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Fw: Africa: South African Churches on NEPAD
- Subject: Fw: Africa: South African Churches on NEPAD
- From: "Cor Groenendijk" <groenend at antenna.nl>
- Date: Sat, 8 Jun 2002 21:42:20 +0200
----- Original Message ----- From: "Africa Action" <apic at igc.org> To: <apiclist at africapolicy.org> Sent: Saturday, June 08, 2002 6:23 PM Subject: Africa: South African Churches on NEPAD Africa: South African Churches on NEPAD Date distributed (ymd): 020608 Document reposted by Africa Action Africa Policy Electronic Distribution List: an information service provided by AFRICA ACTION (incorporating the Africa Policy Information Center, The Africa Fund, and the American Committee on Africa). Find more information for action for Africa at http://www.africaaction.org +++++++++++++++++++++Document Profile+++++++++++++++++++++ Region: Continent-Wide Issue Areas: +economy/development+ SUMMARY CONTENTS: During a press conference at the South African Council of Churches on June 6, the South African churches issued an assessment of NEPAD as a discussion document. This posting contains brief excerpts from the summary and plain text version of the document: "Un-blurring the Vision: An Assessment of the New Partnership for Africa's Development by South African Churches." The full plain text version will be available in the web archive of this posting at http://www.africaaction.org/docs02/nepa0206.htm The complete document, including footnotes and graphics, is available as a Word file from Ms Thabitha Chepape at the SACBC Justice & Peace Department, tel. + 27 (0)12 323 6458, e-mail tchepape at sacbc.org.za The document will be published in hard copy for further distribution in the coming weeks. For more information contact: Neville Gabriel, Justice & Peace Department, Southern African Catholic Bishops' Conference (SACBC), 140 Visagie Street PO Box 941 PRETORIA 0001 South Africa; Tel. +27 (0)12 323 6458 Fax. +27 (0)12 326 6218 Mobile. +27 (0)83 449 3934; E-mail: ngabriel at sacbc.org.za Web: http://www.sacbc.org.za Links to a wide variety of additional documents on NEPAD are available at http://www.web.net/~iccaf/debtsap/nepad.htm See also: http://www.africaaction.org/docs02/accr0204.htm and http://www.africaaction.org/docs01/eca0112.htm A related posting sent out today contains a request for organizational signatures on a letter to be sent to the G7 finance ministers. +++++++++++++++++end profile++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ Un-blurring the Vision: An Assessment of the New Partnership for Africa's Development SUMMARY Africa's social, economic, and political relations urgently need to be transformed through a focused and determined international effort if Africa is to be lifted out of the poverty trap. The New Partnership for Africa's Development (NEPAD) presents itself as a visionary and dynamic initiative by a core group of new generation African leaders to reconstruct and develop the continent. Blurred Vision But NEPAD's vision is blurred by fixing its sights on increased global integration and rapid private sector growth as the answer to overcoming poverty, and by its failure to engage with Africa's people to transform the continent. The remarkable political will generated by NEPAD must be focused into a participatory transformation of Africa through direct, immediate, and decisive action to overcome the causes of Africa's impoverishment. ... The general issues addressed by NEPAD are not entirely new but NEPAD does contain several promising aspects that could give renewed hope and life to Africa's people. NEPAD can strengthen accountability and effective collaboration between African governments in a way that has not happened before. ... NEPAD contains some problematic elements that have proven to be ineffective in building peaceful, just, and caring societies in Africa. Its economic strategy is discredited by the harsh impact on the poor in African countries that have already adopted similar policies. It pretends to be unaware of the severe negative social impact that rapid privatisation of basic and social services has on impoverished communities in Africa. It fails to address the underlying power relations that constrain Africa's development. It does not provide a decisive mechanism to repair the persistent damage done to individuals, families, whole societies, and environments in Africa's history. Most of all, NEPAD has neglected Africa's people both in the process of its construction and in its primary focus. If NEPAD does not focus on Africa's people first, it can result in an increasingly divided Africa at the continental and national levels. NEPAD must focus primarily on immediate poverty eradication interventions that will deliver direct benefits to the poor rather than it current focus on a long-term and indirect development strategy. Meaningful debt cancellation for Africa must be prioritised as a pre-condition for Africa's sustainable development, so that budget support can be provided for public investment in social services such as health care and education and the provision of water and electricity. NEPAD must also propose decisive structural changes to the current international financial and trade systems, including proposals such