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Statement by the Chairperson of the African Union Commission, HE Dr Nkosazana Dlamini Zuma to the 25th Ordinary Session of the African Union Assembly of Heads of State and Government Johannesburg, 14 June 2015 has been created.

Statement by the Chairperson of the African Union Commission, HE Dr Nkosazana Dlamini Zuma to the
25th Ordinary Session of the African Union Assembly of Heads of State and Government

Johannesburg, 14 June 2015


Your Excellency, President Robert Gabriel Mugabe, Chairperson of the African Union and President of the Republic of Zimbabwe
Your Excellency, the President of the Republic of South Africa, our host country
Your Excellencies, Heads of State and Government of the Member States of the African Union;
Deputy-Secretary General of the United Nations, Mr. Jan Eliason
The Secretary General of the Arab League, Mr Nabil Elaraby
Representative of the Palestinian Authority
Visiting Heads of State
Excellencies, Former Heads of State and Government and former Secretaries General and Chairpersons of the OAU and AU
Dr. Lopes, Executive Secrtary of the UNECA
Dr. Donald Kaberuka, President of the African Development Bank
Excellencies, Members of the Executive Council and other Ministers;
Representative of AU Organs
Deputy Chairperson Erastus Mwencha and fellow Commissioners
Visiting Ministers
CEO of the NEPAD Agency, Dr. Ibrahim Mayaki
Excellencies, Heads of African Regional Economic Communities and African Union Specialised and Representative offices;
Excellencies, members of the Permanent Representatives Committee;
Members of the Diplomatic Corps;
Distinguished invited guests;
Distinguished Guests
Officials from Capitals
Ladies and Gentlemen

Let me welcome all of you to this 25th Summit of Heads of State and Government. Karibuni Aukana!

I would like to thank the President, the government and the peoples of the Republic of South Africa for the excellent hospitalities and facilities extended to all of us.

A very warm welcome and congratulations to the Presidents who are joining us following elections in their countries: President Muhammadu Buhari of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, President Hage Geingob of the Republic of Namibia, President Filipe Jacinto Nyusi of the Republic of Mozambique and Prime Minister Pakalitha Mosisili of the Kingdom of Lesotho. We also congratulate Prime Minister Hailemiriam Desalegn of the Federal Democratic Republic of Ethiopia, President Faure Gnassingbé of the Togolese Republic and Omar al-Bashir of the Republic of the Sudan for their re-election.

Excellencies, when we met in January this year, we were still in the throes of the Ebola epidemic. But, thanks to the resilience, and hard work of the peoples and governments of Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone, to the young African men and women of ASEOWA, to Member states, the private sector, to the international community and to the African citizens; Liberia has been declared Ebola free for the last 78 days. We congratulate President Sirleaf Johnson, her government and the people of Liberia for this achievement.

In the other two countries Sierra Leone and Guinea, numbers have significantly reduced. We should not get complacent. We must stay the course until the other two countries are also declared Ebola-free.

The lesson from the Ebola Virus Disease is that with African solidarity and resolve, we can find our own solutions to our challenges. The disease also exposed the weaknesses of our health systems, especially public health. As we move towards recovery, we must train more health workers, and build and strengthen our health systems and infrastructure.

Excellencies,

We’ve been faced by the incidents of xenophobia, and the tragedy of many people dying in the Mediteranean sea, leaving their countries out of desperation, to make a living elsewhere.

In 1906, one of the finest sons of our soil, Pixley ka Isaka Seme in his George Wilson Curtis Medial winning essay at Columbia University said,
The African people, although not a strictly homogeneous race, possess a common fundamental sentiment which is everywhere manifest, crystallizing itself into one common controlling idea. Conflicts and strife are rapidly disappearing before the fusing force of this enlightened perception of the true intertribal relation, which relation should subsist among a people with a common destiny.

It is this common destiny that should guide us towards an integrated, prosperous, peaceful and people-centered Africa which is a dynamic force in the world. Of course for this to happen we should refuse to camp forever on the borders of the industrial world, and having learned that knowledge is power, educate our children and youth, as Pixley ka Isaka Seme said, in 1906.

