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Address by Ebrahim Rasool, South Africa Ambassador to the USA to the Minority Enterprise Development Week, Washington DC 24 August 2010

National Director of the Minority Business Development Agency, Mr. David Hinson,

Assistant United States Representative for Africa, Ms Florizelle Liser,

Deputy Assistant Secretary for Africa, Asia and the Middle East, Ms Holly Vineyard,

President and CEO of the Corporate Council on Africa, Mr. Stephen Hayes,

Excellencies,

Distinguished guests,

Ladies and gentlemen; 

 

 It is a great pleasure that one of my first functions, and indeed, my first speaking engagement since taking office, should be to address the Minority Enterprise Development Conference.  It is a signal that, among the myriad of important matters that can occupy an Ambassador, the facilitation of strong economic relations with the USA must rank as the priority.

This is especially crucial in the immediate after glow of South Africa’s successful hosting of the FIFA 2010 Soccer World Cup.  The impact of this World Cup was particularly delicious because, once again, the capacity of South Africa and Africa to surprise was demonstrated.  The World Cup swept away the waves of Afro-pessimism that created anxiety about the success of the event.

 

More importantly it opened a window on South Africa and Africa that made the world see us with fresh eyes for the first time.  Particularly, citizens of the United States responded fulsomely by buying up most of the tickets and doing the long haul flight to enjoy the spectacle of the tournament.

 

They found in Africa and South Africa a peaceful people, a working infrastructure, spectacular natural scenery, fibre-optic connectivity, world class facilities, a vibrant culture, first class accommodation, and a soulful connection with humanity.

 

They found these despite the poverty, the economic inequality, the shortage of housing, the difficulty of delivering services, the preponderance of disease, and inadequate schools.

 

And in this contrast lies the wisdom of tonight’s focus: “Doing Business in Africa”.

 

In this gathering of distinguished leaders from governments, the private sector, and civil organisations, with our call to do business with Africa, and with the resonance we have with those historically marginalised from the economy, we put before you, not a plea for help in our endeavours, but a proposition.  This proposition is simple.  If you are ready for Africa, Africa is ready for you.

 

A few years ago, Manuel Castell’s visited our country and our continent.  After many engagements with governments and business, citizens and organisations, he stunned us with the simplicity of his feedback.  Africa, he noted, had fewer telephone connections as a continent than New York or Tokyo had as cities.  There would be no digital and communications revolution in Africa without such connectivity.  But connectivity requires a reliable supply of electricity or energy.  The next link he made was that where a country and continent is in conflict, electricity pylons are the first targets of armed groups.  His conclusion was that for Africa, therefore, to be part of the ICT revolution, Africa needs peace, and all the wherewithal that would make this a sustainable peace.

 

From this, a strong component of South Africa’s Africa policy was one of mediation, conflict resolution, peace-keeping, extending democracy and establishing institutions that give life to the rule of law. We saw the building of peace as the precondition for our economic revolution.  The World Cup was a glimpse at a progress report, not the final product.

 

Today we have less than 5 armed conflicts on the continent.  Over 90% of elections held over the last few years have been safe.  Where election results have been contested, workable settlements have been negotiated.   Leadership transitions are increasingly seamless.  Institutions of State and Society are being built.  Increasingly in Africa, we are seeing the establishment of the 3 foundations that any investor or business leader looks for:  the rule of law, internationally justiciable legal system, and a globally integrated banking system.

 

This has, in turn, allowed for improved macro-economic management of African economies and we are seeing the results.  Governments have lowered inflation, reduced foreign debt, and managed budget deficits downwards. Already the cost and ease of doing business is improving with lower trade barriers, and the regulatory environment is more co-ordinated and predictable, and less discretionary and cumbersome.

 

The prediction of Manuel Castells is being realised systematically.  The United Nations has declared that the use of mobile phones and the internet is growing faster in Africa than anywhere else in the world.  Since the year 2000, there have been 316 million new mobile phone subscribers in Africa.  This is the rock on which the potential African economic giant is founded.

 

It is from this basis that the African Union was able to put together a coherent framework for Africa’s growth and development through the New Partnership for Africa’s Development (NEPAD).  In turn, NEPAD has informed the increasing regional integration and collaboration among African countries.  And all of this is underpinned by individual countries addressing their binding constraints to growth and development.  All in all, Africa is poised to be a significant player in the global economic system, given our natural and human resources.

Having said all of these, let me show empirically what I know to be true in my invitation to you to do business with Africa.   Consider the following:

1.    Africa’s economic growth rate as a continent exceeded 5% last year, in the midst of a global recession, and is 2 to 3 times faster than that of the OECD countries.

