July 31, 2009

Caadp Blog

Togo signs CAADP Compact

(l-r) Dr. Mayaki, AU Commissioner for Rural Economy and Agriculture Rhoda Peace Tumusiime and Prof. Mkandawire have welcomed the signing of the CAADP Compact by Togo

(l-r) Dr. Mayaki, AU Commissioner for Rural Economy and Agriculture, Rhoda Peace Tumusiime and Prof. Mkandawire have welcomed the signing of the CAADP Compact by Togo

Lome, 31st July 2009 — Togo’s roundtable meetings on the Comprehensive Africa Agricultural Development Programme (CAADP) have successfully ended with the endorsement of the Togo CAADP Compact.

 

The roundtable meetings which were held from the 29th to the 30th of July attracted close to 150 agricultural experts, policymakers, and representatives from the Government of Togo, the African Union (AU), the New Partnership for Africa’s Development (NEPAD), the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) and development partners.    

 

 

The Compact is a mutual commitment between the Government of Togo and the various national, regional and international agencies that are committed to the CAADP Agenda.

 

The Compact was signed by Togo’s Ministries of Finance and Agriculture, the AU-NEPAD, ECOWAS, a representative of the development partners and representatives from the private sector and civil society.

 

Since the establishment of CAADP at the AU 2003 Summit in Maputo, Togo is the second country to sign the CAADP compact agreement after Rwanda, which made the first concurrence in 2006.

 

“This is clearly a landmark moment in the progress of CAADP. The signing of this Compact highlights not only Togo’s commitment towards poverty eradication through agriculture, but also Africa’s focus on the Maputo declaration and broader global agenda towards issues of food security” said Dr. Ibrahim Assane Mayaki, NEPAD’s Chief Executive Officer.

 

As per the 2003 AU Maputo declaration NEPAD’s Comprehensive Africa Agricultural Development Program is based on two major principles: the pursuit of a six percent average annual growth rate at the national level in the agricultural sector, and the allocation of ten percent of national budgets to agriculture.

 

CAADP’s agenda reflects a fundamental shift in the way Africa’s leadership looks at agriculture and its potential contribution to ending poverty, hunger, and malnutrition. The program—fully owned and led by African governments—is at the heart of efforts to achieve growth and national development in line with the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs).

 

According to Prof. Richard Mkandawire, the Adviser for Agriculture at NEPAD, Togo’s Compact highlights a shared framework for strategic planning and implementation, and for partnership and development assistance in the country’s Agriculture sector.

 

“A key aspect of this will include genuine support towards Togo’s National Program of Agricultural Investment (NIPA) for the purposes of designing quality investment programmes that are in line with the country’s priorities”, he added.

 

NIPA is a program developed by the Togolese government is a strategic planning framework for a long term agricultural investment and a platform for cooperation between the partners in the agricultural sector of Togo.

Ends

 

 

 

 

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July 29, 2009

Caadp Blog

Le discours de Dr.Mayaki, le Secretaire Executif du NEPAD lors de la table round de PDDAA au Togo

Dr. Ibrahim Assane Mayaki
Dr. Ibrahim Assane Mayaki

Excellence monsieur le Président de la République,

Madame la Commissaire en charge de l’Economie Rurale et de l’Agriculture de l’Union africaine

Monsieur le Commissaire en charge de l’Agriculture de la Communauté Economique des Etats de l’Afrique de l’Ouest

Mesdames et Messieurs Les Ministres,

Mesdames et Messieurs Les Représentants des Corps Diplomatiques et des Organisations Internationales,

Honorables Invités,

Mesdames et Messieurs,

Laissez-moi vous dire tout l’honneur du NEPAD de participer à cette table ronde du Programme Détaillée de Développement de l’Agriculture Africaine, la première du genre dans la région ouest africaine.

Je remercie sincèrement le peuple togolais et particulièrement son Excellence le Président Faure Gnassingbé pour la fraternité et la cordialité de l’hospitalité qui nous a été réservée.

 

Excellence monsieur Le Président, Honorables invités, mesdames, messieurs

 

Pourquoi le PDDAA a-t-il été conçu ? Afin de créer un cadre politique de développement de l’Agriculture au niveau continental. Ce que nous visons avec la Commissaire Tumusiime de la Commission de l’Union Africaine, c’est l’utilisation de ce cadre politique afin de définir des stratégies régionales et nationales.