Indeed, if we educate and skill our people, with an emphasis on science, engineering, technology, maths resource and innovation, including technical and vocational skills; our people will stop undertaking the perilous journeys across the Sahel and the Mediteranean sea.

When we undertake this skills revolution, extremists, armed groups and terrorists will find it difficult if not impossible to recruit our young women and men.

Instead, our youth will have the skills to generate electricity, including renewables.

They will produce enough food for the entire Africa, as they modernise and grow agriculture and agroprocessing, and agribusiness.

They will stop camping at the borders (and shores) of the industrial world, but will transform our economies through industrialisation, manufacturing and by adding value to our natural resources.

They will develop our blue economy and build our infrastructure, connecting our capitals and commercial centres through ICT, and through highways, rail, aviation and oceanic and waterways. They will ensure that this is done through the most modern of technology, including the Pan African high speed rail network.

They will create a uniquely African continent whose economic development will not only be based on profit, but on the needs of the people, driven by the youth and women. They will create a prosperous and non-sexist continent. They will take charge of our outer space.

Excellencies

To achieve Seme’s dream, there are a few hurdles we have to overcome. We must believe in ourselves. We have to realise that the demographic dividend is possible if we adopt the right policies, manage our diversity and make every citizen feel valued and part of the driving forces for change and progress, irrespective of tribe, religion, colour or creed, and whether they are man, woman, boy or girl.

In the world today, the countries that now drive the world economy are those with huge populations, such as the emerging economies of China, India and Brazil. Even in Africa, the largest economy (Nigeria) has the largest population.

They are in the same league in terms of population as Africa, but they have the advantage that they are united.

It is for this reason that even though we cannot be one country, we need to speed up our integration and unity.

We must recall Kwame Nkrumah’s words that Africa must unite or perish.

Excellencies, this is why we are so excited about the signing of the trade agreement by the twenty- six countries that make up the Tripartite of COMESA, EAC and SADC in Shamal Sheik this week. This indeed is a good basis for the launch of the Continental Free Trade Area. Of course, if we add ECOWAS - it will be 41 countries, making the Continental Free Trade Area well within reach. This will not only boost intra-Africa trade, but also boost investment. In a similar vein, if we move faster on the free movement of people, goods and services, and the African passport, we are sure to see an increase in trade, as well as tourism and economic growth.

Excellencies, the adoption of the First 10-year implementation plan of Agenda 2063, the Africa we want, will signal a new determination and a desire to bequeath a better Africa to the next generations.

We should chart a new unique Africa, without comparison. Our ancient civilizations cannot be compared to any other.

For instance, the obelix of Axum, the civilizations of Egypt, the Nok and the Ashanti; the Empires of the Shongai, Mali and Monomotapa, the Royal Houses of Nubia, d’Oyo, Benin, Kongo, Kanem-Bornu and Dahomey; Abyssinia, Zimbabwe and Mapungubwe compared to no other; the Egyptian, Ethiopian and Sudanese pyramids; the mosques of Timbaktu, our langauges, our art, music and dance; our geniuses created what is uniquely African.

As the leading generations of our time, it is upon us to help chart our uniquely African path and place in the world today. Agenda 2063 is our roadmap and beacon.

Seme also said:
“In all races, genius is like a spark, which, concealed in the bosom of a flint, bursts forth at the summoning stroke.”

It is our responsibility in all sectors to create the conditions that act as a summoning stroke for the human genius of Africans. It will be contributions of Africa’s young people, its men and women, its intellectuals, its entrepreneurs, its artists, and its sports people today that will shape our destiny.

We are a century late in terms of Seme’s dream, but we can see in the cities and towns, in rural areas, the spark of this brighter Africa.
In building our shared prosperity we must be uniquely African, by placing the human being, rather than only profit at the centre.
As Seme said: The most essential departure of this new civilization is that it shall be thoroughly spiritual and humanistic - indeed a regeneration moral and eternal!
Excellencies,

By January next year we shall present the comprehensive strategy to build African capacity and skills for implementing Agenda 2063. This capacity and skills plan shall be geared towards the empowerment of Africa’s young people, women and girls, creating an enabling environment for them to become the drivers of our transformation and development.

