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Statement from ActionAid International on the occasion of the 42nd anniversary of the launch of the OAU
ActionAid International, Africa Regional Office (ARO)
May 25, 2005

Who we are: ActionAid is an International Non-Governmental organization headquartered in Johannesburg South Africa and works in over 40 countries globally and in 22 countries in Africa. We have been doing development work on the continent for more than 30 years. ActionAid works with the poor and excluded constituencies in Africa. All its 22 programmes are led by Africans. As such, the organization has very strong and long established roots on the continent.

Another africa is an imperative!
ActionAid International would like to take this opportunity to congratulate African peoples, organizations and governments on the occasion of the 42nd anniversary of the launch of the Organization of African Unity (OAU), now the African Union (AU). While we celebrate the strides the continent has made this far at the start of the 21st century, it is necessary to reflect on challenges encountered and what must change.

The AU’s predecessor, the OAU, presided over much of the decolonization of Africa and the cold war era. The OAU was instrumental in the dismantling of apartheid in South Africa and formation of a non-racial democratic state. It thus fulfilled Nkrumah’s vision of political freedom for the whole of Africa. Political freedom that followed from decolonization was, however, not accompanied by economic liberation and independence. Despite the continents immense wealth in natural resources, Africa remains the world’s poorest continent.

The last few years of the OAU era saw the IMF and World Bank impose economic structural adjustment policies upon African states. These neo-liberal economic policies were largely to the detriment of the poor, women and other vulnerable groups. The OAU was thus characterized by a serious failure to deliver socio-economic rights. Its achievement was largely in the defense of African state sovereignty based on the principle of non-interference in internal affairs of member states. As such it was unable to build credibility with African citizens suffering from mis-rule and human rights violations. It was also not prepared to question authoritarianism amongst its group of peer statesmen. The OAU however, did a great deal to prepare the way for the launch of its predecessor the African Union (AU).

Events of the last decade reveal that there is increasing political will on the part of the African Union and its organs to meet its obligations to African citizens.

The 1990s and in particular the launch of the AU in 2001 marked the dawn of a new era. The AU has in its few years of existence made tremendous progress in addressing issues of conflict, trade, governance, and economic development. The efforts so far made by Africa have not been complimented by the developed countries especially the G8.

In Africa, 340 million people, or half the population live on less than US $1 per day. The mortality rate of children under 5 years of age is 140 per 1000, and life expectancy at birth is less than 55 years. Less than 60 % of the population has access to safe drinking water let alone other basic services.

Aid and Debt
Aid can make a huge difference in the lives of the poor, and especially women. Rich countries should give more untied aid and ensure that it is spent on helping the people who most need it. Africa must demand that aid from rich countries is not tied to economic conditions such as reducing trade barriers or privatization of water, electricity and other essential services. Africa must refuse any aid that is tied to goods and services from donor countries.

Many African countries continue to struggle to service their debt while striving to reach the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs).

Reduction of poverty by half, by 2015 as envisioned by the MGDs will require a doubling of the growth levels to some 8 to 9 per cent annually for the next decade. The financial requirements for such doubling of growth levels are incompatible with present and projected levels of debt servicing. The AU should therefore unite with African civil society groups and call for the unconditional writing-off of Africa’s debt.

African governments should assume the responsibility to ensure that debt cancellation frameworks-if adopted- deliver tangible results for the poor and excluded. African governments should actively pursue policies for prudent debt management, economic diversification, human development and sustained economic growth.

Debt has become a huge obstacle to African attempts to combat HIV/AIDS. The $ 15 billion paid annually by Africa to her creditors could be better applied to providing health care to millions of people and fight the war on HIV/AIDS. Action Aid is persuaded that debt has an astronomical human cost that should be collectively resisted by African governments and civil society. Conversely debt cancellation could potentially double African governments’ expenditure on health and education

International Trade
Trade is a necessary but insufficient tool for development and poverty reduction. To make sure that increased trade will benefit the poor, a number of distributive domestic and international policies should also be enforced, i.e., trade should be regulated so that the current unfair trade rules can be rebalanced in order to distribute wealth and reduce inequality. The rules of international trade in agricultural products are stacked in favour of the most powerful countries and their businesses. G8 policies have been disastrous for African farmers. In particular the failure of the G8 to adopt even limited proposals for a moratorium on reducing European and American tariff duties and subsidies for US and European agriculture. The small amounts of aid received from developed countries amounts to a small bandage for haemorrhaging economies in Africa. ActionAid International calls upon African governments to adopt a common position in the lead to the next WTO ministerial meeting to be held in Hong Kong in December.

