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Subject:
From:
saul khan <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
The Gambia and related-issues mailing list <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Thu, 5 Oct 2000 17:44:43 GMT
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Address at the Meeting of Nigerian and South African Business
2 October 2000
Minister Mustapha Bello
Chief Kola Daisi
Mr Bumi Oni
Ministers
Nigerian Business Leaders
The South African business delegation
Distinguished Guests
Ladies and Gentlemen:
I am honoured to be here with you at the International Conference Centre in
Abuja to address the Nigerian and South African Business Forum so that
together we are able to explore important economic matters pertaining to our
two economies as well as to our respective regions and continent.
In his recent epic poem "Mental Flight", Ben Okri writes the following lines
about our present age:
The new era is already here:
Here the new time begins anew.
The new era happens every day.
Every day is a new world,
A new calendar.
All great moments, all great eras,
Are just every moment
And every day writ large.
Thousands of years of loving, failing, killing,
Creating, surprising, oppressing,
And thinking ought now to start
To bear fruit, to deliver their rich harvest."
I think we will all agree that out of the gloom that has defined our
existence for much of the twentieth century, a new era is in the making.
This new time, from which will emerge a new African world, must be made by
all of us working together.
This new Africa will emerge out of commitment, hard work and strategic
partnerships amongst all of us as Africans. Thus we meet here today in order
to work out ways in which together we can "bear fruit" and "deliver the rich
harvest" that our countries and continent deserve so much.
But let's start with re-stating the obvious. Throughout the departing
century, Africa has faced a very difficult economic situation occasioned
mainly by the fact that we were colonial dependencies or subject to white
minority domination. This resulted in the exploitation both of African
labour and our raw materials for the enrichment of the Western countries.
We would all agree that the current situation whereby Africa has been unable
to grow economically, sustain the industries it has, compete with other
regions of the world and feed its people, is a consequence of the legacy of
colonialism and neo-colonialism.
Our acceptance of and participation in the construction and maintenance of a
neo-colonial order has meant that we, as Africans, we have not sufficiently
used our collective abilities and wisdom consciously and deliberately to
alter the path that colonialism had designed for us, to construct a
developmental process that would make our economies vibrant and viable.
Yesterday we celebrated the 40th birthday of an independent Federal Republic
of Nigeria. This important and happy event has also served as a reminder to
all of us that we too must accept responsibility for the fact that we have
not used our decades of independence to construct such vibrant and viable
economies.
This failure has had a further debilitating effect on our economies and
contributed to our economic marganilisation from the current processes of
globalisation.
It is in this context that there are a number of challenges facing Africa in
general and Nigeria and South Africa in particular.
The growth, development and modernisation of the African economy must and
will be driven by a sharp and sustained growth in investments. This is a
first requirement we must pursue with the greatest possible vigour, focusing
on the appropriate sectors of our economies.
This makes it imperative that we do everything in our power to discourage
the unproductive export of scarce capital to the developed world by our own
nationals.
In this regard, I would like to express our firm support and appreciation
for the steps taken by President Olusegun Obasanjo and the rest of the
Nigerian Government to locate and repatriate the resources illegally
acquired and exported during the years of military rule.
We also consider of great importance the work going on to end and punish the
theft of the resources of the parastatal organisations, resulting in their
progression towards their inefficiency and collapse.
I am arguing for the proper utilisation of limited domestic savings properly
to impact on the growth of our economies. The lesson we are all learning
from the important work you are doing is that we should not allow these
limited domestic savings to be misappropriated by corrupt and unpatriotic
individuals, resulting in the further impoverishment of the millions of our
people.
It is in this light that the issue of the foreign debt assumes great
importance. The fact of the matter is that many of our countries are net
exporters of capital to the developed world. Clearly, this situation is both
unacceptable and unsustainable. Accordingly, as governments we have an
obligation to pursue the issue of debt relief and cancellation with great
energy, to convince the developed world that it is also in their interest
that the debt questions dealt with as a matter of urgency.
This is particularly important in the light of the fact that even where we
have already created the conditions necessary for foreign direct investment,
many of us have not experienced any significant capital inflows into Africa.
To some extent, we have to defeat the "Afro-pessimism" that lies at the root
of this reluctance to invest in the African economies by demonstrating our
own confidence in our economies by using such resources as we have actually
to achieve higher rates of economic growth and development.
It is one of our on-going responsibilities, as a government and business
people, to engage the developed countries for them to actualise the
commitments they have made in many international fora to assist with the
development of the countries of the South, and Africa in particular.