Over the last fifteen years, our development agenda has focused on primary education, its now time we urgently paid attention to vocational and higher education. We cannot drive our economic development only through primary education. We need champions for higher education, to help steer and support the African higher education sector. At the Universities Summit hosted in Dakar Senegal by President Macky Sall in March 2015, His Excellency graciously accepted to be one of these champions, who paying special attention to the issue of harmonization of higher education.

This will enable our young people to study and apply their skills anywhere on the continent. We need more such champions. I am sure we shall have more champions volunteering to join him in this task.

Between now and January, we must also do more to popularise the 10-year plan, to align Agenda 2063 to our national and regional strategies and report on our recommendations on the allocation of roles and responsibilities between the RECs, the AU Commission and the Nepad Agency.

We will send teams to the countries that ask assistance to domesticate their plans. We will undertake that exercise together with NEPAD.

The AU Commission and other organs will also align their Strategic plans with Agenda 2063.

Excellencies

Our coastline and waterways are amongst the largest in the world and offer for us much opportunity. Consequently, on 25 July this year we shall launch the Decade of African Oceans and Seas. We will also celebrate that day annually as the Day of African Oceans and Seas, so as to fully utilise and create awareness on the opportunities presented to us by the ocean and seas. We therefore call on all coastal countries, island states and countries with waterways to join us in launching this important decade, so that Africa can be part of this Blue economy.

Already, African women in maritime met in Luanda, Angola earlier this year, refusing to camp at the borders, but instead charted areas of cooperation for women in shipping, port management, fishing and other areas of the blue economy. We have to take charge of our oceanic space.

Excellencies

Africa has many examples of indeginous and good farming practices, some of them climate smart and we must share these experiences, and replicate and upscale them.

In addition, more must be done on agro-processing and businesses, as part of building our collective food security, to reverse our high food imports bill and as part of industrialisation and job creation.

We look forward to the recommendations from the High Level Gender Panel and Ministers of Women on financial inclusion and agro-businesses to this Summit.

Excellencies,

We announced in January that the Pan African Parliament will host the 3rd AU Intergenerational dialogue, and we are glad to report that this indeed took place. The young men and women from across the continent met with the Parliamentarians from PAP, a target for youth employment and investment in our Agenda 2063 first 10 year plan and for an annual report on the status of the continent’s youth.

In my 2013 email to Kwame Nnkrumah, I spoke about students forming AU clubs. I am happy to say there is a delegation from the University of Cape Town’s AU club who are present here. We would like to know about similar clubs in other universities. We welcome the UCT AU Club delegation, and we encourage all students and youth to form AU clubs at their institutions and communities.

We are also happy about the numbers of women at this Summit from all over this continent. As they say in South Africa: Malibongwe, Igama lamakhosikazi - We praise the Women!
Excellencies, Seme contended that ‘the victories of peace are greater and more abiding than the spoils of war.’
It is for this reason that our Peace and Security Council, our peacekeepers, mediators and our high representatives are working tirelessly to silence the guns within the five years we have pledged.
But, as political leadership, governments, political parties, faithbased organisations and communities, we must play our part, to build tolerant, inclusive and democratic communities and societies, where the dignity and rights of all are respected.
Unfortunately, women and children are the main victims of conflicts, enduring untold miseries, hardships, sexual and other forms of violence, in wars and conflicts which they played no part in starting.

Our resolve to silence the guns, must therefore give hope to women and children suffering from the terror of Boko Haram and Al Shabaab. Our resolve must provide renewed hope to the peoples in conflict ridden areas in Darfur, East DRC, Libya, Mali, Somalia, and South Sudan, where lives and livelihoods have been shattered.

We must in the words of Seme ensure that ‘conflicts and strife rapidly disappear before the enlightened perception…among a people with a common destiny.”

Excellencies
We are encouraged by the movement on the decision on Alternate sources of funding, to incrementally provide more domestic resources for the AU and its organs. Starting from next year, we will take the first step in this direction, which is testimony the determination of Africans to take charge of their destiny.

We thank the South African government for the Golf Day and fund raising dinner last night, and for all the individuals pledges.

