.
As the Report says correctly, in the past, in our country access to
water reflected the inequalities of apartheid. Inevitably, as
democratic South Africa sought to eradicate the legacy of
colonialism and apartheid, we had to address this gross injustice.
We therefore thought that it was right and proper that we should
indeed proclaim and treat access to water as a basic human
right.
This was important because during the apartheid years, water use
was based on the English common law principle linking control and
access to water to private ownership of landed property. This meant
that the majority of black people had no access to water.
Accordingly, after our liberation, water had to be declared a
public resource, owned by the people as a whole, and policies and
programmes put in place to ensure integrated water management and
universal access to water.
Of course, as many South Africans would attest, the human right to
water gave birth to other challenges such as a sense of expectation
and entitlement among sections in society at times leading to
disputes over supply and pricing. However, what is important is
that both the public and private sector institutions and
enterprises dealing with water are alive to the rights-based
approach to water provision.
Whatever the progress we are making to respond to the task to
ensure universal access to clean water and sanitation, we are very
pleased that the UNDP Human Development Report 2006 will give us
the possibility to learn from other success stories in water
provision, so that the lessons from countries such as Colombia,
Senegal, Chile and others are used to ensure that the poor of the
world have better access to water.
Further, all of us, particularly from the developing countries,
should fully understand the benefits of co-operation in water
management and provision. In this regard, we may want to study the
example of the European Union, which through co-operation among its
Member States, has been able to improve river water standards thus
creating gains for human health, better access for domestic users,
and industry. Again, we may also want to look at the co-operation
between Lesotho and South Africa and the benefits of revenue and
improved water access for the two countries respectively.
Clearly, co-operation and mutual benefit are very critical,
especially for countries and regions with low levels of water. For
instance, I am informed that countries in our bigger neighbourhood,
such as Malawi, Kenya and our own country, are already below the
water-stress threshold while the Democratic Republic of Congo has
more than a quarter of the region's water.
Programme Director,
To ensure that we expand and utilise the entire spectrum of human
capabilities that William Draper spoke about, requires also that we
give equal weight to all components of development, be they
political, economic or social. We therefore agree with what the
outgoing United Nations Secretary-General Kofi Annan in his report,
In Larger Freedom that:
"?we will not enjoy development without security, we will not enjoy
security without development, and we will not enjoy either without
respect for human rights and the rule of law."
Clearly, development and security complement and mutually reinforce
each other. It is clear that one simply cannot be achieved without
the other, and neither is sustainable without respect for human
rights, which empowers individuals and communities with the freedom
to make better choices. When the world leaders gathered at the
United Nations Headquarters last year to assess the progress made
to achieve the Millennium Development Goals, collectively they
expressed concern that globally, and especially with regard to
Africa, the disparities and inequalities of the past continued to
persist. The Human Development Report 2006 must help us to respond
to the real and dire conditions of the poor with regard to adequate
access to water and sanitation, not with lofty words but with
concrete actions. We have to translate our words into actions that
make a difference in the quality of life of billions of poor
people.
As we know, Africa is working to respond to the many challenges
facing the continent through the development programme of the
African Union, the New Partnership for Africa's Development, NEPAD.
NEPAD seeks to engage different sectors to mobilise internal and
external resources so as to contribute to the regeneration of our
continent and the expansion of the full spectrum of human
capabilities that this entails.
Today, in response to the need for a comprehensive and integrated
approach to unlock the full benefits of sustainable water
management and sanitation for poverty reduction and economic growth
in Africa, co-ordination is taking place between governments and
development institutions through a number of major policy
instruments, namely the overarching framework of the NEPAD Water
Resources Management Programme, as well as the Rural Water Supply
and Sanitation Initiative (RWSSI), and the African Water Facility
(AWF). These programmes are driven by the understanding that
sustainable solutions to water and sanitation problems require
national, regional and international co-operation.
Within the global context, the framework offered by the Millennium
Development Goals for planning and monitoring progress achieved in
the international development agenda will become irrelevant if
Africa fails and becomes even further marginalised.
Accordingly, the measure of success in achieving the Millennium
Development Goals lies not merely in global aggregates, but in the
tangible benefits that are made to improve the quality of life of
the desperately poor in each and every country.