2.    Central Africa’s oil boom spurred a 14.4% growth for that region;

3.    Ghana’s stock exchange is regularly one of the highest performing stock exchanges in the world;

4.    In 2008, Africa’s households spent a combined US $860 bn – more than is spent in India or Russia - and this is set to rise to US  $1,4 trillion by 2020; and

5.    Regional integration in Southern Africa though the SADC Free Trade Agreement has created a regional market worth US $360 bn with a population of 170m people.  When Angola and the DRC sign up this will increase significantly.  Imagine the huge duty free markets across Africa when similar Free Trade Agreements take effect through ECOWAS, COMESA & the EAC.

 

Understanding all of these, the June 2010 McKinsey Report, entitled  “Lions on the Move Progress and Potential of African Economies”, reaffirms that African governments have introduced reforms to improve the business climate, implemented structural reforms to make doing business easier and consequently created great opportunities for joint venture partnerships.  In addition the World Bank has confirmed that the rate of return on investments is higher in Africa that in any developing region.

 

Where is all of this growth taking place, and where should you invest? Between 2002 and 2007:

§  The financial intermediation sector yielded a compound annual growth rate of 24%;

§  The tourism sector grew by 8.7%;

§  The transport and telecommunications sectors by 7.8%;

§  The wholesale and retail sectors by 6.8%; and

§  Resources, agriculture, manufacturing, utilities, construction, real estate and business services all exceeded 5% growth.

 

There are enormous opportunities in the downstream development of the continent’s resources; in the creation of critical infrastructure like roads, railways, ports and utilities; and in the burgeoning consumer market of Africa through merchandise exports.  There is the incredible incentive to take advantage of the substantially duty-free access to markets in Southern Africa and soon across Africa.  There is a world of partnerships and joint ventures to share risks and gains with in the 20 home-grown African companies, each with revenues of at least US $3bn.  And there is the comfort of a continent embracing democracy, the rule of law, and economic development as the only sustainable ways to overcome our legacy of poverty and underdevelopment.

 

Our invitation to you is to trade, to invest, to tour.  There is money to be made in Africa.

 

Africa backs SA for UN Security Council

The African Union summit endorsed South Africa’s candidature for a non-permanent seat on the United Nations Security Council.

Elections for the African seat of the UN Security Council will be held during the 65th session of the UN General Assembly in New York in October. If elected, South Africa will serve a second term as a non-permanent member of the council.

South Africa served its first ever term on the council in 2007-08, bringing to it a strong track record as an “agent of change” after chairing the Non-Aligned Movement, Commonwealth, African Union, and G77+China.

South Africa had also contributed towards norm-setting in the international arena by hosting major conferences such as the World Conference against Racism and the World Summit on Sustainable Development.

According to the Department of International Relations and Cooperation, the main theme of South Africa’s previous tenure on the UN Security Council was that of deepening cooperation between the UN and the African Union, and the country would seek to take this forwarded if elected for a second term.

South Africa’s candidature for 2011-12 “will be guided by its commitment to strengthening the multilateral system and its support for a broader multilateral approach to questions of international peace and security

“Membership of the Security Council will present an opportunity to promote the African agenda and to contribute to achieving peace and stability on the continent and in all regions of the world”.

“In putting forward its candidature, South Africa also recognises the necessity and importance of continuing to work together with all the members of the African Union and United Nations in pursuit of effective global governance, multilateralism and the reform of the United Nations system, including the reform of the Security Council, in order to make it more transparent and accountable to enhance its legitimacy, representivity and effectiveness.

SAinfo reporter and BuaNews

Address by His Excellency, President JG Zuma on the occasion of National Women’s Day celebrations, ABSA Stadium, East London 9 August 2010

The Premier of the Eastern Cape, Ms Noxolo Kiviet,
Ministers and Deputy Ministers,
MECs, Members of Parliament and Provincial Legislatures,
Mayors and Councillors,
Fellow South Africans,
Malibongwe!
Igama lamakhosikazi!

 

Molweni, dumelang, good afternoon!

We greet you all on this significant day in the history of our nation.

Fifty four years ago on this day, twenty thousand women from all corners of the country marched to the seat of government, the Union Buildings in Pretoria, to register their protest against the pass laws.

They had seen the manner in which pass laws had dehumanized men in their families. They decided that something needed to be done.

These brave patriots, united in their diversity, declared as follows in their petition to then apartheid prime minister, Hans Strydom:

“We are women from every part of South Africa. We are women of every race, we come from the cities and the towns, from the reserves and the villages. We come as women united in our purpose, to save the African women from the degradation of passes”.