Excellencies, we welcome the fact that we shall debate the Summit theme Women’s empowerment for the realisation of Agenda 2063 later today. Agenda 2063 is about the people, we cannot leave out halve of the population. May I also remind all of us, that women and youth form the majority of the voters.

We should therefore heed President Nelson Rolihlahla Mandela’s words when he said:
The legacy of oppression weighs heavily on women. As long as women are bound by poverty and as long as they are looked down upon, human rights will lack substance.
As long as outmoded ways of thinking prevent women from making a meaningful contribution to society, progress will be slow.
As long as the continent refuses to acknowledge the equal role of more than half of itself, it is doomed to failure.”

Ngiyabonga
Asante sane
Ke a leboga
Shukran
Mercie
Muchos obrigade
Kanimambo

Dates: 
June 14, 2015
English

Statement of the Chairperson of the AU Commission, Her Excellency Dr. Nkosazana Dlamini Zuma to 27th Ordinary Session of the Executive Council of the African Union

Statement of the Chairperson of the AU Commission, Her Excellency Dr. Nkosazana Dlamini Zuma to 27th Ordinary Session of the Executive Council of the African Union

11 June 2015, Johannesburg


Your Excellency, Honorable Shimbaradze, Chairperson of the Executive Council, Minister of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Zimbabwe
Honorable Ministers Member of the Executive Council, and Heads of Delegation,
Honorable Ministers and High-level Officials from the capitals, here present
Dr. Carlos Lopes, Executive Secretary of the UNECA
Your Excellency Erastus Mwencha, Deputy
Chairperson of the AU Commission and other Commissioners
Your Excellencies Members of the PRC,
Dear Colleagues Commissioners,
Members of the Diplomatic Corps,
Distinguished Representatives of International
Organizations
Distinguished Invited Guests,
Ladies and Gentlemen and Fellow Africans

I warmly welcome you to this 27th Ordinary Session of the Executive Council, during this crispy winter of Gauteng, which means place of gold.

As we gather here in Johannesburg this week, the eyes of African women, young and old, from all walks of life are on this Summit, held under the theme Women’s Empowerment and Development for the realization of Agenda 2063.

Women and girls pin their hopes on the Union, to act decisively - together with our governments, civil society, faith-based organisations, business and workers associations, the women’s and youth movements - to ensure that women everywhere in the continent have access to land, to capital, to clean and affordable energy, to water and sanitation, to jobs and sustainable livelihoods and to health care. They expect to partipate in all areas of human endeavour

Our girls and young women in particular yearn for opportunities to, along with their brothers have access to education, including in the vocations and in areas of science, engineering, technology, research and innovation. As our Minister of Botswana likes to say: if we deny the African child an education, we deny them a life.

During this Summit, a number of gender and women’s events are therefore being held, to emerge with a call to action on the empowerment of women, guided by our theme for 2015.

During the first part of this year, we have already begun to see the mobilisation by the women’s movement on such issues as access to land, to capital, financial inclusion and on the representation of women in all areas of human endeavor.

Excellencies, women in Somalia, Central African Republic, eastern DRC, South Sudan, Darfur, northern Mali, the north of Nigeria are yearning for peace: for themselves, their children, their families and communities, to live normal lives, to plough their fields, and to educate their children. We must silence the guns.

These issues highlighted by women are already contained in our instruments - such as the Maputo Gender Protocol, the Solemn Declaration on Gender Equality.

The challenge, Your Excellencies, is that if we continue at the same pace of gender transformation as we did since the 1995 Beijing Women’s Conference, it will take us another 80 years to reach full gender parity.

As African women and girls, and progressive minded men, we agree that this is unacceptable. We can’t wait for another 80 years. We have to do more to ensure that the continent operates at its full capacity, by including women, so that we can implement our Agenda 2063 effectively.

As indicated earlier this, we will therefore launch at this Summit the inaugural African Gender Scorecard, as an instrument to monitor progress, share best practice, and hold each other accountable. We would like to thank the UNECA for their hard work to have this done by the Summit.

During 2014, the Year of Agriculture women farmers from across the continent called on us to consign the handheld hoe to the museums and to assist them with access to modern technology, land, credit and extension services.

