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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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