Their petition painted a poignant picture of the impact of the pass laws.

“For hundreds of years the African people have suffered under the most bitter law of all - the pass law - which has brought untold suffering to every African family. Raids, arrests, loss of pay, long hours at the pass office, weeks in the cells awaiting trial, forced farm labour - this is what the pass laws have brought to African men. Punishment and misery - not for a crime, but for the lack of a pass’’.

Led by Lillian Ngoyi, Sophie Williams-de Bruyn, Amina Cachalia, Rahima Moosa, Helen Joseph and others - the 20 000 women took the struggle for freedom and democracy to a higher level.

They stated their resolve that they would never give up the fight until the dawn of freedom.

“We shall not rest until we have won for our children their fundamental rights of freedom, justice, and security’’, they declared.

On this special day, we salute those women who had great foresight.

We proudly proclaim that:“Wathint’ abafazi, wathint’ imbokodo, uzokufa”!

On this great day, we salute all women leaders of the struggle for a free, non-racial, non-sexist and democratic South Africa.

We take out hats off to all generations of leaders, from Charlotte Maxeke to Florence Mophosho, from Dorothy Nyembe and Florence Mkhize to Ruth First, Gertrude Shophe and a host of others.

We acknowledge the courageous generation of Winnie Mandela and Albertina Sisulu and others who soldiered on at great personal cost, during the worst periods of our lives.

We single out mama Winnie Mandela, who kept the flag of freedom flying. She kept hope alive inside the country, in the face of endless persecution by the apartheid security apparatus.

Through her, we salute all women who lived in fear and persecution for years, hounded by security police, because their husbands or family members were activists.

We also pay tribute to women who served time as sentenced prisoners given their resolve to fight for freedom at all cost. These include Thandi Modise, Marion Sparg, Barbara Hogan and others. We also remember those who were detained at various points in their lives.

We also think of the millions of women, especially the poorest of the poor, who suffered severely under apartheid conditions in villages and townships of this country.

All these categories of women paid a huge sacrifice so that we could see the peace, joy, unity and togetherness that we experienced during the 2010 FIFA Soccer World Cup tournament.

During the tournament, South Africans united in their diversity, demonstrated to the world that we are now one people who had risen from the ashes of apartheid to build a new society. Indeed, the non-racial struggle against apartheid was not in vain.

Ladies and gentlemen,

While celebrating the strides we have made in our country, we also acknowledge that the struggle for a truly better life for women continues.

The theme of this year’s National Women’s Day and Women’s Month is: “Working together for Equal Opportunities and progress for Women: Forward to the Decade of African Women”.

We are working in a positive African and international environment. The African Union Heads of State declared the years 2010 to 2020 as the Decade of African Women, putting women at the centre of development in Africa.

Very soon, there will be a review of the UN Millennium Declaration, adopted at the Millennium Summit on 8 September 2000, and one of the key goals is gender equality.

We are also marking 15 years since the Fourth World Conference on Women held in Beijing, China, another ground-breaker with regards to women’s emancipation.

As the South African Government we recognize that the promotion of gender equality and women’s empowerment are central to all efforts aimed at combating poverty and stimulating sustainable development.

For this reason, our primary focus is to improve access to socio-economic rights, which are enshrined in our country’s Constitution.

We focus on socio-economic rights because the emancipation of women cannot be separated from the fight to eradicate poverty and to improve access to basic services.

For scores of poor women, emancipation means access to electricity, water, decent shelter, access to income generating activities or decent jobs, roads and transport, education and training for themselves and their children.

Siyazi futhi ukuthi omama badinga ukuphepha emakhaya nangaphandle. Abezomthetho bakubeka phambili ukuvikelwa kwabesifazane, futhi bayawasukumela amacala okuhlukunyezwa komame.

Sicela umphakathi uvule amehlo, usheshe ubikele amaphoyisa uma kunezenzo zokuhlukunyezwa komame nezingane.

Siyazi futhi ukuthi omame badinga ukusizwa ngezinhlelo zokuxosha indlala. Badinga umhlaba, izinsiza zokulima kanye nembewu.

Ukuze senze impilo ibe ngcono, sakhe umnyango kahulumeni osebenza ukuthuthukiswa kwezindawo zasemakhaya, phecelezi i-Department of Rural Development and Land Affairs.

Lomnyango uzosiza ukuthi intuthuko ifike kulolonke izwe hhayi emadolobheni kuphela.

Siyabagqugquzela omama ukuthi bazikhulumele emakhosini, emakhanseleni, kongqongqoshe kanye nondunankulu bezifundazwe basho izidingo zabo. Ithuba labo leli, abalisebenzela kanzima.