As we speak, the 2nd AU High level Panel on Gender with Ministers of Gender and Women from civil society is in progress under the theme ‘Financial inclusion of women in Agribusinesses’, and we look forward to their recommendations.

Excellencies, Ladies and Gentlemen

The Executive Council just emerged from a two-day Retreat, where we discussed the first 10 Year Plan of Action for Agenda 2063. We also strategise on the challenges of integration, with a focus on free movement of people and goods, as well as the harmonization of higher education in Africa.

Trade amongst African countries remain below global standards, although a number of regions through their Economic Communities (RECs) are making progress - especially in the East African Community, in SADC, ECOWAS and COMESA.

The trade agreement reached by the latter three RECs yesterday, and the launch of the African Continental Free Trade negotiations this year, are therefor all aimed at growing trade amongst ourselves and therefore jobs and creation of wealth.

The Council retreat recognized that the Agenda 2063 priorities, including the African skills revolution and connecting the continent through transport, energy and ICT infrastructure are critical enablers for increasing economic integration and shared prosperity. We must therefore continue to push ahead with progress on these matters.

Our discussion on the harmonization of higher education was prompted by the calls from across the continent by students and young professionals and entrepreneurs, expressed forcefully during the Agenda 2063 consultations - that they want to be able to study, work and have their qualifications recognized everywhere in the continent.

We must therefore move faster to ensure that higher education in Africa is comparable and compatible, with recognition of credentials that facilitate transferability of skills, knowledge and expertise.

We want to ensure that African citizens, especially our young people, can use their qualifications to work anywhere in Africa.

A related matter is therefore our continental discussions on speeding up the free movement of people and goods. Within RECs we see a lot of progress, but we also need to duplicate the best practice between and amongst RECS so that we eventually have free movement across the continent

We must therefore keep in mind the concerns of the majority of our continent’s population, our young men and women, for access to opportunities and a voice.

Excellencies, the challenge of xenophobia and the tragedy of thousands of young Africans undertaking perilous journeys across the seas to look for greener pastures has to motivate us to speed up the implementation of our Agenda 2063 so that the Africans have skills on our continent, have job on our continent; that they only move across the seas because they want to move, not because they have to move.

We have to move on the skills and vocational revolution, especially in the areas of science, technology, innovation, engineering and mathematics.

This will also help us to industrialise and build manufacturing, so that we stop exporting jobs and revenue, along with the raw materials we continue to export.

We must empower our young people to contribute as innovators, entrepreneurs, manufacturers, traders, scientists, inventors, professionals, workers, farmers - in all areas so that they become the drivers of our transformation.
Excellencies,

We just returned from the World Summit on the Ocean, and it was indeed an illuminating experience. For me

The Deputy Chairperson of the Commission, likes to say, talking in the context of the African Integrated Maritime Strategy 2050, that Africa is a large island, with smaller island states. All the matters discussed at this Ocean Summit therefore impact on Africa, but there were very few Africans present at this summit.

The Blue economy includes both economic aspects (deep sea prospecting, fishing, etc), as well as environmental concerns for marine life and against pollution of the oceans with plastics and other pollutants.

A few months ago, the first ever Women in Maritime Africa conference was held in Luanda, Angola to mobilise women in the sector and look at Pan African cooperation to ensure greater African ownership and participation.

We also know that a number of African countries have or are in the process of looking at the establishment of centres for maritime studies, to increase the number of African skills and research in this area.

I want to remind the Excellencies, that on 25 July this year, in accordance with AIM 2050, we will launch the start of the Decade of African Oceans and Seas, as an important step towards the continent reclaiming its ownership of this critical part of our natural resources, and managing it in the interest of all Africans, including future generations.

We shall have a central event, but we also encourage our coastal countries, countries with inland waterways and island states to organise events that focus on African Oceans, Seas and Lakes and other waterways on this day.

Excellencies,

In conclusion, the adoption of the First Ten year Plan of Action for Agenda 2063 will take us to the next step of implementation. This will enable us to

It will help move forward our unstoppable quest for a peaceful, integrated, prosperous and people centered Africa,that takes its rightful place in the world.

I wish the Executive meeting fruitful discussions that will take us a step forward in our quest for a prosperous Africa.

