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The following is the African Civil Society's Declaration
on the New Partnership for Africa's Development (NEPAD)
AFRICAN CIVIL SOCIETY DECLARATION
ON NEPAD
“WE DO NOT ACCEPT NEPAD !!
AFRICA IS NOT FOR SALE !!”
We members of social movements, trade unions,
youth and women’s organisations, faith-based organisations, academics,
NGOs and other popular civil society organisations from the whole
of Africa, meeting in Port Shepstone, South Africa, 4-8 July 2002
on the threshold of the launch of the African Union and the New
Partnership for Africa’s Development (NEPAD) in Durban, critically
examined NEPAD in the context of the struggles for Africa’s development
and emancipation.
While conscious of the importance of joint
endeavours for the development of Africa, this “new international
partnership‚” initiative ignores and sidelines past and existing
programmes and efforts by Africans themselves to resolve Africa’s
crises and move forward from programmes such as the Lagos Plan of
Action (1980) and the Abuja Treaty (1991), the African Alternative
Framework to Structural Adjustment Programmes (AAF-SAAP, 1989),
the African Charter for Popular Participation and Development (Arusha
Charter, 1990) and the Cairo Agenda (1994).
In contrast to such programmes, NEPAD is
mainly concerned with raising external financial resources, appealing
to and relying on external governments and institutions. In addition,
it is a top-down programme driven by African elites and drawn up
with the corporate forces and institutional instruments of globalisation,
rather than being based on African peoples experiences, knowledge
and demands. A legitimate African programme has to start from the
people and be owned by the people.
We take as our point of departure, and build
upon, the many fundamental critiques of NEPAD from all over the
continent, such as the statements of the African Social Forum (Bamako,
Mali, January 2002) and of CODESRIA (Council for Development and
Social Science Research in Africa) with the Third World Network-Africa
(Accra, April 2002) and others.
During our deliberations and wide-ranging
discussions on NEPAD we focused on the following key aspects and
reached the following conclusions.
I . NEPAD, DEMOCRACY AND GOOD GOVERNANCE‚
We discussed the nature and
role of the post-colonial state in Africa, and the role of the developmental
state in the earlier economic, social and human development achievements
following independence. We noted that NEPAD
- ignores the way the state has, itself,
been undermined as a social provider and vehicle for development,
particularly under the World Bank’s tutelage;
- ignores the way that the structurally
adjusted state has, in turn, been undermining institutions and
processes of democracy in Africa;
- does not reflect the historic struggles
in Africa for participatory forms of democracy and decentralisation
of power;
- promises of democracy and good governance‚
are largely intended to satisfy foreign donors and to gives guarantees
to foreign investment.
We conclude that
1. While we are committed to good government
in Africa, we do not accept the interpretation and content that
this is given in NEPAD, including questionable economic policies
that we do not accept embedded within good governance‚
2. We call on African people to mobilise
for a developmental participatory state responsive to their needs
and aspirations, and to build popular and democratic movements that
can hold our states to their responsibilities.
II. NEPAD, PEACE AND‚ STABILITY‚
We discussed how the conflicts
on the continent have their sources in the legacy of colonialism,
economic exclusion, political intolerance, social polarisation,
artificial borders and unequal access to resources. We noted that
NEPAD
- ignores all these factors and approaches
these problems mainly as technical peace-keeping operations;
- does not point to the structural adjustment
policies of the IMF and World Bank in exacerbating conflicts leading
to further wars;
- does not point to the interests of corporations,
war profiteers and war-lords, in their determination to control
and exploit our resources, such as oil, diamonds, and other precious
resources, as a major source of war and conflict in Africa
We conclude that
1. Peace based on and guaranteeing human
security requires an environment that fulfils people’s needs, and
livelihood needs free from all forms of discrimination .
2. Peace demands a Pan-African response
to the divisions and tensions created by the legacy of arbitrary
colonial borders and divisive social relations.
3. The Kampala Declaration establishing
the Conference on Security, Stability, Development and Cooperation
(CSSDCA) can be an important instrument for peace building.
III. NEPAD AND HUMAN RIGHTS
We discussed with great concern
the longstanding denial and abuse of human rights in most of the
countries of Africa and the devastating effects of the HIV-AIDS
pandemic on our people. We noted that NEPAD
- makes very few references to human rights
and these are largely rhetorical;
- deals only superficially with the impact
of HIV-AIDS upon peoples lives;
- does not guarantee self-determination
for the people and contains policies that contradict or are incompatible
with democracy and human rights;
- promotes regional economic integration
but is totally silent on the rights of people to freely move and
seek employment across borders in Africa.
We noted, further, that since the recent
G8 meeting in Kananaskis, NEPAD is now being linked to the US agenda
on terrorism‚ that could be used as a lever for the introduction
of legislation violating basic civil and political rights.
We commit ourselves to continue our struggle
for human rights in the fullest meaning, including political, civil,
economic, social, women‚s, cultural and environmental rights.
IV. NEPAD AND STRUCTURAL ADJUSTMENT
PROGRAMMES
We analysed the policies and
effects, and our direct experiences of World Bank SAPs over recent
decades in our countries. We noted that, despite the negative economic,
social, political, and environmental effects of SAPs, NEPAD
- accepts the fundamentals of the neo-liberal
and gender-blind SAPs paradigm which has been largely responsible
for the deepening of the African crises, including the feminisation
of poverty;
- uncritically endorses the latest version
of SAPs, the so-called Poverty Reduction Strategy Programme (PRSPs)
which have been discredited by popular movements;
- throws a lifeline to the IMF and WB
at precisely the time that they are in ideological and institutional
crises as a result of unremitting criticism and struggles worldwide
against their policies.