Compatriots,

Education is the most powerful socio-economic right that will help us bridge the gender divide.

Performance in National Senior Certificate examinations indicates that more girls than boys entered the exams, and that the pass rate for girls is 57%, while it is 60% for boys.

The lower pass rate for girls calls upon us to investigate the reasons, which could be gender-based.

The causes could be teenage pregnancies. It could also be that girls are expected by parents to spend a lot of time on household chores while boys are encouraged to study. It could be cases of child headed households where girls play the leading role in raising their siblings, replacing parents.

As part of our support for the 1Goal Education for all initiative which is a legacy of the 2010 FIFA World Cup tournament, we must all work harder to get girl children in particular back to school.

Sithi kubazali, imfundo isikhali sentuthuko, asibambisaneni siyise izingane zamantombazane esikoleni. Yizo ezivame ukusalela ngemuva. Uma sibambisene soqinisekisa ukuthi nazo ziyafunda zibe ngabaholi bakusasa.

Ladies and gentlemen, we must also applaud the fact that the health of women and children has taken centre-stage this year in key decision making forums.

Maternal and infant health was on the agenda of the G8 forum of rich nations in Canada. It was also the theme of the July Summit of the African Union.

We take this issue very seriously in our country. The heavy burden placed by HIV, tuberculosis and malaria on the health of women and children has added urgency in our response.

We believe we are making progress in dealing with these pandemics.

We welcome the recent breakthrough in the fight against HIV and AIDS through the development of a gel that can reduce women’s possibility of contracting HIV.

In addition, the ongoing roll out of HIV treatment for women and children will also go a long way towards improving the health of women and children.

Ladies and gentlemen,

Women have benefited greatly from social security, another key socio-economic right for South Africans. The old age pension is known to be the only source of income to some households, due to the levels of poverty.

We know, too, that there are children who would not be attending school, were it not for the Child Support Grant. That is the reason why government has extended the benefit to children up to the age of 18, which is when most finish high school.

We will continue to make access to these grants easier for qualifying needy people in remote areas of our country, due to their critical value in the alleviation of poverty, especially amongst women and children.

Ladies and gentlemen,

Other than socio-economic rights, we also want to highlight the need to hasten the entry and participation of women in decision making processes and positions in the country.

The Women’s Charter for Effective Quality, adopted in February 1994, reminds us that conventionally, democracy and human rights had been defined and interpreted in terms of men’s experiences.

Society and its institutions have been structured for the primary benefit of men.

The Women’s Charter aptly outlined the demands of women:

“We want recognition and respect for the work we do in the home, in the workplace and in the community. We claim full and equal participation in the creation of a non-sexist, non-racist democratic society”.

We have a long road to travel still to achieve the kind of gender parity that is required. As you are aware, the 10th Commission on Employment Equity Report released by the Department of Labour last month, revealed that transformation in the workplace remains very slow.

The report indicates that 10 years after the introduction of the Employment Equity Act, and sixteen years into our democracy, white men continue to hold 63% of top management positions in the private sector. African women are at less than 3% and coloured and Indian women are at one percent each.

The report also points out that white women still benefit the most from affirmative action measures, while people with disabilities and African and coloured women have benefited the least.

Some urgent action is required in the private sector to improve gender and race diversity at the top management level.

Meanwhile, steady progress is being made in the public sector, although targets have still not been reached.

The representation of women in parliament has increased from 25% after the first democratic elections in 1994 to 44% after April 2009 elections.

The number of women Ministers and Deputy Ministers increased from 18% in 1994 to 40% in last year’s elections.

Women are holding their own in the portfolios of Defence, International Relations and Cooperation, Energy, Water and Environmental Affairs, Correctional Services, Agriculture, Fisheries and Forestry, Mining, Public Enterprises, Science and Technology and Home Affairs.

We are proud of them as they are challenging stereotypes. These are areas which are generally viewed as ‘traditionally’ male sectors.

The country has done exceptionally well at the provincial government level. There are five women out of nine premiers. This makes it a 55% representation of women.

Overall, women constitute 42% in Provincial legislatures, while 40% of all elected councillors at the local government Level.

A lot of work needs to be done to increase the representation of women at senior levels of the public service. At the moment women make up an average of 36% of senior management.

While welcoming the progress made in the public sector, our analysis of various studies available indicates that if we continue at the current pace of transformation, it will take the country almost 40 years to attain 50-50 gender parity!

Therefore, measures have to be taken to hasten the process of gender and racial transformation in our country.

