Assembly Special Declaration on Illicit Financial Flows
Assembly Special Declaration on Illicit Financial Flows
Promoting Africa’s growth and economic development by championing citizen inclusion and increased cooperation and integration of African states.
Promoting Africa’s growth and economic development by championing citizen inclusion and increased cooperation and integration of African states.
Agenda 2063 is the blueprint and master plan for transforming Africa into the global powerhouse of the future. It is the strategic framework for delivering on Africa’s goal for inclusive and sustainable development and is a concrete manifestation of the pan-African drive for unity, self-determination, freedom, progress and collective prosperity pursued under Pan-Africanism and African Renaissance.
H.E President William Samoei Ruto (PhD), President of the Republic of Kenya and the African Union Champion on Institutional Reform. H.E. Ruto was appointed during the 37th Assembly of Heads of State and Government in February 2024 to champion the AU Institutional Reform process taking over from the H.E Paul Kagame, President of the Republic of Rwanda who led the implementation of the reform process since 2016.
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Assembly Special Declaration on Illicit Financial Flows
Decision on the Report of the High Level African
Trade Committee (HATC) on Trade Issues
Keynote Address by H.E. Mrs Tumusiime Rhoda Peace
Commissioner for Rural Economy and Agriculture of the
African Union Commission
On
"The Agriculture Future We Want"
At the AU Joint Conference of Ministers of
Agriculture, Rural Development, Fisheries and Aquaculture
1 May 2014
AU Conference Centre, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
I thank the Chairperson of this Joint Conference, Honourable Minister of the Islamic Republic of Mauritania
Honourable Minister of the Federal Democratic Republic of Ethiopia, our host
Honourable Ministers of Agriculture, Rural Development, Fisheries and Aquaculture of African Union Member States,
Distinguished Heads of Delegations of African Union Member States,
Distinguished representatives of Regional Economic Communities,
Excellencies members of the Diplomatic Corps,
Distinguished representatives of African and international organisations,
Distinguished representatives of Africa's development partners,
Distinguished representatives of Farmers, Non-State Actors,
Dear members of the Media,
Ladies and gentlemen,
My presentation is based on the Agriculture we want. This is within the Africa Agenda 2063 that you have just listened to by way of introduction.
As Commissioner responsible for Rural Economy and Agriculture at the African Union Commission, allow me to join H.E The Deputy Chairperson of the Commission who this morning, welcomed you all to this important Conference.
Let me begin by saying that it is my singular honour and pleasure to convey to you warm greetings and best wishes of the African Union Commission and our Chairperson H.E. Dr. Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma, on the occasion of this opportune and important Conference.
Indeed, as we all know, this Conference comes at a time when we move towards concluding a year-long celebration of the 50th Anniversary of the OAU, now AU under the theme "Pan-Africanism and African Renaissance." And as you all know Pan Africanism is about asserting African dignity and so, ensuring a food and nutrition secure citizenry is central to Pan Africanism and African Renaissance.
This Conference also comes as the first political follow-up milestone to the formal launch by the AU Heads of State and Government on 30 January 2014, of 2014 as the Year of Agriculture and Food Security also commemorating the 10th Anniversary of the Comprehensive Africa Agriculture Development Programme (CAADP).
More importantly, this meeting serves as a key stepping stone in the build up to the next June Summit, where AU Heads of State and Government will debate on the theme of the Year of Agriculture and Food Security with a view to providing strategic direction and adopting a Declaration of renewed and strengthened commitments towards concrete goals and targets in advancing Africa's agriculture and food security agenda for the next decade.
From the outset, it is deemed fitting that we proceed from a shared vision of the Future Agriculture We Want for Africa. Because, short of agreeing on where we want to be, we may end up elsewhere or nowhere.
Africa Agenda 2063 Vision and the Year of Agriculture and Food Security
Let us start with, the Agriculture Future We Want is an integral part of the bigger Agenda 2063 Vision of The Africa We Want, that is “An integrated, prosperous and peaceful Africa, driven by its own citizens and representing a dynamic force in the global arena” as you have already heard.
This is reflected in the very theme of the Year of Agriculture and Food Security, which is "Transforming Africa's agriculture for shared prosperity and improved livelihoods through capturing opportunities for inclusive growth and sustainable development" that relates directly to the pan-African transformative Agenda 2063.