Cette table ronde se tient dans un contexte particulier marqué par une crise économique mondiale sans précédent qui marque la fin d’un ordre du monde et annonce le début d’un monde incertain.

L’affaissement de l’activité économique mondiale aura, a déjà, des répercussions sur notre continent.

L’Afrique, après avoir enregistré des taux de croissance soutenus et prometteurs ces cinq dernières années voit une baisse de croissance s’amorcer cette année avec notamment des pressions supplémentaires sur des budgets nationaux déjà mis à mal lors des crises énergétiques et alimentaires, une paupérisation se traduisant par l’incapacité à satisfaire les besoins les plus élémentaires comme l’alimentation qui demeure un droit humain fondamental, avec ce que cela peut entrainer comme agitations et tensions sociales.

Excellence monsieur Le Président, Honorables invités, mesdames, messieurs

 

Pour nous, cette crise peut constituer une opportunité car elle marque la fin des donneurs de leçons, qui n’ont pas marché et elle va permettre à l’Afrique de réfléchir pour elle-même.

Des reformes sont en cours dans nombres de pays et de nouveaux espaces politiques et économiques s’ouvrent pour les acteurs non étatiques (organisations de la société civile, le secteur privé agro-alimentaire, les organisations de producteurs, etc.) afin de leur permettre de participer activement au processus national de développement de l’agriculture en particulier. Désormais les organisations de la société civile ne sont plus vues comme des acteurs anti-développement mais plutôt comme des acteurs actifs du processus de développement. Au niveau du PDDAA, nous avons pris connaissance du rôle critique que les acteurs non étatiques peuvent jouer comme instrument de changement.

 

Excellence monsieur Le Président, Honorables invités, mesdames, messieurs

 

Permettez-moi de féliciter notre hôte de ce jour à savoir la République du Togo, pour les efforts qui ont permis l’instauration d’un climat de paix, propice au développement socio-économique, malgré la crise qu’a traversé le pays, il y a quelques années.

Cette table ronde est le résultat d’un processus national, cohérent et soutenu. C’est ce processus qui a permis d’aboutir à des documents de travail sérieux et de qualité. C’est ce processus, qui vaut aujourd’hui, l’honneur au Togo d’être le premier de la Communauté des Pays des Etats de l’Afrique de l’Ouest à organiser la table ronde du PDDAA. Et peut être le second pays du continent à signer un compact après la République du Rwanda.

 

Excellence monsieur Le Président, Honorables invités, mesdames, messieurs

 

Il ressort de l’analyse des perspectives de croissance de l’économie du pays que « Si les tendances actuelles de croissance se poursuivent, c’est-a-dire une croissance de 3,8% pour l’ensemble de l’économie et 4,4% pour le secteur agricole comme ce fut le cas entre 2002 et 2005, cette croissance reste cependant insuffisante pour permettre au Togo d’atteindre les Objectifs du Millénaire pour le Développement à l’horizon 2015, à savoir réduire de moitié la proportion de la population considérée comme pauvre».

De même, « Les résultats escomptés de la mise en œuvre de la SDR, la Stratégie de Développement Rural, bien que meilleurs, ne permettraient pas non plus d’atteindre l’objectif de 6% de croissance tel que recommandé par le PDDAA ».

Le pays devrait pour réaliser les objectifs du millénaire pour le Développement atteindre un taux de croissance du secteur agricole de:

      -        9,6% à l’horizon 2015

      -        Soit 6,9% à l’horizon 2020

Cette analyse nous interpelle tous, secteur public, secteur privé, organisation de la société civile, organisation des producteurs, partenaires technique et financier pour une plus forte mobilisation et plus de cohérence dans nos interventions, qui dorénavant doivent se resserrer autour du Programme National d’Investissement de l’Agriculture du Togo. Car ce programme est la volonté exprimée du Togo. Il est en cohérence avec l’ECOWAP, le Programme Agriculture de la CEDEAO. Et il embrasse les principes et les valeurs du PDDAA, qui sont :