The Ministry of Women, Children and Persons with Disability is planning to present a Gender Parity Bill in parliament as part of the instruments that should help us reach our equity goals.

Everyone has a role to play to ensure that we reach our targets, for the benefit of the country. One action required is for men to confront their attitudes and insecurity.

We have to overcome the mindset that views women not as colleagues, but as a potential threat to the careers of men, as much as we must deal with the notion that black men are threats to the careers of white males and females.

The South African workplace must also be sensitive to the situation facing scores of women - of having to balance family and careers.

This we must do until we create a society where men and women are born truly equal, and are afforded the same opportunities.

Compatriots,

The third point I wish to share with you today is the promotion of women’s access to justice.

We are pleased to use this opportunity of celebrating National Women’s Day, to mark the coming into operation of the Jurisdiction of Regional Courts Amendment Act of 2008. This law will effectively eradicate the concept of blacks-only divorce courts.

One of these courts is the King Williams’ Town Black Divorce Court, which was established in 1929, under the Black Administration Act. The court served Africans from the areas that today constitute the Western Cape, Northern Cape and the Free State.

Other similar courts established at the same time, which will be affected, are the Central Divorce Court in Johannesburg, and the North Eastern Divorce Court in Durban.

From tomorrow, regional courts across the country will adjudicate in all forms of civil claims, including divorce matters, regardless of the race of the person seeking assistance from the court.

Therefore, when the said courts open their doors tomorrow morning, they will do so no longer as Black Divorce Courts, but as ordinary regional magistrate’s courts promoting equal access to justice for all.

This will greatly benefit women and children who are usually adversely affected in divorce cases.

Ladies and gentlemen,

Fellow South Africans, the mere recognition of women’s rights is not enough. The laws in our statute books are not enough. They will become truly meaningful when they create a tangible improvement in the lives of women.

Let me hasten to add that women’s emancipation is not just a struggle for women only.

This point is well-illustrated by the historic Women’s Charter adopted on the 17th April 1954, at the founding conference of the Federation of South African Women in Johannesburg.

It states:

“We women do not form a society separate from the men. There is only one society, and it is made up of both women and men. As women we share the problems and anxieties of our men, and join hands with them to remove social evils and obstacles to progress’’.

We celebrate Women’s Day and the achievements of women together, as men and women.

In this regard we also like to thank the ANC for providing guidance and leadership on this issue of gender.

In its highest decision making structures namely, the National Conferences, the ANC took deliberate progressive resolutions to promote gender parity.

Since its unbanning, the ruling party took a resolution in the 1991 to adopt a thirty per cent women representation in all its structures, and in its 2007 conference took a fifty percent quota, to ensure the empowerment of women.

These resolutions have influenced the developments of women’s empowerment we see today.

This has influenced the progress we see today within our private and public life.

We also recommit ourselves to take the struggle forward, for the true emancipation of women and our communities, working together as men and women.

I thank you.

Ambassador Rasool presented his credentials to President Obama, 10 August 2010.

” Ambassador Rasool’s statement during the presentation of credentials as well as President Obama’s response”

 

  

Honourable Secretaries

Members of the Diplomatic Corps and the Press

Ladies and Gentlemen

 

It is a great honour to be here as President Jacob Zuma’s representative to the United States of America. I have a
simple task: to deepen and consolidate the relationship between South Africa and the USA into a Co-operative Partnership.

 Mr. President, I arrive in your country at a time when the Fifa World Cup has focused the eyes of the world on South Africa. I dare say that South Africa’s ability to surprise and delight continues, for, despite our many challenges the world found a continent bursting with potential, a country determined to develop and a nation warm and inviting. The World Cup does not represent the achievement of our aspirations, but the platform for the many things that still need to be done.

We have the benefit of a warm relationship that permeates from our respective Presidents and Ministers, and shaped by your excellent choice of Donald Gips as Ambassador to South Africa.

 

Ke-Nako - The time is now for the Strategic Dialogue to realise our mutual priorities for good governance and democracy; for human rights and dignity; for peace and stability; for growth and development; for combating climate change; and for creating a society free of pandemics like HIV and AIDS, afflictions like violence, and conditions like poverty.

 

Our Co-operative Partnership must be founded on the commitment to economic development as the most sustainable path to all our goals, including the urgent goal of an enduring peace and stability in the world. This is the lesson we learn in pursuit of the Consolidation of the African Agenda. We are pleased that there is a convergence in our respective foreign policies of preventing and mitigating armed conflict, supporting economic growth in Africa, and recognising Africa as, in your words, Mr. President, “… a fundamental part of our interconnected world.” This agenda can be advanced if, amongst others, the USA supports the African Union’s endorsement earlier this year of South Africa’s candidature for the United Nation Security Council.