From the consultations we have so far held with multiple stakeholders across the African continent at different levels, the emerging picture of the agriculture future we want is one that is driven by a broad base of dynamic and creative African citizens, contributing to creating inclusive growth, shared prosperity and sustainable development across the continent and to making Africa a major player in the global agrifood economy. It has been observed that today, there are no productive sectors that can help accelerate our walk towards this bright Africa future more than the agriculture and food system.
Bluntly put, in a "farm-to-fork" value chain perspective, this system provides for a potential total business value of US$ 1 trillion by 2030 rising up to US$ 3 trillion by 2050! At this juncture, what could better contribute to achieving a vision of a prosperous, food and nutrition secure and, therefore, poverty-free, peaceful Africa more than unleashing the capacities and resourcefulness of the majority of Africa's citizens to realize that potential to create and capture broad-based wealth and jobs from such a multi-trillion dollar business? The answer, I have no doubt, is more than obvious to this august policy audience.
Defining features of the agriculture future we want
Honourable Ministers,
Excellencies,
Ladies and Gentlemen,
There are converging voices indicating that to realize that dream, we need an agriculture future grounded in five solid foundations ranging from production and productivity, value addition, food and nutrition security, to resilience and investment finance.
Increased production and productivity
First, the agriculture future we want should be a future of a modern and productive agriculture anchored in a solid science and knowledge foundation.
This is considered as being imperative because ten years after the adoption of CAADP, Africa's agricultural output has been growing at an average annual rate of 4%, one-third short of the targeted 6% growth rate achieved or surpassed by only a few countries.
It is thus recommended that for Africa to redress this shortfall in the future, national and regional centres of excellence of Africa's science, technology and innovation systems will have to be capacitated to fully implement the Science Agenda for Agriculture in Africa, and generate and disseminate the knowledge and technologies required to double agricultural total factor productivity by 2025. As you know, 2025 is an important target set by AU Heads of State by which time we should have ended hunger on the continent.
At the same time, African farmers, including the majority of smallholders and women among them, should have secured access to and rights over the land they nurture and manage productively and sustainably. Farmers have to be equipped with adequate knowledge and sustainable water management systems (especially irrigation). These farmers have to be continuously afforded reliable and efficient access to the best inputs, equipment and financial services by a thriving African agricultural input industry and services business, in order to engage in modern and profitable farming enterprises that attract the continent's increasingly educated youth. In the projected desirable future, African smallholders especially women farmers should have been liberated from the use of a hand-hoe, to modernize and upgrade. We will have to phase out the hand-hoe if we are attract the youth into agriculture. The youth cannot get attracted to agriculture if we continue to use rudimentary technology but rather if we apply modern technology. In the future we want, the right place for the hand-hoe should be a museum.
Increased value-addition and access to better functioning markets and trade
Second, the agriculture future we want should be one of a competitive food and agriculture system, which meets the fast-growing and diversifying agrifood demands of intra-African local, national and regional markets and, beyond, responding increasingly to the demands of a growing and exigent global market.
To this end, the first call for Africa's agrifood systems is to get preferential access to and conquer the intra-African market which, under the combined effects of the continent's population growth (about 3% per year), strong income growth (at 5% or more over the last decade) and rapid urbanization (at the annual pace of 5%), are demanding for more quality, diversified and convenient food and agricultural products. These opportunities are further sharpened by the fact that the African urban food markets are projected to grow to the tune of US$ 400 billion per year by 2030. We want a future that will take Africa away from the scenario where the continent footed a staggering food import bill averaging US$ 69.5 billion and escalating at the fast pace of 15% per year from 2010 to 2012 !
To capture the growing internal market opportunities and increase the share of intra-African trade to at least 50% of the continent's total agrifood trade by 2025, the agriculture future we want is one where adequate market and trade infrastructure -- including roads, railways and transport services; ICTs; storage and agro-processing facilities; commodity exchanges, market information and other structured trade facilitation services -- connect farmers to local, national and regional markets through a dynamic web of efficient value chains of strategic food and agricultural commodities.
Leveraging the emergence and flourishing of a vibrant sector of small, medium and even large joint-venture agro-processing and agribusiness enterprises, which attract a core of young and skilled African women and men entrepreneurs in those value chains, will require bold policies addressing the fragmentation of the African agrifood market through the establishment of an integrated continental market free of all (tariff as well as non-tariff) barriers to intra-African trade in agrifood products and protected from external unfair trading practices. Without losing sight of the continent's collective interests for greater integration in the global markets, Africa's agrifood systems will thrive within a Continental Free Trade Area (CFTA), supported by an effective Common External Tariff scheme that strengthens regional preference in agrifood trade by 2019.