  • La constitution de partenariats et d’alliances, c’est- à -dire (1)l’alignement et l’harmonisation dans les efforts de développement entre les gouvernements nationaux et les partenaires au développement, (2) la participation effective dans le processus de prise de décisions politiques des organisations de producteurs et autres acteurs y compris le secteur privé, et (3) l’accès à une expertise technique adaptée.
  • Le deuxième principe : Le dialogue, la revue (par les pairs) et la responsabilité mutuelle – au niveau national ceci ouvre le processus à une responsabilité collective et une participation inclusive jusqu’au niveau des structures à la base. Ces principes sont supposés stimuler et répandre les pratiques de normalisation, d’apprentissage mutuel et d’harmonisation des efforts de développement nationaux, en encourageant un niveau plus élevé de coopération transfrontières et d’intégration régionale.
  • L’exploitation des complémentarités, de la coopération et de l’intégration  régionale  ainsi que les besoins communs et mutuels et les avantages comparatifs régionaux.

Ceci devrait induire une transformation fondamentale au niveau de la façon dont les affaires sont gérées avec un impact réel sur :

  • la qualité des programmes de développement/d’investissement ;
  • la qualité dans la mise en œuvre et les mécanismes de diffusion et autres arrangements politiques et institutionnels
  • des liens sous-sectoriels mieux organisés (filières: élevage, pèche, production végétale) y compris plus de partenariats de bonne qualité;
  • Des interactions régionales de qualité y compris une meilleure collaboration régionale sur le front économique.

Quand un gouvernement africain choisit l’Agriculture comme priorité, il est sur la bonne voie.

 

Le simple fait de donner la priorité à l’Agriculture, est un signe manifeste de démocratie car cela est l’illustration de la prise en compte des intérêts de la majorité.

 

Le rôle des partenaires au développement, s’ils sont sincères, est de participer à l’accompagnement de ce processus.

 

Quand on demande à nos leaders d’avoir la volonté politique des choix de priorité, il faut de l’autre côté avoir la volonté pratique d’appuyer ces choix.

 

Nous ne devons pas répéter l’exemple du Rwanda où après ce même type de table ronde, les partenaires n’ont pas été à la hauteur de ce qui était attendu d’eux.

 

Les efforts de conception ont été réalisés, l’appropriation a été circonscrite, l’adhésion a été recherchée, les documents de qualité ont été élaborés, sérieusement élaborés.

 

Qu’attendons-nous des partenaires au développement ? L’application des mêmes valeurs qu’ils prônent : volonté politique, transparence et cohérence dans les engagements.

 

 

Je vous remercie.

 

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Caadp Blog

Togo zeroes in on CAADP as an avenue for agricultural-led development

LOME—Close to 150 agricultural experts, policymakers, and representatives from the African Union’s (AU) - New Partnership for Africa’s Development (NEPAD), the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS), and other international organizations will convene here from 29th to 30th July for a roundtable on NEPAD’s Comprehensive Africa Agricultural Development Program (CAADP). The ultimate aim of CAADP, which is spearheaded by African governments, is to accelerate agricultural growth, reduce poverty, and achieve food and nutrition security. The program was created to facilitate the commitment of resources and policies necessary to revitalize African agriculture.

In most African countries, agriculture is the engine of economic growth, and agricultural growth is the cornerstone of poverty reduction. Approximately sixty-five percent of Africans rely on agriculture as their primary source of livelihood, and smallholder farmers are responsible for more than ninety percent of Africa’s agricultural production.

CAADP’s agenda reflects a fundamental shift in the way Africa’s leadership looks at agriculture and its potential contribution to ending poverty, hunger, and malnutrition. The program—fully owned and led by African governments—is at the heart of efforts to achieve growth and national development in line with the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs).

“The key to spurring greater economic growth and achieving the first MDG of cutting poverty in half by 2015 is agriculture-led development. Therefore NEPAD and ECOWAS will support Togo to design quality investment programmes and help by the mobilization of resources to implement them” said Dr. Ibrahim Assane Mayaki, NEPAD’s Chief Executive Officer.

            NEPAD’s Comprehensive Africa Agricultural Development Program is based on two major principles: the pursuit of a six percent average annual growth rate at the national level in the agricultural sector, and the allocation of ten percent of national budgets to agriculture as per the 2003 Maputo declaration.