We stand a better chance of achieving results in this regard if we ourselves
begin to show that with the necessary commitment we can even develop centres
of excellence, utilising such comparative advantage as we may have to
rebuild our economies.
Among other things, we need a comprehensive and rigorous plan of human
resource development. And in developing this human capital, we have to take
a long-term view and work towards targets in producing sufficient expertise
in critical areas such as in education, the sciences, communication and
information technology, engineering, economics, management and health.
This would help us to position ourselves strategically, so as to both reap
the benefits of indigenous expertise and also to strengthen our niche
markets that should give us a competitive edge in the global economy.
Nigeria is South Africa's biggest trading partner in West Africa. The
potential to expand our relations is demonstrated by the fact that trade
between our two countries more than doubled from 1998 to 1999, rising from
R730 million in 1998 to R1,7 billion in 1999.
Our geographic locations, our histories and our shares vision of the future
means that we have to utilise the different strengths of our economies to
enhance and consolidate investment and trade relations and improve the
exchange of high quality goods and services for mutual benefit.
Even prior to the launching of the Nigeria/South Africa Binational
Commission, technical and trade visits looking at the prospects for joint
ventures and the identification of areas of co-operation produced positive
results.
Our two countries are already engaged in a number of joint economic
initiatives and I trust that our two delegations here today will use this
opportunity to further strengthen and develop these partnerships.
In this regard, it is important that we speed up the work that we are doing
together to construct and rehabilitate rail and road infrastructure so that
the rich potential of Nigeria can be realised not only for the people of
this country but also for the whole region as well as the continent.
Our mutually beneficial partnership in the telecommunications sector must
ensure that we have both the infrastructure and expertise to enter the
global economy on a favourable footing so that we are able to harness the
process of globalisation to the benefit of our people.
One of the negative effects of industrialisation in our countries has been
the decline of our people's participation in agriculture, resulting in
insufficient food production, despite the fact that we have the wherewithal
to be our own breadbasket. As we revive our economies, one of the challenges
is to reprioritise agriculture as a critical and strategic element of the
attainment of economic development.
Nigeria has developed capacity in the crude oil and gas industries that can
be shared to enhance our expertise in management, exploration and technical
spheres. Transfer of technology between our two countries has already made
it possible to capture the gas currently being flared in Nigeria's
oilfields. I think as business people gathered here today we have to take
advantage of the critical areas of partnership that the Nigeria-South
African Binational Commission has identified.
The agreements we have signed have enable public-private partnerships in
some of the areas that we have already mentioned, including transport,
energy, communication and information technology, and also mining, and the
environment.
At the same time, we need to create a business milieu that is informed by
integrity, honesty and hard work, consolidated through agreed codes and
ethics. In this regard, we have to rebel against the tendency to accept as
normal, bribes, kickbacks and the corruption of business interaction.
We need to create a business milieu in which entrepreneurial creativity,
flair and innovation can flourish. It is in this way that we can improve our
businesses and inspire the rest of society to improve productivity and
competitiveness.
Once again in his poem, Ben Okri asks of all of us:
"Will you be at the harvest,
Among the gatherers of new fruits?
Then you must begin today to remake
Your mental and spiritual world,
And join the warriors and celebrants
Of freedom, realisers of great dreams."
It has to be that those who will be "at the harvest" and "among the
gatherers of new fruits" must be the ordinary people of Nigeria, of South
Africa and of the entire African continent. As we prepare to join "the
warriors and celebrants of freedom" and "realisers of great dreams" we must
do so within the partnerships that we have referred to, but also in the
context of our regional co-operation within SADC and ECOWAS, so that our
efforts benefit no only our individual countries but also helps regional
development.
A prosperous South Africa and Nigeria should mean a prosperous SADC and
ECOWAS. In fact, it must mean a prosperous Africa, for sustained
socio-economic development is dependent on this. To achieve these
objectives, a heavy responsibility falls on the shoulders of our business
communities.
The realisation of the dreams of our countries, our regions, our continent
and the millions of ordinary people depend on the foresight of our business
people to help with the radical transformation of our economies so as to
ensure a better life for all.
The governments of Nigeria and South Africa are firmly committed to work
together and to co-operate with our respective business communities to
ensure that we achieve these objectives.
I therefore wish you success in your own deliberations and expansion of the
economic relations between our two countries.
I thank you.


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