Food and nutrition security for all
Third, in this integrated and effective market space, the agriculture future we want is one that will end hunger and ensure food and nutrition security for all Africa's citizens on a self-reliance (food sovereignty) basis by 2025. What will primarily contribute to reaching this state of affairs are effective policy and social protection interventions aimed not only at reducing Africa's dependency on increasingly expensive, volatile and uncertain global food markets, but also at strengthening sustainable livelihoods and dietary diversity for target vulnerable groups including children, women, female-headed households, youth, as well as poor smallholders, pastoralists and peri-urban people. That is the inclusive nature of the Pan-Africanist approach in the agricultural transformation we want.
Resilience to climate change and other risks
Fourth, the future we want is one that will be characterized by resilient food and agricultural systems. In the context of increasing and intensifying adverse impacts of climate change and other natural disasters with highly vulnerable communities and nations, the future we want will be one where climate change adaptation shall be strongly integrated in agricultural investment plans, strengthened by functional resilience mechanisms at national, regional and continental levels. With particular focus on women, youth and other vulnerable groups, access by smallholders to finance and technology for climate adaptation and management of other risks shall be strongly enhanced.
Public-private engagement and investment financing
Fifth, the agriculture future we want rests before and above all on Africa's own resources and resourcefulness after all Pan Africanism has at its core not only self-determination but also self-reliance. I am sure you will all agree with me that the very promising agriculture future depicted above will come at a cost. We should first look within ourselves, mobilise and harness domestic resources, before we put out our hand for help. This will be an eloquent demonstration of not only our commitment but also our ownership and leadership of the African agriculture we want. Then, we can expect additional support and in this connection, Africa's development partners should deliver on their support commitments in line with Africa's priorities as, indeed, the future we want calls for alignment of such support to our own defined priorities and programmes.
Coming back to looking into ourselves, I wish to point out that against the commitment in the Declaration at the Maputo 2003 AU Summit to allocate at least 10% of total public expenditures to agriculture, only 13 countries have reached or surpassed this target in any year so far. Although the volume of public expenditures on agriculture has increased at an impressive rate of 7.4% between 2003 and 2010, agriculture's share in total public spending has fallen below the 2003 level as expenditures on other sectors increased faster. But the future we want is one premised on public private partnership and not government acting alone.
Despite recent positive developments such as the expansion of pan-African banking groups, the related increase in competition and the infusion of new technologies, products and managerial techniques, including mobile money and ICT products, private-sector financing for agriculture remains very limited, averaging only 5.8% of total commercial lending. This poor performance of the financial sector vis-a-vis agriculture is associated with the persistent challenges of lending risks due to the variability of agricultural outputs and incomes, gender bias against women's access to credit, insecure land tenure issues, as well as financial institutions' reluctance to lend to unemployed youth lacking collateral security.
However, against the prospects of booming agrifood markets and virtually world-wide growing interest in African agriculture, the future agriculture we want calls for African Union Member States to reaffirm and deliver on their commitment made in the Maputo 2003 Declaration to translate their pronounced priority for agriculture through the allocation of a significantly increased share of their respective national public expenditures for the structural and sustainable transformation of the agricultural sector. Moreover, such spending should go beyond public investment to develop farming to embrace the needs for the development of the full value chains, markets and trade for strategic agrifood commodities. It should also serve to leverage, through effective public-private partnerships, private-sector investment financing at a scale commensurate with the wealth and job creation potential of transformed agrifood systems that Africa cannot afford to miss in this 21st Century, Our Century.
While all the five areas I just outlined are key for transforming agriculture on the African continent, for us to realize this vision, we will require improved sector governance and coordination. This entails several actions, notably:
(i) improving the agricultural institutions in terms of their capacity to effectively and efficiently implement agricultural plans at the different levels, particularly national and regional; (ii) improving the quality of policies supported by evidence; (iii) improving the quality of agricultural data to support sector planning and making ensure any subsequent reforms are based on informed analysis; and (iv) establishing mechanisms for tracking and reporting the performance of the agricultural sector at country, regional and continental levels; reviewing sector performance on a regular basis and creating platforms for joint sector reviews and mutual accountability. As we have learned over the last 10 years, reviewing our performance against the targets in the five strategic areas will help assess the progress we are making, and where necessary pave the way for taking corrective measures to ensure we move steadily towards reaching our set goals. It is for this reason that we developed the CAADP results framework for use by AU member states and RECs to track implementation over the next 10 years. The governance and coordination is critical considering the multiplicity of areas covered by or related to agriculture and this is one of the key reasons that the Joint AU Conference of Ministers of Agriculture, Livestock , Fisheries and Aquaculture is being convened with the participation of the Bureau Chairpersons/members of the other related sectors.