          The purpose of the CAADP roundtable, which is hosted by the Government of Togo, NEPAD, and ECOWAS, is to reach consensus among key stakeholders on how to take forward Togo’s National Program of Agricultural Investment (NIPA) along the CAADP Principles. The aim is to see how this national agricultural development agenda can be pushed forward in order to forge the necessary partnerships to implement it, and secure commitments and resources from partners to make the necessary investments as per the CAADP priorities. NIPA is also consistent with the ECOWAPthe agricultural Policy of ECOWAS, and Program for Priority Actions (PAP).

The government of Togo is expected to meet the renewal of the commitment of the African Union heads of State and Government towards the 2003 Maputo declaration.

Similar roundtables will be held throughout the region in August and September to speed up implementation of various countries’ agricultural development programs. The main objectives of the CAADP roundtables are to:

·         review how national policies and investments are supporting agricultural development;

·         identify constraints to achieving the six percent target growth rate for the agricultural sector, and identify policy and investment gaps;

·         design action plans to bridge these gaps and agree on the necessary resources and capacity to  implement the plans; and

·         adopt mechanisms to coordinate efforts and monitor and evaluate a country’s progress and performance.

 

“In the coming years, growing populations, stagnating agricultural productivity, and increasing climate change will make it even more difficult for Togo to tackle poverty, hunger, and malnutrition,” said, Kossi Messan Ewovor Minister of agriculture, livestock and fisheries of Togo. In order to deal with these challenges, the Government of Togo through NIPA and with the support of AU/NEPAD, ECOWAS and development partners is zeroing in on agriculture as a key aspect of its poverty reduction efforts. 

For more information, please contact:

Dr. Andrew Kanyegirire, CAADP Communications Manager

Email: andrewk@nepad.org

Tel. contact in Lome, Togo: +228 080 06 67

 

 

 

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July 13, 2009

Caadp Blog

G8 pledges support for research in African agriculture and health

As predicted, science and Africa featured only marginally in the G8 discussions in Italy held on 8-10 July. But at least in two key research areas, agriculture and health, world leaders agreed to make some progress.

From left to right: the Indian Prime MInister Manmohan Singh, Brazil President, Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, Mexican President Felipe Calderon, South Africa President Jacob Zuma and Chinese State Counsellor, Dai Bingguo, during the G5 Countries family photo del G5 on the first day of the G8 Summit in L'Aquila.G8website/ANSA Photo: Ciro Fusco

From left to right: the Indian Prime MInister Manmohan Singh, Brazil President, Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, Mexican President Felipe Calderon, South Africa President Jacob Zuma and Chinese State Counsellor, Dai Bingguo, during the G5 Countries family photo del G5 on the first day of the G8 Summit in L

 

In a US$20 billion package for global food security, the G8 nations agreed to work with national governments and regional organisations to strengthen agricultural research systems, increase investment and access to scientific knowledge and technology.

 

The Leaders of the 40 States and International Organizations have approved the L’Aquila Initiative on Global Food Security. Their objective is to invest the US$20 billion dollars in 3 years to encourage rural development of poor countries. Initially the funds invested amounted to 15 million dollars.

The decision has been subcribed to by all of the countries represented in L’Aquila, as well as the G8 and G5 countries, Egypt,  Australia, South Korea, Indonesia, Denmark, The Netherlands, Spain, Turkey, Algeria, Angola, Ethiopia, Lybia, Senegal, and Nigeria, along with the African Union and all of the International Organizations.

The Leaders have further promoted the development of a Global partnership focused on Agriculture and Food Security with the objective of prioritizing the importance of Agriculture on the International agenda, launching new investments and improving  the efficiency of aid  programs and regional coordination by involving all the partners.

They also said they would “strengthen” the role of the Consultative Group for International Agricultural Research (CGIAR) – an international alliance of agricultural research bodies. But no figures were put on the level of investment for agricultural research, and nor did the G8 nations set out how they would strengthen it.

World leaders also agreed to “address substantial gaps in knowledge” in the management and delivery of healthcare in Sub-Saharan Africa. Proposals include the development of networks of researchers and establishing a consortium of interdisciplinary centres of health and innovation.

Again, world leaders failed to set out how much funding they would contribute to such initiatives, but they say, “as a first step” a planning meeting will be convened later this year to establish a roadmap to develop the consortium.