 

Our Co-operative Partnership has a firm foundation in the role that the USA is already playing through PEPFAR, through AGOA, through military and security co-operation, in the education sector, and in the expansion of trade and investment links between us.

 

Mr. President, I have four years to realise the mandate that President Zuma has set for me. Four years from now I would like to look back on our Co-operative Partnership and say:

 

-     that the Bilateral Energy Dialogue has begun to realise the benefits of our search for new sources and approaches to energy;

 

-     that we have given impetus to the United States - South Africa Partnership for Skills Development and that, truly, education is becoming the antidote to the legacy of Apartheid;

 

-     that PEPFAR, and the Global Health Initiative have driven down HIV/AIDS mortality, and that our research programmes are continuing to bring new tools to the fight against this disease; and

 

-     that, most importantly, in pursuit of economic growth and development we have not only maintained, but strengthened AGOA, that we have negotiated a viable TIDCA was signed in July 2008 and is currently being implemented.

 

Mr President, in 2006 I had the pleasure of hosting a certain Senator from Illinois in Cape Town. While discussing the joys of an inclusive, cosmopolitan world, and the blight of fundamentalist extremism, I had no idea that he would become the next president of the USA. I gave him an artwork of the first speech that Nelson Mandela delivered after 27 years in prison.

 

I hope that gift continues to inspire you, especially on days like the 4th of August. Maybe next year you should celebrate your birthday in South Africa. I will personally arrange that our streets be lined with vuvuzelas welcoming you.

 

Mr President, in this era of Co-operative Partnership and unprecedented goodwill between our nations, may I please present my letter of credence to you and the letter of recall from my predecessor.

 

 

THE PRESIDENT’S REPLY

TO THE REMARKS OF THE

NEWLY APPOINTTED AMBASSADOR

OF THE REPUBLIC OF SOUTH AFRICA

EBRAHIM RASOOL

UPON THE OCCASION OF THE PRESENTATION OF

HIS LETTER OF CREDENCE

  

Mr. Ambassador:

     It is with great pleasure that I accept your Letter of credence, which establishes you as Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of the Republic of South Africa,  and I acknowledge receipt of the Letter of recall of your predecessor, Ambassador Welile Nhlapo, who was exceptional in representing South Africa in the United States. I would like to extend to you and your family a warm welcome, and I look forward to working closely with you to deepen the already close relations between our countries.

   I’d also like to take this opportunity to again congratulate you and all South Africans for the successful hosting of the historic 2010 FIFA World Cup, the first on African soil. The Cup was a testament to all South Africa has achieved since 1994 and all that it-and all of Africa-has to offer. The world cheered with you and now we all know the meaning of Ke Nako.

   Our two countries share historical struggles for self-determination that have established our places in the world today. Our close relationship continues to thrive due to increased cooperation in many areas including health, education, non-proliferation, climate change, energy, law enforcement, cultural and academic exchanges, and trade.

   We have made great strides in enhancing our collaboration on topics of mutual interest, through the launching of an Energy Dialogue on April 12 between our energy departments, a Nonproliferation and Disbarment Dialogue, and the creation of a United States-South Africa Business Council in September 2009. The U.S. and the South African Department of Health have commenced discussions to develop and sign a PEPFAR Partnership Framework, and our teams worked closely together at the climate change talks in Copenhagen. In April of this year, Secretary Clinton and Minister Nkoana-Mashabane signed a Memorandum of Understanding laying out a framework for a Strategic Dialogue between our countries, and fruitful meetings have already taken place within the context of this structure.

  Mr. Ambassador, I look forward to working with you to advance our common agenda and deepen the strong and abiding friendship of our countries, building upon the dedicated efforts of the past years. It is a pleasure to welcome you to Washington.

  

 

Meeting between Deputy President Motlanthe and US Vice President Biden. 12 June 2010

Deputy President Kgalema Motlanthe received the US Vice President Joe Biden today, 12 June 2010, at his official residence Tambo House in Pretoria for bilateral discussions.

This was the first high level meeting after the April 2010 meeting between Presidents Zuma and Obama and the establishment of the US-South Africa Strategic Dialogue by Minister of International Relations and Cooperation, Maite Nkoana - Mashabane and Secretary of State, Hilary Rodham Clinton on 14 April 2010 in Washington. 

The meeting focused on international challenges such climate change and Haiti while on bilateral level it focused on the development of the South African Government’s five priorities namely: education, health, rural development, job creation and crime. The alignment of these priorities underpins the South African Government’s engagement with the US.