We commit ourselves
To continue to expose to greater public
knowledge, and reinforce our resistance to all policies of the IMF
and the World Bank now incorporated into NEPAD.
V. NEPAD AND RESOURCE MOBILISATION
We examined the challenges
and problems of resource mobilisation for development, and noted
that NEPAD
- ignores the question of people’s ownership
and control of African resources, and disregards the people as
the most vital resource and purpose of development;
- will not mobilise Africa’s rich natural
resources for African development but for further foreign exploitation
and plunder;
- has nothing to say about the mobilisation,
redistribution and utilisation of African land for development,
particularly for women;
- focuses heavily on external financial
resources without concern for the costs, and the negative economic,
social, and environmental effects of foreign investment and liberalised
capital flows
We conclude that:
1. The unrealistic hopes for external financial
resources will, as always, not be forthcoming, as already evident
in the recent G8 response to NEPAD.
2. The donors‚ or aid givers have shown
that they will decide separately which countries they will/will
not support and on their own policy terms and self-interests.
3. The debt relief‚ offers by the G8 will,
similarly, be very limited and only offered to those governments
which dutifully follow neo-liberal and gender blind precepts.
4. Such limited debt relief‚ will, nonetheless,
not go even to such countries but to bail out the creditors.
5. The whole NEPAD fundraising project
is a non-starter, and we will focus our efforts on appropriate resource
mobilisation, including African financial resources now legally
and illegally outside of Africa; and relate all such resources to
alternative development strategies based on collective self-reliance.
VI. NEPAD AND DEBT
We examined the nature, sources and causes
of Africa’s debt, which is a fundamental cause of underdevelopment,
poverty and inequality; is owed to the same forces that benefited
from slavery, colonialism and neo-colonialism; has served to build
the wealth and power of the elites in Africa; and is not only a
financial, but a political instrument of domination and control
of the North over Africa.
We note, however, that NEPAD
- accepts the obligation for Africa to
repay this illegitimate debt to the further prejudice of fundamentally
important social services and development needs;
- ignores the demands for total debt cancellation
produced by campaigns in Africa, in South-South campaigns and
worldwide.
On this basis we
1. We demand total and unconditional debt
cancellation.
2. We reaffirm the demand for reparations
for the social, economic and ecological damage done to Africa and
its people through slavery and colonialism.
3. We call for the return of Africa’s wealth
corruptly transferred by African elites and held in the North.
3. We undertake to intensify popular mobilisation
to pressurise African Governments to repudiate the debt.
VII. NEPAD, TRADE AND GLOBALISATION
We fully discussed the role of trade in
Africa and the current global system, and noted that indiscriminate
trade liberalisation has led to de-industrialisation, increased
unemployment and growing poverty, and has reinforced Africa’s role
in the global economy as suppliers of cheap raw materials and labour.
We noted that NEPAD
- ignores experience and the huge body
of evidence and analyses discrediting the theories that trade
leads to growth which leads to development;
- accepts export-led growth and the expansion
of Africa’s traditional exports which has already aggravated the
deteriorating terms of trade for Africa;
- reinforces Africa’s focus on market
access into the richest countries through unilateral but false
offers such as the EU’s Everything But Arms (EBA);
- endorses the aims of reciprocal free
trade and other policy conditionalities demanded by the EU and
the US, such as privatisation, labour deregulation, and investment
liberalisation in the Cotonou Agreement and the African Growth
and Opportunities Act (AGOA), respectively;
- accepts the erroneous depiction of the
“marginalisation” of Africa, whereas Africa has long been deeply
and disadvantageously integrated into the global economy;
- promotes the deeper integration of Africa
into the current globalisation process which fundamentally serves
the interests of the rich;
- misunderstands the imbalanced nature
of WTO trade agreements and trade-related agreements, particularly
the General Agreement on Trade in Services which will extend global
appropriation of African services and resources.
We conclude that
1. We need to continue our efforts to create
different types of local, regional and inter-regional trade, and
a different role for trade in our economies.
2. We will continue to campaign for our
governments to resist unilateral, bilateral and multilateral trade
agreements which do not address the inequities of the international
economic system.
3. We will continue to campaign and mobilise
the African peoples to pressurise their governments to resist an
expansion of the scope and powers of the WTO through the introduction
of ever more new issues, and to resist a new WTO round being pushed
since the Doha Ministerial Conference.
4. We will continue to build the popular
movement at national, continental and international levels against
neo-liberal economic globalisation, and against the World Trade
Organisation as the main institutional force driving globalisation.
On the basis of the above, we do not accept
the NEPAD plan, as a process and in its content. We are to committed
to joint efforts for Africa’s development and emancipation, and
we call upon all African peoples‚ organisations and movements to
continue their longstanding efforts to produce sustainable, just
and viable alternatives that will benefit all the people of Africa.
ANOTHER AFRICA IS POSSIBLE
!
ANOTHER WORLD IS POSSIBLE
!!
For More Information:
Hosts: Motheho Integrity Consultants,
Economic Justice Network, AIDC
Member Africa Trade Network
Gender & Trade Network in Africa
(Secretariat)
P.O. Box 6655
Johannesburg, 2000 South Africa
Tel: 27-11-426-2056
Fax: 27 ˆ11-426-3690
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