Sources:

http://www.g8italia2009.it/G8/Home/G8-G8_Layout_locale-1199882116809_Home.htm

http://blogs.nature.com/news/thegreatbeyond/2009/07/g8_pledges_support_for_researc.html

Source for the photo: G8website/Ansa.

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July 1, 2009

Caadp Blog

UN’s Asha-Rose Migiro calls for more focus on the Maputo declaration

Following is UN Deputy Secretary-General Asha-Rose Migiro’s address to the Thirteenth Ordinary Session of the Assembly of the African Union in Sirte, Libya, today, 1 July:

 

I bring warm greetings to you from the Secretary-General of the United Nations, Ban Ki-moon.  It is a great privilege to represent him at this important Summit.

 

I am grateful to Brother Leader Colonel [Muammar] Qaddafi, as well as the Government and people of Libya for their warm reception and hospitality.  I should also like to take this opportunity to commend AU Chairperson Qaddafi for his leadership of the African Union, and Chairperson [Jean] Ping for his steadfast stewardship of the African Union Commission.  It is also fitting that I congratulate Dr. Ali Treiki for his election as the next President of the General Assembly, a tribute to Libya and to Africa.

 

Earlier this year, the African Union met to discuss the continent’s infrastructure needs.  Today, we gather to address the critical role of agriculture in creating economic growth and food security.

 

Africa faces challenges on several fronts.  The world remains gripped in the most severe economic crisis in 60 years.  Food and fuel prices remain high and volatile.  The effects of climate change are growing more pronounced.  Progress towards the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) remains too slow.  The scourge of non-constitutional changes in authority is returning, just when we thought this was a thing of the past.  And violent conflicts continue to imperil the lives of many.  These challenges demand resolute action from all of us.

 

Clearly, we meet at a critical time.  More than half of all Africans currently live in extreme poverty.  We must use this Summit to mobilize action to protect the poorest and most vulnerable -— and prevent more from joining their ranks.

 

Since time immemorial, agriculture has been the cornerstone of development in every region, not just in Africa.  Although the share of Africans living in urban areas has doubled since 1965, 70 per cent of Africans still live in rural surroundings.  They depend on agriculture for their livelihoods, most at subsistence levels.  The benefits of investing in agriculture are clear.  Agricultural investment creates jobs.  It can make economic growth more durable.  And it can increase food and nutritional security.

 

Agricultural investment can also have a profound impact on social equality, particularly by improving the situation of women, who account for the bulk of smallholder farmers in Africa.  Empowering women smallholder farmers should be part of a broader commitment to ensure women play leadership roles across our economic, political and social development fields.

 

By some estimates, a dollar invested in agriculture in Africa has a two or three times greater impact on poverty than the same amount invested in other sectors.  And yet, until recently, agriculture has often been neglected in national development strategies.  The results of this neglect are clear.  Food continues to cost more than it should, and prices continue to fluctuate.  In fact, many prices remain higher than the poorest can afford.

 

Two hundred sixty-five million people in sub-Saharan Africa currently go hungry —- an increase of almost 12 per cent over last year.  Children bear the brunt of this burden.  Close to half of all children in sub-Saharan Africa are underweight for their age.  Malnutrition can permanently stunt their prospects for survival, growth and long-term development.  This already appalling situation is expected to get worse.  The United Nations projects that the rate of economic growth in Africa will be only 0.9 per cent in 2009, down from 4.9 per cent in 2008.  Poverty as a whole will rise by 1.2 per cent in 2009 compared to 2008.

 

We should all be alarmed by these numbers.  We must do all we can to address them by giving agriculture the attention it deserves.  We know where the problems lie.  For instance, only 7 per cent of arable land in Africa is irrigated, compared with nearly 40 per cent in Asia and 20 per cent globally.  Fertilizer is barely used on depleted soils.  Climate-adapted seed varieties are scarce.  And planted acreage appears to be falling.

 

We also know what needs to be done.  African ministers rightly called for a sustainable green revolution earlier this year in Windhoek.   Malawi, for example, shows us what can be achieved when good policies are backed by adequate resources.  Less than a decade ago, Malawi was hit by famine.  Today, Malawi is a food exporter.  Other countries have also recorded great successes.  We need to replicate these transformations across the continent. 