The priorities identified by both South Africa and the US include good governance and democracy; respect for human rights; peace and stability as well as development through the creation of economic opportunities for all Africans. South Africa and the US are already working in partnership on a number of projects such as the fight against HIV and AIDS, especially through PEPFAR, and other communicable diseases.

This partnership, strengthened by the US- South Africa Strategic Dialogue and the Annual Bilateral Forum, will lay the foundation and assist South Africa in reaching its Millennium Development Goals.

Deputy President Motlanthe and Vice President Biden agreed that the Strategic Dialogue and high level visits created the ideal opportunities to share views and experiences.

In conclusion both parties expressed the wish that significant progress will be made in deepening bilateral relations with real progress before the next Ministerial meeting of the US-South Africa Strategic Dialogue, scheduled for October 2010.

For more information contact the Chief Director for Public Diplomacy at DIRCO, Mr Saul Molobi, on +27 351 0083, +27 82 940 1647 or email him at molobisk@dirco.gov.za

Issued by the Department of International Relations and Cooperation
OR Tambo Building
460 Soutpansberg Road
RIETONDALE
0002
                    
 12 June 2010

U.S - South Africa Strategic Dialogue convenes Annual Bilateral Forum to advance Critical Issues of Mutual Interest. 14 May, 2010

PRETORIA – The South African Department of International Relations and Cooperation hosted the first official bilateral meeting under the new U.S.-South Africa Strategic Dialogue signed by Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton and South African Minister of International Relations and Cooperation Maite Nkoana-Mashabane on 14 April 2010. 

This meeting, known as the South Africa–United States Annual Bilateral Forum, met in Pretoria 12-13 May 2010.  The Forum was co-chaired by Ambassador Nozipho Mxakato-Diseko, Deputy Director-General: Americas and Caribbean, and the United States Ambassador to South Africa, Donald H. Gips.  The Annual Bilateral Forum is now focused on priority areas as outlined in the Strategic Dialogue Memorandum of Understanding and provides a mechanism to discuss bilateral and multilateral issues of shared interest and common concern, including development, security and economic cooperation; and reaffirms the strong, growing relations between South Africa and the United States.

Discussions at the Annual Bilateral Forum focused on key priority areas, including health, education, agriculture, law enforcement, trade, investment, energy, climate change, and regional security.  The two sides agreed to establish functional working groups in several broad topic areas in order to implement mutually agreed upon programmes and strategies.

At the conclusion of the Forum, the co-chairs stated, “This official meeting was a big step in our roadmap to closer cooperation and an enduring national friendship.  Our countries share many interests and aspirations for our people and the global community – it is both natural and productive for us to work together in realizing these goals.  To echo our Presidents, ‘Together we can do more,’ and ‘Yes, we can.’”

For more information contact Saul Kgomotso Molobi on 082 940 4716, 012 351 0083 or email him at molobisk@dirco.gov.za
 
Issued by the

Department of International Relations and Cooperation
OR Tambo Building
460 Soutpansberg Road
RIETONDALE
Pretoria

13 May 2010

Obama lauds SA for quitting nuclear program Monday, 12 April 2010

President Obama Meets With President Zuma of South Africa in Washington

US President Barack Obama on Sunday heaped praise on South Africa for taking the decision to become the first country to abandon a nuclear weapons program.

Obama met President Jacob Zuma, who is in the USA, amid a string of bilateral meetings with world leaders on the eve of a 47-nation nuclear security summit.

The summit is designed to draw commitments from key powers to keep loose nuclear material out of the hands of extremist groups.

“South Africa is singular in having had a nuclear weapon program, had moved forward on it, and then decided this was not the right path,” Obama said, noting how South African had since been a leader on non-proliferation.

“South Africa has special standing in being a moral leader on this issue. And I wanted to publicly compliment President Zuma and his administration for the leadership they’ve shown,” Obama said.

“And we are looking forward toward the possibility of them helping to guide other countries down a similar direction of non-proliferation.”

South Africa abandoned its nuclear weapon’s program in the 1990s and the International Atomic Energy Agency certified in 1994 that the program had been fully dismantled.

Sapa

President Zuma arrives in Washington DC to attend nuclear summit

President Zuma was received at Andrews Air Force Base by senior US and South African government officials.

The summit, which takes place on 12-13 April 2010, is being convened by US President Barack Obama to find effective measures to secure nuclear material and to prevent nuclear terrorism.

South Africa maintains that it is important for countries to pool their resources and work together through strengthened multilateral institutions to combat all forms of organised transnational crime, including terrorism.