I thank you
Dates:
Jun.11.2015

Dates: 
June 11, 2015
English

Opening Statement on the Occasion of the 27th Ordinary Session of The Executive Council by Honourable Simbarashe S. Mumbengegwi the Minister of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Zimbabwe

OPENING STATEMENT ON THE OCCASION OF THE 27TH ORDINARY SESSION OF THE EXECUTIVE COUNCIL BY HONOURABLE SIMBARASHE S. MUMBENGEGWI THE MINISTER OF FOREIGN AFFAIRS OF THE REPUBLIC OF ZIMBABWE CHAIRPERSON OF THE EXECUTIVE COUNCIL: 11 JUNE 2015: JOHANNESBURG, SOUTH AFRICA

Your Excellency, the Chairperson of the African Union Commission, Dr. Nkosazana-Dlamini Zuma;
The Minister of International Relations and Cooperation of South Africa, Hon. Maite Nkoana-Mashabane;
Hon. Ministers of the African Union Member States;
Members of the Permanent Representatives Committee and other Senior Government Officials;
Members of the Diplomatic Corps;
Representatives of the Regional Economic Communities;
Invited Guests;
Ladies and Gentlemen;
Comrades and Friends;

I wish to welcome you, Honourable Ministers, to the 27th Ordinary Session of the Executive Council. Let me express my profound gratitude and appreciation to the Government and people of the Republic of South Africa for the warm welcome and the usual legendary hospitality accorded to me and my delegation, since our arrival in this bustling cosmopolitan city of Johannesburg. The excellent state-of-the-art facilities placed at our disposal provide us with the environment necessary for conducting our deliberations in preparation for the Assembly.
I wish to thank the Chairperson of the African Union Commission, Dr. Nkosazana-Dlamini Zuma, and through her, all African Union Commission Staff for the sterling preparatory work. Your critical role in facilitating the functioning of our Union and its Organs, is fully appreciated.

Let me commend the Permanent Representatives Committee for their efforts and diligence in preparing for this meeting.

Honourable Ministers,
We held our 2nd Ministerial Retreat on 9 and 10 June 2015, during which we successfully deliberated on the First Ten-Year Implementation Plan of the African Union Agenda 2063 and its Financing Mechanisms; and Streamlining and improving the Working Methods and Rules of Procedure of the African Union.

In relation to Streamlining and improving the working of our Union, one cannot over-emphasize the importance of according ample and unbridled time to our Heads of State and Government to attend to issues that are strategic to the Continent. In line with this, it is imperative to review the Working Methods and Rules of Procedure of the other Organs of the Union in order to enhance their efficiency and effectiveness in the discharge of their various mandates.

Honourable Ministers,
As you will recall, the Assembly, at its 24th Ordinary Session held in January 2015 in Addis Ababa, took the strategic Decision to progressively increase Member States funding of the Union to make sure that at the end of five years, starting from 2016, Member States will be financing 100% of the Operations Budget, at least 75% of the Programmes Budget and at least 25% of its Peace-keeping Operations Budget. That Decision, inevitably brings with it added responsibilities for Member States, particularly in the area of assessed contributions. The Decision was not only necessary, but was an important step taken by our Principals to ensure African control over and ownership of the Union and its programmes and activities. The old adage, “he who pays the piper calls the tune,” becomes relevant in our situation.

It is therefore imperative that as we seek alternative sources of financing the Union, our organisaton should take measures to ensure that we operate within the confines of our Budget. This would enable the Union to avoid overdependence on our cooperating partners.

Honourable Ministers,
As we conduct our deliberations, let us also remember the challenges that are facing our great Continent. In so doing, let us take heart in the knowledge that none of these challenges are insurmountable. Africa, through the African Union Commission, took the lead to fight against Ebola, together with the support of the African private sector. This was no mean achievement as it showed what we can achieve with unity of purpose. Further, it was a clear demonstration of the desire and readiness of the African private sector to participate in the development of Africa.