 

The Comprehensive Africa Agriculture Development Programme (CAADP) provides a solid framework for action.  We need to ensure that every African country has a national strategy for agricultural development.  To deliver on CAADP’s promise, countries still need to follow through on the Maputo Declaration’s pledge to raise agricultural spending to 10 per cent of their national budgets.  Though the 2008 target year has passed, current conditions amply justify the continued pursuit of this goal.

 

Donors, working with Africa’s farmers, will also need to step up their support.  The Secretary-General’s MDG Africa Steering Group estimated that an increase in annual agricultural aid —- from its current levels of 1 to 2 billion dollars per year to 8 billion dollars —- would allow Africa to meet the goal of halving extreme poverty.  This is a great deal of money, but some perspective is in order.  Against the trillions in liquidity marshalled to combat the financial crisis, increased aid to African agriculture is eminently feasible.  Moreover, the Steering Group’s work with 10 initial countries on the “Gleneagles Scenarios”, based on the G8’s pledge to more than double aid to Africa, has showed that scaled-up aid can be absorbed and spent without compromising macroeconomic stability.

 

The Secretary-General’s High-Level Task Force on the Global Food Crisis is working with other mechanisms to help donors deliver this financing in a coherent fashion.  Indeed, aid remains critical.  The global economic crisis has reduced export revenues, cut remittances, sliced tourism revenues and lowered capital flows.  Aid is one of the few financing sources left.

 

At the same time, aid alone is unlikely to meet all of Africa’s needs.  As the Danish Africa Commission and the Aid for Trade Initiative have highlighted, private capital can play a key role in processing raw commodities, creating value chains, building transportation networks and ensuring more food makes it to market.  But inward investment must be consistent with country-led priorities and poverty reduction.  This is why the African Union’s work on a Framework and Guidelines for Land Policies is so timely.

 

Private capital is especially important for Africa since trade accounts for 60 per cent of total income.  In this light, we must not only resist protectionism, but also continue to break down the substantial trade barriers between African countries.  Tackling climate change must also be a top priority.  Left unaddressed, climate change will make our efforts to support agriculture and reduce hunger more expensive and more difficult.  Indeed, climate change strikes at the heart of Africa’s key development concerns:  clean energy, better water, reduced disease incidence and increased food security.  

 

For all these reasons, we need to seal a deal on a new climate agreement in Copenhagen this December.  A fresh global agreement would help African countries adapt to climate change and reduce greenhouse-gas emissions.  Urgent action is needed from all countries.  Industrialized countries should commit to substantial cuts in emissions.  They also need to provide adequate and predictable financing to developing countries for mitigation and adaptation. This funding should be additional to current aid commitments —- not a substitute.

 

Global solidarity will be required in Copenhagen.  As we all know, the people who suffer most from the effects of climate change -— many of whom live here in Africa —- have had the smallest hand in creating this problem.  This inequity must be addressed under a new climate agreement.  The Secretary-General is counting on your full support to make Copenhagen a success.

 

We know that the challenges we face will continue to evolve.  And our understanding of them will need to be constantly updated.   This is why Secretary-General Ban has asked me to mobilize the United Nations family to create a Global Impact and Vulnerability Alert System.  This system will give us a real-time picture of emerging challenges as they develop, country to country, village to village.  Armed with better data, we can respond more quickly and with greater focus.

 

A stronger agricultural sector is a prerequisite for a brighter future for Africa and its people.  But even as we focus on food security, we remain mindful of the daunting challenges to peace and political stability faced by some African nations.  The United Nations, in close collaboration with the African Union, and other regional and sub-regional organizations, will spare no effort to bring about lasting peace and security throughout Africa.  We must act resolutely together to end the scourge of violence and conflict that still bedevils our beloved continent. 

 

In Somalia, Secretary-General Ban is seriously concerned by the continuing violence.  He strongly condemns the ongoing attempts by insurgent groups to overthrow the Transitional Federal Government (TFG) that is open to include all.  This Government represents the most viable option for peace and national reconciliation.

 

We cannot afford its collapse, nor can we allow the Djibouti peace process to unravel.  We urge Member States to fulfill the pledges they made in Brussels last April to provide bilateral assistance to the Transitional Federal Government and the support it needs.  In particular, the TFG needs adequate funds to sustain its forces in Mogadishu.  At the same time, we must work together to mobilize additional troops for the African Union Mission in Somalia (AMISOM).  For its part, the United Nations Security Council has decided to provide logistical support to AMISOM and we are in the process of delivering it.

