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Report
of The Commission for Africa
Economic Commission
for Africa
March 2005
http://213.225.140.43/english/report/thereport/cfafullreport_1.pdf
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Introduction
About this
report
This year is of great significance for Africa. In 2005 the world
will review progress on a remarkable commitment it made in 2000.
The Millennium Development Goals set out to halve world poverty
by 2015. But we are now a third of the way to that date and the
rich world is falling behind on its pledges to the poor. Nowhere
is that more clear than in Africa, where the world is furthest behind
in progress to fulfil those solemn promises. If that is to change
we must act now.
But all is not gloom.
For 2005 is also the year in which it is becoming clear to the outside
world that things are changing on the continent - with African
governments showing a new vision, both individually and working
together through the African Union and its New Partnership for Africa's
Development (NEPAD) programme. Africa, at last, looks set to deliver.
A year ago, the British
Prime Minister, Tony Blair, brought together 17 people to form a
Commission for Africa. We were invited in our individual and personal
capacities rather than as representatives of governments or institutions.
A majority of us come from Africa and we have varied experience
as political leaders, public servants and in the private sector.
The task we were set was this: to define the challenges facing Africa,
and to provide clear recommendations on how to support the changes
needed to reduce poverty.
Our starting point was
the recognition that Africa must drive its own development. Rich
nations should support that, because it is in our common interest
to make the world a more prosperous and secure place - though
the international community will contribute to the achievement of
these objectives in different ways. But what is clear is that if
Africa does not create the right conditions for development, then
any amount of outside support will fail.
Our recommendations are
based on two things. We carefully studied all the evidence available
to find out what is working and what is not. And we consulted extensively,
inside and outside Africa, with governments, civil society, the
academic world and with those in the public and private sector.
We have met individuals
and groups from each region and 49 individual countries in Africa,
and from every G8 country, China, India and across Europe. We have
received nearly 500 formal submissions and have made a particular
effort to engage with the African diaspora. We are enormously grateful
to all these individuals and groups for their contributions.
Our report is in two
parts. The first, The Argument, addresses itself to that wider audience
and succinctly sets out our call to action. The second part, The
Analysis and Evidence, lays out the substance and basis of our recommendations
so these can be held up to public scrutiny. Our Recommendations
are set out between these two sections.
Our report is
written for many audiences. We address ourselves to decision-makers
in Africa who must now drive forward the programme of change they
have set out. We address ourselves to the rich and powerful nations
of the world, whose leaders meet as the G8 in Gleneagles in Scotland
in July 2005 where they must take a strong lead for action of a
different order. We address ourselves to the international community,
which must commit to greater and faster action on the Millennium
Development Goals at the United Nations in September - and
must also act boldly at the World Trade Organisation talks in Hong
Kong in December.
And we address ourselves
to the people of Africa and the world as a whole. For it is they
who must demand action. It is only their insistence which will determine
whether their political leaders take strong and sustained action.
The measures we propose
constitute a coherent package for Africa. They must be delivered
together. 2005 is the year to take the decisions that will show
we are serious about turning the vision of a strong and prosperous
Africa into a reality.
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