Dear Colleagues,
I would like to emphasize the need to institute strong follow-up mechanisms as we prepare ourselves for the implementation of the First Ten-Year Plan of Agenda 2063. There is an old Chinese saying which says, “A journey of a thousand miles begins with the first step.” We have already taken that decisive first step. The journey over the next 50 years will be long and may even be riddled with many hurdles which we must overcome together as we move towards our desired destination. With our collective knowledge, wisdom and political will, we should be able to achieve what is envisaged in the Agenda 2063 blueprint.

Honourable Ministers,
The African Union theme for 2015, is “Year of Women Empowerment and Development towards Africa’s Agenda 2063.” It is noteworthy that more than half of the population on the Continent are women. They form the backbones of our nations, regions and the continent, at large. It is, therefore, only logical to conclude that no sustainable development can take place without the input and involvement of African women. It is important that as we embark on the implementation of the Agenda 2063 blueprint, we ensure that the most important factor in our development process, the women and the youth, are given pride of place, not as an act of charity, but as clear recognition of their essential role in the actualisation of the seven aspirations under the Agenda 2063 blueprint, to lead us to an Africa that is, “integrated, prosperous and peaceful, driven by its citizens, and representing a dynamic force in the international arena.”

Honourable Ministers,
It is now my singular honour and privilege to declare this, the 27th Ordinary Session of the Executive Council, officially open.

I thank you.
Dates:
Jun.11.2015

Dates: 
June 11, 2015
English

Clone Opening Remarks for Minister Maite Nkoana-Mashabane at the 27th Ordinary Session of the Executive Council

• Your Excellency, Chairperson of the Executive Council, Minister Simbarashe Mumbengegwi of the Republic of Zimbabwe;
• Your Excellency, Chairperson of the African Union Commission, Dr Nkosazana Dlamini Zuma;
• Your Excellences, Heads of Delegation;
• Your Excellences, Distinguished Members of the Diplomatic Corps;
• Distinguished Guests

Let me reiterate my warm welcome to you all to South Africa. Following our robust engagement in the last two days at our retreat, I know that we are ready and determined to use the Executive Council effectively to prepare for the necessary decisions by our leaders. If our leaders had sat in on the robust discussions we had at the retreat on the first 10 year implementation plan of Agenda 2063, I am sure they would have shared the sense of urgency and commitment which I took from the meeting regarding the need to implement, to implement, to implement all the critical decisions necessary to make the lives of our people, in particular women, better as embodied in Agenda 2063. We must thank the Chair of the Commission for the work that they have done on Agenda 2063.

With seven of the fastest growing economies in the world being in Africa and the continent being the repository of all the variety of resources required in minerals for either sustained development or sustained recovery, the time has never been opportune for Africa to achieve the things it wants. Furthermore, with our youth dividend the continent is uniquely advantaged. Therefore, never has the effectiveness of the AU, and the symbiosis between its organs and structures, been more critical. Whether Africa seizes the moment or not, is dependent on how we as the Executive Council, which is a critical layer of the decision making processes of the African Union, work. Therefore, how we process the work deposited to us by the PRC and take it forward to our Heads of State and Government, is important. Through us they must resolve not only issues of the implementation of Agenda 2063 but also the necessary resources to fund it, as well as matters pertinent to peace and security. This is just lifting a few of the wide range of areas that our leaders are supposed to deliberate on in a short space of time.

Following our interaction at the retreat, I know we are all inspired and ready to work to make it easy for our leaders to conclude their work on a heavy agenda covering a wide range of issues.

With these words I wish you a pleasant stay in South Africa.

Thank You.
Dates:
Jun.11.2015

Dates: 
June 11, 2015
English

Report of the Chairperson of the Commission on the Situation in South Sudan to the Peace and Security Council 515th Meeting at the Level of Heads of State and Government, Johannesburg, South Africa

Report of the Chairperson of the Commission on the Situation in South Sudan to the Peace and Security Council
515th Meeting at the Level of Heads of State and Government, Johannesburg, South Africa

Dates: 
June 13, 2015
English

Clone Statement of the Chairperson of the AU Commission Delivered by HE Mrs Fatima Acyl, Commissioner of Trade and Industry to the Gender is My Agenda Pre-Summit Conference, 8-9 June 2015, Sandton, Johannesburg