 

In the Sudan, the challenges to the full implementation of the Comprehensive Peace Agreement and peace in Darfur are well known.  Elections and the referendum in the South are approaching.  Yet, many obstacles to their successful conduct remain unresolved.  The United Nations-African Union Hybrid Operation in Darfur and the African Union Mission in Somalia show that we can advance the cause of peace when we build on the comparative advantages of our organizations.  But nothing will change for the people of Somalia, who have suffered so deeply and for so long, unless their leaders and their sub-regional neighbours begin to look beyond short-term self-interest.  Confrontation cannot bring peace and stability to Somalia -— only cooperation can.  Without it, Somalia’s agony will endure, blighting its people and imperiling the sub-region.

 

In Madagascar, we continue to support an inclusive and consensual political process leading to credible elections.  We welcome the Southern African Development Community’s decision to appoint former President Joachim Chissano to facilitate talks between the Malagasy parties.  We look forward to working with him.

 

As we strive to resolve the Malagasy crisis, the African Union, United Nations, Southern African Development Community and the Organisation Internationale de la Francophonie must maintain a concerted approach and convey a common message to the parties involved.  But the future of Madagascar is ultimately in the hands of the Malagasy people themselves.  They must exhibit the leadership and vision to move Madagascar decisively beyond its recent cycle of extra-constitutional change.   

 

We see reasons for hope coming from the recent progress in the Great Lakes Region.  The Government of the Democratic Republic of the Congo and the Congrès national pour la défense du peuple showed courage in coming together, on 23 March, to pledge themselves to peace.  The reconciliation between the Democratic Republic of the Congo and Rwanda displays equal bravery.  We are particularly grateful for the efforts of former Presidents Olusegun Obasanjo and Benjamin Mkapa, as well as the vital support of regional leaders, in helping to bring about these major developments.  This has been a shining example of the results that concerted regional leadership can accomplish.

 

But our work is not yet done.  The commitments made on 23 March must be made real.  The improvement in regional relations must be deepened and consolidated. And those leaders of armed groups who still refuse the call of peace -— such as Lord’s Resistance Army leader Joseph Kony -— must know that the world will hold them accountable for their acts.

 

In West Africa, the United Nations, the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) and the African Union are working to ensure lasting peace and reconstruction in Guinea-Bissau, Sierra Leone, Liberia and Côte d’Ivoire.  We are also involved in restoring constitutional order in Mauritania and Guinea.

 

In Mauritania, our joint efforts culminated in the 26 June decree establishing a Transitional Government of National Unity.  It is our hope that this will lead to credible elections and pave the way for the consolidation of democracy.  Likewise in Guinea, our joint efforts in support of the country’s transitional process have intensified through various mechanisms, including the International Contact Group on Guinea.  The outcome of the fourth session of the Group, which was held here in Sirte on 27 June, clearly indicates our commitment to the restoration of constitutional order in Guinea.

 

The African Union’s unwavering rejection of unconstitutional changes in government -— combined with the determination of Africa’s peoples —- has driven each of these encouraging developments.  But we can do more to bring peace to Africa.  I exhort this august assembly of leaders to seek the early support of the United Nations, this Union, other regional organizations, and other third parties, to help defuse disputes before they turn violent.  Prevention is so much better than any cure. 

 

There are no easy solutions.  We have seen how quickly the hope offered by elections can degenerate into death and destruction.  In the next few years, African Member States will witness an historic number of trips to the polls.  We must work together now to ensure that these electoral processes are conducted in a free, fair and transparent manner that helps build the stable and prosperous Africa to which this Union is pledged.  But elections are not enough to build an ever-more peaceful and stable Africa.  The effects of climate change, rapid urban growth, unemployment and food insecurity can all create tension and open conflict.

 

Cooperation in dealing with these challenges must be our watchword going forward:  we need to strengthen global collaboration -— and build a new multilateralism that delivers results for all, not just a fortunate few.  This will require strong leadership from all sides -— from both African Governments and their international counterparts.  The United Nations will continue to be your constant partner in this endeavour.

 

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