as an international currency transaction tax and special protection for vulnerable African industries. ... In the same way that African countries are willing to undertake a path of self-criticism and renewal, G7 leaders must make a firm commitment to support Africa according to the priorities and plans that are set through participatory and democratic processes in African countries. Ending the scourge of corruption cannot be seen as the responsibility of Africa exclusively because corruption is a global problem that could be worsened by increased foreign trade and private investment in Africa. A G7 over-emphasis on the "cost-free" elements of NEPAD such as peace-building and governance issues and on private sector development alone, without a corresponding commitment to support Africa's reconstruction and development in additional material budget-support terms, reinforces the distrust that makes many believe that African development based on the hope of a new partnership with rich countries is not viable. Un-blurring the Vision While NEPAD's analysis of the problems that confront Africa is accurate and its end goal of an African continent free from war and poverty expresses the deep-felt hope of all Africans and people of good will, the economic path it chooses is bound to fail this mission. NEPAD's vision is blurred by setting its sights on the hope that greater global integration will save Africa. Yet NEPAD's vision can be restored if Africa's leaders enter into a new partnership with their people. The vision of a new Africa dawning in the 21st century is too precious to be lost because we failed to see that Africa's children, men, and women are its greatest treasure. ************************************************************ Un-blurring the Vision: An Assessment of the New Partnership for Africa's Development [Selected excerpts only. This paper was initially drafted by the SACBC Justice & Peace Department. It was further developed through various ecumencial consultations hosted by the South African Council of Churches (SACC) and the Southern African Catholic Bishops' Conference (SACBC). It was released as a discussion paper on June 6, 2002.] 1. Introduction ... While Africa holds ten percent of the world's population, seventy-five percent of the world's people living with HIV/AIDS are in Sub-Saharan Africa and one-third of the world's poorest people live in Africa. Half the continent's population lives in absolute poverty. Africa has inherited a legacy of weak states and bad governance systems. Africa exports thirty percent more today than it did in 1980 but receives forty percent less income from these exports than it did in 1980 due to global forces beyond its control. Nearly half of the estimated 515,000 women who die annually from pregnancy or child birth are African meaning that one African woman in 13 dies during pregnancy or childbirth. After more than fifteen years of Structural Adjustment Programmes (SAPS) unemployment rates are estimated to be well above thirty-five percent on the continent. Nineteen thousand children die in Africa each day as a result of preventable diseases and malnutrition. Yet Sub-Saharan Africa has a foreign debt of more than $170 billion and pays creditors $40 million a week to service debts accumulated as a result of the cold war, apartheid, and failed projects. .... 2. What is NEPAD? ... Conceived and developed by a core group of African leaders, NEPAD describes itself as a 'comprehensive integrated development plan that addresses key social, economic and political priorities for the continent'. It includes a commitment by African leaders to African people and the international community to place Africa on a path of sustainable growth, accelerating the integration of the continent into the global economy. It calls on the rest of the world to partner Africa in her own development based on her own agenda and programme of action. ... These plans of action were presented for approval by the Heads of State Implementation Committee (HSIC) at its meeting on 25-26 March in Abuja. The final versions will be presented to the African Union (AU) Summit in July in South Africa. The programme will also be presented to the G7 Summit in June in Canada. [The NEPAD Steering Committee includes Algeria, Egypt, Nigeria, South Africa, and Senegal.] ... 5. Which Wedding Garments to Wear for the New Partnership? ... NEPAD may be seen as Africa's attempt to present itself in an acceptable manner to participate in the globalisation wedding feast. But the kinds of garments NEPAD chooses are telling of whose feast it is, who its guests will be, and what the quality of the marriage will be. 5.1. African-Owned Conditionality? The NEPAD framework provides the possibility for African-controlled conditionality, even though it is an inadequate process in its current form. It is determined by a nucleus of new generation African leaders and is endorsed by the Organisation of African Unity (OAU). ... As an outline of the conditions to which African leaders pledge themselves in entering into a partnership with the industrialised countries, NEPAD does not offer any dramatically new conditions. It largely follows the kinds of conditions that have been demanded by creditor and donor countries in the past, both in terms of governance and economic strategy. However, it does include a proposed process for mutual North-South evaluation and accountability, even though this is not developed adequately. ... 