Commitment to sustaining the CAADP momentum
Honourable Ministers,
Excellencies,
Ladies and Gentlemen,
The outgoing account spells out the agriculture future we want , for which we should toil for the next decade by the CAADP Results Framework, your framework for "Transforming Africa's agriculture for shared prosperity and improved livelihoods through capturing opportunities for inclusive growth and sustainable development."
This is the vision and these are the strategic goals that we invite you to consider. I hope you find them ambitious and bold enough to not only sustain, but also heighten over the next 10 years the momentum of your own comprehensive Africa agriculture transformation agenda, the CAADP Momentum. No doubt, the challenge is big But, against the considerable prospective returns, facing up to the challenge will certainly be more than rewarding.
The AU Commission and the NEPAD Agency look forward to your strategic guidance and wish to assure you that we will follow up the outcomes of your deliberations that I wish the most fruitful possible.
Thank you for your kind attention.
Assembly/AU/Dec.555(XXIV)
DECISION ON THE REPORT OF THE HIGH LEVEL AFRICAN TRADE COMMITTEE (HATC) ON TRADE ISSUES
Doc. Assembly/AU/11(XXIV)
REMARKS
BY
H.E TUMUSIIME RHODA PEACE
COMMISSIONER FOR
RURAL ECONOMY AND AGRICULTURE
AFRICAN UNION COMMISSION
Financing Transformational Change and Achieving Sustainable Development Goals in Africa
DELHI SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT SUMMMIT
6 FEBRUARY 2015
Excellencies,
Distinguish participants,
Ladies and gentlemen,
It is an honor and a privilege to be here in New Delhi, to take part in the Ministerial Session of the 15th Delhi Sustainable Development Summit. On behalf of the Chairperson of the African Union Commission, H.E. Dr. Dlamini Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma and, indeed, on my own behalf, I take this opportunity to express my gratitude to the government and the people of India, and the organizers for convening this important meeting.
Excellencies – Honorable Ministers,
Distinguished guests,
Ladies and Gentlemen,
The Inter-Governmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) under the able leadership of Dr. Rajendra Pachauri has contributed significantly towards generating consensus on climate change as a reality. In the same vein, we value the Delhi Sustainable Development Summit as being timely and pertinent in the sense that it provides a platform to consolidate ideas in the movement towards the desired success of the climate change, SDGs and other related processes and thinking through the difficult aspects including finance.
For us in Africa, the picture is such that while the economies are growing we are worried that if the world does not get united on a common front to fight climate change, that growth will be reversed and the gains eroded.
Africa’s predominant economic activity is agriculture. African agriculture is rain-fed. However, the rains have reduced, droughts have increased and the effects of climate change are intensifying across the continent.
As part of the global village and in the build up to the United Nations Conference on Sustainable Development (Rio+20). African stakeholders came together and highlighted important areas to be underlined at Rio+20 spanning the social, economic and environmental dimensions of sustainable development. Fortunately, quite a number of the concerns expressed in the African Consensus Statement were incorporated in the Outcome Document on The World We Want.
Currently, we are again engaged in and anxious about the outcomes of the three different but interlinked processes:
- Next month in Sendai, Japan, we shall dedicate our collective efforts to a global framework of action on disaster risk reduction;
- In September in New York, the Sustainable Development Goals process will reach its height, and this process, compared to the previous MDGs, has this time round been engaging globally in a botton-up fashion. Africa has come up with a Common Position on the Post-2015 Development Agenda. Besides its being an input to the global process, it will define the Africa We Want and it is part of the African Union Agenda 2063 adopted by the AU Heads of State and Government meeting at the end of last month in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.
- The December 2015 in Paris, the 20th Conference of Parties to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (CoP21) will also be considering concluding the global agreement on climate change in order to bridge the gap between the aggregate efforts of mitigation pledges and aggregate emission pathways consistent with having a likely change of holding global average temperature rise below 2 degrees to avoid the catastrophic events on the most vulnerable continent – Africa and the most vulnerable people – the women and children.
The Common Africa Position on Sustainable Development Goals has among its priority areas the issue of finance and partnerships to mobilize domestic resource and innovative finance.