African countries must demand that the focus of trade negotiations should change from achieving trade liberalisation for its own sake, to increasing trade in order to achieve development. African governments should partner with African social movements and civil society groups to address the anti-democratic negotiating procedures of the WTO as a matter of urgency. ActionAid International calls for the immediate elimination of all export subsidies and for all other trade-distorting subsidies to be phased out.

Privatisation of Essential Services
Africa must give priority to the basic rights of its poor masses. African countries must unequivocally reject privatization of basic services such as water, education, health and electricity. Privatization of these basic services has had dire consequences for women and the poor. In the context of Africa education can no longer be viewed as a privilege but a fundamental right for every child. We, therefore, urge the African Union (AU) to reaffirm the rights to education, health and clean, affordable and accessible water as critical both to African development, fighting HIV/AIDS and arresting common pandemics such as cholera, tuberculosis and malaria.

Health and HIV/AIDS
More than 70 % of total numbers of people infected with HIV in the world live in Africa and of these 60% are women. All essential services required to fight HIV and AIDS in Africa such as Voluntary Counseling and Testing, Anti Retroviral Treatment, condom access and orphan support are at 5% of required coverage. The decline in GDP in most African countries is in part linked to HIV prevalence.

The burden placed upon women to care for the ill, the aged and minor dependants is unjust and unsustainable.

Africa must demand a comprehensive international approach to HIV/AIDS, to ensure the right and access to HIV&AIDS related care for poor and excluded people, especially women and children.

It is evident that the HIV/AIDS crisis in Africa is inextricably linked with poverty, social exclusion, discrimination and the denial of human rights. ActionAid International therefore urges African civil society groups and governments to unite in the Global Campaign against Poverty G-CAP). This united front of African governments and peoples should demand that developed countries commit to a multilateral timetable for universal access to anti-retrovirals for people living with HIV and AIDS in Africa. It should also demand that developed countries ensure that their actions on aid, debt and trade contribute to making this achievable.

On their part African governments should demonstrate their seriousness to fight HIV/AIDS through comprehensive policies and programmes at the national level. Two key starting points would be increasing budget allocations for health to the 15% of GDP levels as agreed in Abuja, and promotion and protection of women’s human rights as envisaged in the AU Protocol on the Rights of Women.

Peace, Conflict and Security
Violent conflict has been a major cause of the increase in poverty witnessed on the African continent over the last two decades. However ‘peace’ is not just about the absence of war. It is also about justice and human security.

The AU’s objective in situations of conflict should not simply be to stop conflict, but also to ensure sustainable and inclusive post-conflict reconstruction. African efforts alone will not suffice to end sporadic and recurrent conflicts experienced in different parts of the continent. ActionAid International exhorts the AU to partner with civil society groups to demand that the international community: Support an International Arms Trade Treaty, support the African Union’s peacekeeping and peace building capacity, and ensure that aid does not worsen conflict, in line with OECD guidelines.

Women’s Rights
The subordination of women and girls in Africa is still entrenched in laws and policies, as well as in the absence of laws or policies that promote or protect their rights. Women and girls are still largely excluded from decision making processes.  

For many African women poverty is not just about material lack. It is also about denial of rights as human beings and as citizens. Their subordinate status makes women vulnerable to sexual abuse and violence that is fuelling the AIDS crisis.

With intractable conflicts still affecting large populations in sub-Saharan Africa, the peculiar situation of women and other vulnerable groups can not be ignored. In most conflicts across Africa, women’s’ sexual and reproductive rights are often violated with impunity by male belligerents, peace-keepers and Aid workers. These violations occur in situations where no remedial processes exist. The unmitigated spread of HIV/AIDS as a consequence of conflict remains an under-appreciated phenomenon. Access to treatment, care and support for women who are raped and infected with HIV during conflicts is almost non-existent. The AU should unite with African civil society groups to ensure that women are protected in all situations of emergency. The AU should take drastic measures against individuals and groups that perpetrate rape as a tool of war. Collective efforts should also be undertaken to ensure that victims have access to treatment, care and support.

ActionAid International calls upon the AU to commit itself to radically change the unequal power relations between women and men. African leaders are enjoined to lead by example in issues of women’s rights and taking action. African governments must implement existing international and regional frameworks, including the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women (CEDAW) (UN 1979) and the Dakar and Beijing platforms for Action, (1994 & 1995). We also urge the speedy ratification of the AU’s own Protocol on the Rights of Women in Africa and its implementation.

Issued By:

Asenath K. Omwega
International Director Africa
ActionAid International
P.O Box 554-00600
Nairobi, Kenya
Telephone +254-20-4440458/69
Fax No. +254-20-4450089
E-mail:
Asenath.Omwega@actionaid.org

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