Statement of the Chairperson of the AU Commission Delivered by HE Mrs Fatima Acyl, Commissioner of Trade and Industry to the Gender is My Agenda Pre-Summit Conference, 8-9 June 2015, Sandton, Johannesburg

STATEMENT OF THE CHAIRPERSON OF THE AU COMMISSION
DELIVERED BY HE MRS FATIMA ACYL,
COMMISSIONER OF TRADE AND INDUSTRY
TO THE
GENDER IS MY AGENDA PRE-SUMMIT CONFERENCE
8-9 June 2015
Sandton, Johannesburg

Programme Director
Leadership of GIMAC and Civil society
The President and Leadership of the Pan African Women’s Organisation
Mme Bineta Diop, Special Envoy of the AUC Chairperson on Women, Peace and Security
Veterans of the African women’s movement
Ladies and Gentlemen

It is truly an honour for me to address this meeting of GIMAC, on behalf of Her Excellency, Dr. Nkosazana Dlamini Zuma, who unfortunately cannot make this meeting due to other continental duties she is undertaking.

For those of you who know my boss, Dr. Dlamini Zuma takes the issues of African structural transformation very seriously. She always reminds our heads of state and leadership, if they are serious about development and shared prosperity, they cannot ignore more than 50% of our population, the women. If we don’t empower women, we will function at halve capacity, and it will be a huge missed opportunity. When talking to and about women, there is no big or small gathering for the Chairperson and she would have loved to be here today.

She also most definitely shares your commitment to move from solemn declaration to solemn action.

Ladies and Gentlemen

Let me start by congratulating GIMAC for once again providing this critical platform for civil society and women’s organisations, to meet, to reflect on progress and jointly strategize on how we should push forward our Pan African agenda.

In January this year, on the margins of the Summit in Addis Ababa, we discussed the theme for the Year: Women’s Empowerment and Gender Equality for the realisation of Agenda 2063.

We agreed that we must use this year to make decisive progress on key areas, and identified the six priority areas: health and reproductive rights; financial inclusion and women’s empowerment; peace and security; representation and education and skills with a focus on STEM and women in agriculture.

Since then, we have focused on the practical issues to take each of these priority areas forum.

Ladies and Gentlemen

I am sure that this GIMAC forum will take stock of where we are and the practical issues needed as we finalise the first ten-year plan for Agenda 2063.

Let me highlight a few of these issues, which we want to address at this Summit.

Firstly, during the Malabo Summit on Agriculture, and in the Agenda 2063 consultations, women farmers appealed to us to relegate the handheld hoe to the museum. We have listened and at this Summit we will launch the campaign to replace this relic with more modern technology, and to achieve this in the next ten years.

Secondly, the Summit will also launch the start of negotiations on the Continental Free Trade Area, and on 10 June 2015 tripartite of SADC, Comesa and EAC composed of 23 countries concluded an agreement in Shamal Sheik as an important step in this direction.

As we know, women make up the majority of cross border trades (up to 85%), we must therefore look at ways to ensure that the voices and issues of women traders feature prominently in the CFTA negotiations.

Thirdly, as indicated in January, we will be launching at this Summit the inaugural African Gender Scorecard, as an instrument to monitor progress and share best practice, so that we hold each other and our governments accountable for the implementation of our gender instruments such as the Protocol and the Solemn Declaration.
In addition to these issues, we will at this Summit and for the remainder of the Year also continue to pay attention to the issue of financial inclusion and economic empowerment, as well as health, reproductive rights and the focus on skills, science, technology and innovation.

On financial inclusion, the Ministers of Finance and Planning at the March meeting discussed the issue of women’s access to credit in the content of the first 10 year plan on Agenda 2063, as well as domestication of Agenda 2063. The Chairperson of the AUC wants to also involve Central bankers as well as the private sector in addressing this issue of access to credit for women.

Dr. Dlamini Zuma on this occasion said:
‘We must move away from always talking about micro credit and micro enterprises when we talk about women. There is nothing micro about us. There is nothing micro about women.”

The voices and actions of civil society remain critical to taking our struggle for gender equality and women’s empowerment forward. We therefore wish this GIMAC forum all success, and look forward to the outcomes of your deliberations.

I thank you.

Dates: 
June 08, 2015
English

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