On Climate Change, I am happy to also inform this Conference that Africa will continue to speak with one voice in the global climate change negotiations through the African Group of Negotiators on Climate Change with the guidance of the African Ministerial Conference on Environment (AMCEN) under the political leadership of the Committee of African Heads of State and Government on Climate Change (CAHOSCC). The priority for Africa is adaptation and means of implementation. The African leaders have reaffirmed Africa’s commitment to working with all Parties to achieve a legally binding Agreement in December this year in Paris.
Having said that, I would like to point out that Africa recognises the nexus between these processes and expects that the world will build common understanding and intensify joint efforts towards positive outcomes that will commit to reduction of green house gases and increase financing for climate change adaptation and mitigation and also copying with disasters especially in developing countries particularly those in Africa. We consider as critical the capitalization of the Green Climate Fund, the provision of the Means of Implementation for Adaptation as well as the transfer of technologies and capacity building.
We hope that, also, the International Conference on Financing for Development in July, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia will accord special attention to climate finance that will be transformative in the sense of enabling the achievement of SDGs.
As Africa engages in these global negotiation processes it is also engaged in country level and regional processes to implement programmes and projects to adapt to climate change and increase resilience and reduce the vulnerability of households, communities and nations.
Excellencies – Honorable Ministers,
Distinguished guests,
Ladies and Gentlemen,
Before I to conclude, let me state that these frameworks on disaster risk reduction, SDGs and climate change, will further help to consolidate the achievements in the past millennial and also take into account emerging issues. This timing provides an unprecedented opportunity to set a clear path for international development for the next generation. These framework agreements should be seen as complementary, with opportunities for mutual benefits in areas such as resilience, economic development, climate adaptation and low carbon development with new flows of finance.
Thank you.
Keynote Address
BY
H.E.MRS. RHODA PEACE TUMUSIIME
COMMISSIONER FOR RURAL ECONOMY AND AGRICULTURE
(Member of the Global Panel on Agriculture and Food Systems for Nutrition)
AT:
THE WORLD FOOD SECURITYSUMMIT
DUBAI, United Arab Emirates
9 FEBRUARY, 2015
Thank you our Moderator, Dr Ashraf Mahate, Head of Export Market Intelligence, Dubai Export Development Corporation
Honourable Felix Koskei, Cabinet Secretary for Agriculture, Livestock and Fisheries, Kenya
H.E. Khadim Abdulla Al Darei, Vice Chairman, Al Dahra Agriculture
Dr. Saad A. Kh. Esa, Director, Office of King Abdullah Initiative for Saudi Agricultural Investment Abroad Ministry of Agriculture
Quintin Gray, Agricultural Counselor, Office of Agricultural Affairs, U.S. Consulate Dubai
Kimble Winter, Global CEO, Logistics Executive Group
Thorsten Hartmann, Director EMEA, Canadean
Alan Smith, Managing Director, GCC and Pakistan, Mondelēz International
Rayan M. Qutub, CEO Industrial Valley – King Abdullah Economic City
Amin Khayyal, General Manager, DuPont
On behalf of the African Union Commission, it is an honour for me to participate in this World Food Security Summit and the Gulfood Leaders’ Event.
I look forward to sharing information and knowledge with the global policy makers and senior industry professionals as we explore together strategies for the future of a sustainable global agriculture industry, policy reforms, farmland strategies, agriculture initiatives, just to mention but a few of the major items on our agenda.
I wish to commend the organisers of this important engagement that has brought us together and for placing focus on building coherent global governance for food security and for including African agro-investments into our discussions on commercial and business opportunities pertaining to agriculture and the food industry.
I must say, at the outset, that I consider this as very important for the African Union as it also brings together some of the key players in the Africa – Arab Cooperation in Agriculture which is one of the components of the Africa-Arab Partnership.
This is one of the most valuable partnerships for Africa and we meet regularly up to the highest level. You would recall that the last Summit of Africa and Arab Heads of State and Government took place in Kuwait in 2013. And prior to that, the Second Conference of Africa-Arab Ministers of Agriculture and Rural Development took place in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, the first one having taken place in Sharm el Sheikh, Egypt in 2010. And, as you may be aware, the next Africa-Arab Conference of Ministers of Agriculture and Rural Development is scheduled for Kampala, Uganda later this Year.