Accordingly, we have a duty to ensure that we persist in our effort
to achieve the national targets we have set ourselves with regard
to water and sanitation. A few days ago on 6 November, our Minister
of Water Affairs and Forestry, the Honourable Lindiwe Hendricks,
addressed this challenge and said:
"For South Africa (the response to the water challenge) started
with our Constitution, which guarantees the right to water for all
and is supported by international agreements, such as the
Millennium Development Goals. From this starting point of
recognising provision of water services as a basic human right, we
as the relevant government department, are able to put in place the
policies, legislation, and institutional mechanisms so that these
critical services are delivered to our people. We are supported by
our President who has given us targets of achieving universal
access to water by 2008 and sanitation by 2010, as well as the
Minister of Finance who has allocated resources towards achieving
these targets, as well as towards creating the bulk infrastructure
for building new dams and pipelines which are required to meet the
increasing demand for water."
"This year I was able to attend the Stockholm International Water
Week, and one of the issues being discussed was the concern that we
will start running out of water in 20 years due to increasing
demand and change in weather patterns, as some have predicted. The
message coming through was that if we better manage our water
resources we can avoid such a crisis. It is of course necessary for
us to respond to climate change issues and we look forward to
positive actions from the current discussions that are taking place
in Kenya on the new commitments under the Kyoto Protocol."
The tribute paid to our country by the UNDP through its decision to
carry out the global launch of the 2006 Human Development Report,
the purpose of this ceremony most appropriately taking place at the
Kirstenbosch National Botanical Gardens in Cape Town, imposes an
obligation on us to ensure that indeed we do everything necessary
to meet our water and sanitation targets. We will do this. In his
famous poem, "The Wasteland," TS Eliot used the allegory of a world
without water. He wrote: "Here is no water but only rock
Rock and no water and the sandy road
The road winding above among the mountains
Which are mountains of rock without water
If there were water we should stop and drink
Amongst the rock one cannot stop or think
Sweat is dry and feet are in the sand
If there were only water amongst the rock
Dead mountain mouth of carious teeth that cannot spit
Here one can neither stand nor lie nor sit
There is not even silence in the mountains
But dry sterile thunder without rain
There is not even solitude in the mountains
But red sullen faces sneer and snarl
From doors of mudcracked houses
If there were water
And no rock
If there were rock
And also water
And water
A spring
A pool among the rock
If there were the sound of water only
Not the cicada
And dry grass singing
But sound of water over a rock
Where the hermit-thrush sings in the pine trees
Drip drop drip drop drop drop drop
But there is no water"
Together, we have a responsibility to ensure that our common globe
does not turn into a mountain of rock without water, a place where
we cannot stop and think, where we can neither stand nor lie nor
sit, condemned to sneer and snarl from doors of mudcracked houses.
We need to work together to create a vibrant, developed and
prosperous world where the full spectrum of human capabilities can
and must be expanded and the full potential of every human being
realised.
The outstanding South African poet and writer, Antjie Krog, wrote
the Preamble to our 1997 White Paper on a National Water Policy for
South Africa. She said:
"There is water within us, let there be water with us. Water never
rests. When flowing above, it causes rain and dew. When flowing
below it forms streams and rivers. If a way is made for it, it
flows along that path. And we want to make that path. We want the
water of this country to flow out into a network - reaching every
individual - saying: here is this water, for you. Take it; cherish
it as affirming your human dignity; nourish your humanity. With
water we will wash away the past, we will from now on ever be
bounded by the blessing of water.
"Water has many forms and many voices. Unhonoured, keeping its
seasons and rages, its rhythms and trickles, water is there in the
nursery bedroom; water is there in the apricot tree shading the
backyard, water is in the smell of grapes on an autumn plate, water
is there in the small white intimacy of washing underwear. Water -
gathered and stored since the beginning of time in layers of
granite and rock, in the embrace of dams, the ribbons of rivers -
will one day, unheralded, modestly, easily, simply flow out to
every South African who turns a tap. That is my dream."
Let the UNDP Human Development Report 2006 serve to guide all
nations as all humanity combines to achieve the fundamental human
right of universal access to adequate water and sanitation. Let
this be our common dream.
Thank you.
Issued by: Department of Foreign Affairs 9 November 2006 |