Untitled Document
Paris, France,
20 February 2003 - Secretary-General's address to the Africa-France Summit
| "...since
AIDS in Africa and around the world is more and more wearing a woman's face,
we will gain control of the pandemic only if women are the very centre of
our strategies. In short, if you want to save Africa, you must save Africa's
women first." |
Monsieur le Président
de la République française, Présidents et Chefs de Gouvernement,
Excellences, Mesdames et Messieurs,
It is a great pleasure
to join you for this timely and important Summit. Allow me to pay special tribute
to President Chirac for hosting this meeting. And let me thank the many African
Heads of State and Government who are here today, as well as their partners
from around the world, for everything they are doing for the cause of peace
and development in Africa.
Excellences, Mesdames
et Messieurs, chers amis,
Since the last
Africa-France Summit two years ago in Yaoundé, African leaders have taken
a number of important steps towards helping the continent to realize its full
potential. You have joined your destinies in an African Union of shared values
and common institutions. You have agreed on a far-reaching New Partnership for
Africa's Development. Democracy and the rule of law have made further advances.
And African civil society women's groups, journalists, lawyers, trade
unionists, youth groups and others has stepped forward as never before,
holding Governments to account and injecting new dynamism into African societies.
But such progress
merely sets the stage for the hard work to come. And hard work there is. Conflict,
misrule, crop failures and disease in particular continue to inflict great misery
on the continent's people.
Like you, I have
known, for almost all of my adult life, a Cote d'Ivoire whose stability and
spirit lit a beacon of hope across West Africa and beyond. Yet today, we are
all struggling to calm a situation that has provoked tragic rifts in that country,
along ethnic and religious lines, and to cope with a crisis that has caused
hundreds of deaths and large-scale displacements of people. We must all do our
utmost to help Cote d'Ivoire regain the secure path it had known for so many
decades. I call again on all Ivoirians, and particularly the country's political
leaders, to make the agreement they signed last month a concrete first step
towards peace.
What is happening
in Cote d'Ivoire should not cloud progress being made in other parts of Africa.
Angola is now in consolidating peace after three decades of war. In Burundi,
Sierra Leone, Sudan and the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Africans are showing
real determination to settle their conflicts, with tangible results. That makes
it all the more important for the international community to provide strong
support to Africa's peacekeeping and peacemaking mechanisms and institutions
as set out, for example, in the G-8 Action Plan for Africa. Africa cannot
afford further turmoil but if it erupts, Africa must have the capacity
to respond.
Nowhere is an effective
African response more critical than in the fight against AIDS. In agriculture,
for example, there is an emerging pattern linking food insecurity with AIDS.
In many parts of the continent, and southern Africa in particular, AIDS is not
just making a severe food crisis worse, it is the main underlying cause of the
emergency. Because of the disease, farming skills are being lost, agricultural
development efforts are declining, rural livelihoods are disintegrating, productive
capacity to work the land is dropping, and household earnings are shrinking.
There is a clear
gender dimension to this AIDS-related food insecurity, as the burden falls most
heavily on women. It is they who care for the young, the old, the sick and dying.
It is they who nurture social networks that help societies share burdens. And
in the past it was their expert knowledge of alternative foods that kept their
families going during times of drought. Yet with AIDS rising dramatically and
disproportionately among women, that lifeline is being threatened.
AIDS is precipitating
a crisis of governance beyond the farm as well. The disease is killing the most
productive members of society. Schools are losing their teachers; hospitals
their doctors and nurses; private businesses their managers and engineers; government
ministries the very people responsible for planning and implementing programmes
to address society's key concerns. With infection rates in many national security
services at alarming levels, peace and security is increasingly in jeopardy.
Sector by sector, the loss of human resources is ushering in a governance and
development crisis of catastrophic dimensions.
The Millennium
Declaration, NEPAD and the development objectives set out in the Millennium
Development Goals provide both a framework and mechanisms for the international
community to assist Africa in responding to this crisis. I would like to highlight
three areas which should be addressed urgently.