5.3. A New African Bloc? NEPAD is a promising initiative to develop dynamic collaboration and accountability between African governments in a way that has not happened before. It proposes to develop a code of conduct for African leaders that will include a limitation of terms for heads of state or government, as well as an independent peer review mechanism that will make its reports public. In many ways this is driven by a 'new-boys club' rather than the established 'old-boys club' of the past. However, understood in the context of shifting geopolitical alignments on the continent, this holds out the danger that the continent may be divided along two very clear lines: those backing NEPAD and those resisting it. Nonetheless, NEPAD holds out the possibility of creating an African bloc of leaders that can, if their policy and strategy advice is appropriate, radically alter the path of Africa's future participation in multilateral organisations. 5.4. Ending Africa's Wars Highest priority is given to conflict management and resolution and peace-building as a precondition for sustainable development. The problem of conflict and wars in Africa is correctly associated with concerns around Africa's natural resources, systems of governance, and broader issues of poverty. African governments that have been actively involved in NEPAD have already undertaking some promising initiatives to end Africa's great wars and to promote political rather than military processes for resolving conflicts that may arise. However, the Sudan war remains the biggest challenge to NEPAD's peace-building initiative. How African governments respond in resolving the Sudan war will be the biggest test for NEPAD's general objectives of building an African consensus for peace and prosperity on the continent. 5.5. The Free Market & Africa's Recovery The Model of Development: NEPAD fails to offer any alternative to the dominant market fundamentalist development model that places unquestioning faith in uncontrolled, private sector led, rapid economic growth as the answer to the problem of rampant poverty, despite the evidence that this strategy in fact deepens poverty, increases unemployment, and widens inequality in the short and medium term, while making national economies extremely vulnerable to speculative capital and 'market sentiment'. NEPAD in fact promotes a market-driven strategy as the solution to Africa's problems, effectively sacrificing the poor who are here now for some uncertain end in the distant future. ... 5.6. Democratic Participation? NEPAD completely failed to meaningfully engage with communities and civil society organisations concerning its process and content. This highlights the problematic trend in the "globalised" world for major national and international priorities to be determined outside of democratic processes in un-transparent, unaccountable processes in the international sphere. While NEPAD, by design, did not include space for civil society input into its initial development, it did, by design, include high-level consultation with the IMF/World Bank and leaders of industrialised countries and the private business leaders. ... 5.7. Changing Perceptions of Africa NEPAD is in many respects a marketing strategy for Africa that attempts to overcome the negative image and sentiment that Africa generates in the consciousness of many political, business, and civil society circles outside the continent. It has, for whatever reasons, received much acclaim and has won international political respectability that could be harnessed for the benefit of the continent. 5.8. Africa on the Global Agenda NEPAD has succeeded to engage the global political and economic powers in a direct dialogue on the course of Africa's development so that the upcoming G7 Kananaskis summit has Africa and NEPAD as a major theme. The political will that has been generated through the NEPAD process as a result of energetic work by Africa's leaders, represents a major achievement for NEPAD that must be applauded. However, the direction in which that political will has been mustered is ambiguous at best. It remains to be seen whether the political will can be sustained if democratic processes alter the direction of NEPAD's primary focus. 5.9. Poverty is a Secondary Focus The strategies adopted by NEPAD are intended to deliver long-term and indirect poverty alleviation through mechanisms that have not yet delivered real benefits to the poor in African countries that have tried them. NEPAD has no clear plan to address the current crisis of impoverishment that is rampant across Africa, including the joblessness crisis. ... 5.10. Redistributing Power? The current international power relations determine the boundaries of possibility for developing an effective development plan for Africa. NEPAD does not make clear proposals to change the current power relations that are the single biggest obstacle to Africa's development. It in fact proposes greater participation in the current international political and economic governance structures and processes as they are now, in the framework of 'a new partnership'. However, 'partnership' in a context of seriously disproportionate power relations, amounts to little more than domination. 