South Africa has consistently condemned acts of terrorism and shares the international community’s concern over nuclear security.

Shortly after his arrival, President Zuma held a bilateral meeting with US President Barack Obama at Blair House, the President’s guest house.

The meeting followed discussions between the two Presidents at the G8 Summit in L’Aquila, Italy in July last year. It covered a number of bilateral issues, including strengthening cooperation on areas like agriculture and HIV and AIDS. They also discussed the promotion of African peace and security within the ambit of the African Union and United Nations.

President Zuma is accompanied to the summit by Minister of International Relations and Cooperation Maite Nkoana-Mashabane, Minister of Energy Dipuo Peters, Minister of State Security Siyabonga Cwele and senior government officials.

Issued by
The Presidency
Union Buildings
Pretoria

11 April 2010

Enquiries: Vincent Magwenya +2772 715 0024

President Jacob Zuma to lead South African Delegation to Nuclear Security Summit in Washington, 12-13 April 2010.

His Excellency President Jacob Zuma will lead the South African delegation to the Nuclear Security Summit scheduled for 12-13 April 2010 at the Walter E Washington Convention Centre, in Washington D.C. South Africa will be among forty four (44) States to participate in the Summit at the invitation of President Barack Obama of the United States of America.

South Africa participates in the Nuclear  Security Summit within the context of strengthening the global governance system as the most effective mechanism to deal with global challenges, and re-emphasizing the centrality of the UN. In this regard terrorism constitutes one of the major threats to international peace and security. The South African Government’s view is that the threat of international terrorism is real and remains a danger to the citizens of the world as no country is immune to it.

It is anticipated that the Summit will be organized around four themes namely:

  1. Threat of nuclear terrorism and Illicit Trafficking;
  2. National actions to mitigate the threat of nuclear terrorism and secure nuclear material and Prevent Illicit Trafficking;
  3. The role of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) in Nuclear Security; and
  4. International actions to mitigate the threat of nuclear terrorism and secure nuclear material and Prevent Illicit Trafficking.

The Summit is expected to issue a Communiqué and adopt a Work Plan which will be the final product of three Sherpa meetings, held in November 2009 in Washington, December 2009 in Tokyo and February 2010 in The Hague. South Africa’s Sherpa is Ambassador AS Minty.
President Jacob Zuma will be supported by the Minister of International Relations and Cooperation, Ms Maite Nkoana-Mashabane, Minister of Energy, Ms Dipuo Peters, Minister of State Security Mr. Siyabonga Cwele and Deputy Director-General in the Department of International Relations and Cooperation, Mr. Abdul Samad Minty.

From Washington D.C. President Jacob Zuma is expected to travel to Brazil to participate in the India-Brazil-South Africa Summit scheduled for 15 April 2010.

For more information contact Chief Director for Public Diplomacy, Mr. Saul Molobi on 082  940 1647

Issued by the Department of International Relations and Cooperation
Private Bag X152
Pretoria
0001
10 April 2010

President Jacob Zuma will attend a Nuclear Security Summit to be held in Washington DC in the United States on 12-13 April 2010.

President Zuma to attend Nuclear Security Summit

8 April 2010

 President Jacob Zuma will lead a delegation which includes Minister of International Relations and Cooperation Maite Nkoana-Mashabane, Minister of Energy Dipuo Peters, Minister of State Security Siyabonga Cwele and senior government officials.

The Summit has been convened by US President Barack Obama in the context of his policy announcement on nuclear disarmament and non-proliferation.

This policy announcement, made in a statement he delivered on 5 April 2009 in Prague, identified nuclear terrorism as the “most immediate and extreme threat to global security”.

The goals of the Nuclear Security Summit, to which 43 countries have been invited, are to reach a common understanding of the threat posed by nuclear terrorism and to agree to effective measures to secure nuclear material and to prevent nuclear smuggling and terrorism.

The Summit is expected to adopt a communique and work plan.

South Africa welcomes the summit as an opportunity for countries to pool their resources and work together through strengthened multilateral institutions to combat all forms of organised transnational crime, including terrorism.

South Africa has consistently condemned acts of terrorism and shares the international community’s concern over nuclear security.

South Africa has also in the past pledged its support for the global campaign against terrorism within the framework of international law and the United Nations and its structures.

Following the summit in Washington, President Zuma will travel to Brazil to attend the 4th summit of the leaders of Brazil, India and South Africa, which is taking place on 15 April.

Enquiries: Vincent Magwenya, Spokesperson to the President on 072 715 0024

Issued by:
The Presidency
Union Buildings
Pretoria