Within this framework of cooperation, we emphasise public – private partnership and I notice, that it is the same spirit at this World Food Security Summit and the Gulfood Leaders’ Event. In fact, within the framework of the Africa-Arab Conference of Ministers of Agriculture, we have a Steering Committee co-chaired by myself on behalf of the African Union Commission and H.E Dr. Tariq bin Mousa Al-Zadjali, Director General of the Arab Organisation for Agricultrual Development, on behalf of the League of Arab States. The Steering Committee is supported by the Joint Facilitation Unit and it is private sector oriented.
In this cooperation framework, Africa’s orientation is guided by the Comprehensive Africa Agriculture Development Programme (CAADP) which has among its key pillars a focus on investment particularly private sector and market access that goes along with value chain development. The Arab partners have, on their part, the Arab Strategy for Sustainable Agricultural Development (ASSAD) - 2005-2025.
This is especially important because we find that while Africa has a good climate, abundant water resources and fertile soils that enable us to produce food and we have potential to feed ourselves and the rest of the world including our Arab neighbours, our main challenge has been the marketing infrastructure. For example, due to poor storage, Africa loses about 30 per cent of her agricultural products in what we call post harvest losses. This is a major discouraging element to farmers and a big contributor to food insecurity in Africa. And this is an area we would like our Arab partners to join us in addressing. Furthermore, inadequate rural infrastructure makes food transport difficult and subsequently costly and unaffordable to the majority of the population. Again, this is an area we would be interested to encourage Arab investors to venture in. In addition, our food processing capacities are also low to the extent that food losses are exacerbated and value addition is limited and our people are deprived of quality and safe food and this has especially affected our children whereby the rate of stunting remains high. This is yet another area where we would like to invite our Arab agro-industry investors to consider especially processing nutritive diets and I want to emphasise this as a Member of the Global Panel on Agriculture and Food Systems for Nutrition.
Owing to these and related constraints, Africa currently imports nearly US$40 billion worth of food annually. That is why we are emphasizing investment including foreign direct investment in the entire agricultural value chain so that we exploit fully our agricultural potential, minimize post harvest losses, add value to our agricultural products through processing and improve marketing through agribusiness thereby, saving our foreign exchange, also increasing employment especially of the youth and creating wealth or combating poverty.
Besides crop agriculture, Africa also offers extraordinary potential in the livestock sector for food and leather industry but unfortunately many of our pastoralists have not benefitted optimally from this sector. We, therefore, welcome investors in livestock development, dairy and meat processing and leather value addition, among others, to boost this sector as well. Also investment in making water available in pastoralist communities to prevent unnecessary movements of animals that would otherwise spread diseases and reduce productivity.
I wish to draw your attention to the fact that Africa’s agriculture is predominantly rainfed and this is proving unsustainable in the wake of the climate change and climate variability that has occasioned unpredictable weather patterns. It is now imperative to invest in climate-smart agricultural technologies including irrigation considering that Africa currently uses only 3 per cent of its irrigation potential while demand for food is increasing with the rising population and urbanisation, among other mega trends. Water harvesting is another area we would like to promote. And by the way, Africa lags behind the rest of the world in the use of fertilisers to boost agricultural production and we are in the process of addressing this challenge. I chair the Governing Council of the African Fertilizer Financing mechanism (AFFM) that we are trying to capitalise and operationalise to contribute to the realisation of Africa’s agricultural transformation.
These are some of the areas that we would like to engage with you in taking forward so that Africa does not continue to only pride in holding 60% of the world’s uncultivated arable land and yet having one of the highest numbers of people who are hungry and malnourished. As stated by Her Excellency Dr. Nkosazana Dlamini Zuma, Chairperson of the African Union Commission when she was addressing the 24th Ordinary Session of Heads of State and Government of the African Union last month in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia: ‘‘Our aspirations and the concrete programmes in Agenda 2063 are very clear: to diversify our economies and industrialise; to have a skills and entrepreneurial revolution, unleashing the creativity and energy of our young people, and to effect an agricultural and agro-processing transformation, so we can feed ourselves and contribute to feeding the world’’.
As you may be aware, the Heads of State and Government of the African Union Member States just last month adopted the Strategy and Roadmap to implement the Declaration that they adopted last year which was the AU Year of Agriculture and Food Security where they committed themselves to ending hunger by 2025 through Accelerated Africa Agriculture Growth and Transformation. We look forward to your partnership in our pursuit of the goal of a food and nutrition secure and poverty free Africa that will also contribute to global food security needs.
Thank you.
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