5.11. The Lure of Privatisation NEPAD adopts rapid and extensive privatisation in various forms as a key strategy to offer investment opportunities, attract foreign investment, and develop infrastructure across the continent. It does this in a way that pretends to be unaware of the severe social consequences of such measures, especially in a context of widespread poverty and inequality. 5.12. What About Reparations? Only passing mention is given by NEPAD to Africa's history of slavery and colonialism with no mention of the need for reparations. This represents a political decision by NEPAD's engineers to avoid the politically charged language of historical justice and reparations. However, NEPAD presents itself in many ways as a post-colonial Marshall Plan for Africa's recovery. However, reparations remain a major concern not only amongst the Southern African victims of severe human rights violations under apartheid, but among a wide variety of civil society groups across the continent. ... 6.2. Building on Unstable Ground Some crucial aspects of NEPAD are very disturbing. Despite widespread public discontent, NEPAD makes proposals that have not proven to be effective to build stable, just, and caring societies in Africa: 6.2.1. NEPAD articulates the serious negative impact on Africa of "globalisation's" market fundamentalist development model but then goes on to adopt and promote more of the same model as the solution to Africa's economic problems. NEPAD's macro-economic framework must be seriously questioned on the basis of the current experience of the poor in African countries that have already adopted these policies. 6.2.2. NEPAD pretends to be unaware of the severe negative impact that rapid privatisation of social and basic services has on impoverished and highly indebted communities. 6.2.2. The process that gave rise to NEPAD glaringly neglected popular participation in any meaningful form. There can be no real development without the participation of Africa's people at all stages of the process. 6.2.3. NEPAD fails to address the underlying international and national power relations, structures, and processes that will ultimately determine the success or failure of the process. 6.2.4. NEPAD does not offer clear prospects to resolve the call for reparations that are due to Africa's people. ... Accordingly, the following proposals are made to correct the failures of the NEPAD process and to improve its content and focus: 6.3.1. NEPAD must recognise that Africa requires a fresh start. Africa cannot begin to develop unless the massive current social backlog is directly addressed as a first step. NEPAD should therefore include, as a priority, an additional programme to deliver immediate and direct anti-poverty interventions that will lift the poor out of their current suffering. ... 6.3.2. Meaningful debt cancellation must be prioritised as a precondition for the success of any other medium or long-term strategy for social and economic recovery. 6.3.3. NEPAD must give higher priority to rapidly increased investment in social services such as health care and education, rather than the low priority that social services are currently given in NEPAD's plans. 6.3.4. NEPAD must support proposals for corrective changes to the international financial system such as the proposed international currency transaction tax that could be implemented at national level, and that a set proportion of the revenues raised in rich countries should be directed to Africa's reconstruction and development. 6.3.5. NEPAD must address the call for corrective action to repair the damage caused to individuals and communities as a result of Africa's history of slavery, colonialism, and apartheid. 6.3.6. Broad-based national popular consultation processes must be initiated across Africa to review the NEPAD programme. To this end, a civil society liaison unit should be established within the NEPAD secretariat and national civil society representatives should be elected to participate in official NEPAD discussions. ... ************************************************************ This material is being reposted for wider distribution by Africa Action (incorporating the Africa Policy Information Center, The Africa Fund, and the American Committee on Africa). Africa Action's information services provide accessible information and analysis in order to promote U.S. and international policies toward Africa that advance economic, political and social justice and the full spectrum of human rights. Documents previously distributed, as well as a wide range of additional information, are also available on the Web at: http://www.africaaction.org To be added to or dropped from the distribution list write to apic at igc.org. For more information about reposted material, please contact directly the source mentioned in the posting. Africa Action 110 Maryland Ave. NE, #508, Washington, DC 20002. Phone: 202-546-7961. Fax: 202-546-1545. E-mail: africaaction at igc.org. ************************************************************
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