One is agriculture.
Shipping in food is essential but is not enough. Africa has long needed a Green
Revolution -- to feed itself and to free up the labour that would help generate
an industrial revolution. That need remains. We need to restore soil fertility,
develop the infrastructure for rural markets, and strengthen agricultural research,
and take other steps to counteract decades of intensive farming that has not
put back what it has taken out. But today the re-greening of Africa will also
require new agricultural techniques appropriate to a depleted workforce. Such
an effort must be launched immediately.
A second is governance.
We will need to rebuild the capacity of the state to provide essential public
services. Where once we spoke of capacity building, today we have to speak of
capacity replenishment. I have asked the UN Volunteer Programme to be on standby
to offer further help. I am also pleased to announce today that I will be establishing
a high-level Commission on HIV/AIDS and Governance in Africa. The Commission
will study the links between AIDS and governance in various sectors, including
agriculture, youth and the military. It will come up with detailed recommendations
for stemming the tide of the disease across Africa, and advise African policymakers
on how to address the profound structural impact it is beginning to have on
their ability to tackle their many development challenges. More details will
be announced shortly, and I appeal to you to give the Commission your full support.
Third is AIDS itself.
Many African leaders have taken truly groundbreaking steps to raise awareness
of AIDS, remove stigma and show that prevention is possible and that treatment
can work even in the poorest societies. In Abuja two years ago, you adopted
a landmark declaration, and most of your nations have since gone on to adopt
national plans of action.
Distinguished Heads
of State and government, and friends, for all you have done, much more is needed,
by each and every one of you. I urge you to continue speaking out about the
disease, and to stress the need for safe sex, including the use of condoms.
I encourage you to support the initiatives of the many courageous grass-roots
groups and community organizations battling the pandemic. I hope you will allocate
greater shares of your national budgets to health care systems, and in general
bring the full force of your office to this issue.
I appeal to you to pay greater attention to the extraordinary proliferation
of AIDS orphans. The number has now reached 11 million. By the year 2010, 20
million African children will have lost one or both parents to AIDS. On the
small and fragile shoulders of the older AIDS orphans sometimes only
ten years old or less -- is placed the heavy task of caring for their younger
siblings and other children bereft of their parents. In makeshift households,
far from schools, far from opportunities -- indeed suddenly far from childhood
itself -- they face the bleakest of futures. It would be unconscionable to allow
their plight to persist any longer.
Above all, I urge
you to put African women at the centre of the fight against AIDS. On all three
fronts, the role of women is absolutely crucial. A Green Revolution in Africa
will happen only if it is also a gender revolution. Governance will improve
only if women are genuinely empowered. And since AIDS in Africa and around the
world is more and more wearing a woman's face, we will gain control of the pandemic
only if women are the very centre of our strategies. In short, if you want to
save Africa, you must save Africa's women first.
I urge the international
community to do its part -- universities, by spreading knowledge and training;
the private sector, by spreading technology and expertise; non-governmental
organizations through their incomparable efforts at the community level. President
Bush has galvanized the international response with his pledge to spend $15
billion over the next five years, and I hope other leaders will follow his example,
especially at the G-8 meeting to be held later this year here in France, which
offers a prime opportunity for contributions to the Global Fund. The UN system,
for its part, especially at the country level, will need new approaches and
will need to examine their activities through an AIDS lens.
Excellencies,
Let me close with
a word about our organizations, the African Union and the United Nations. Too
many people see us as remote rather than responsive, distant rather than determined,
in meeting their concerns and aspirations. Young people in particular, who make
up more than 20 percent of Africa's population higher than any other
world region -- are often sceptical or even estranged. We must all, as a matter
of political responsibility and moral urgency, do our utmost to reach not only
today's generations, but tomorrow's as well, bringing them both opportunity
and hope. I look forward to working closely with you to make our organizations
more effective, more responsive, and ultimately more successful in bringing
us closer to the day when all of Africa achieves justice, peace and prosperity.
Thank you very
much.
[show print version]
[back]
|