SA Coat of Arms.jpg

 

24 September 2013

 

Statement of the President of the Republic of South Africa

 

His Excellency Mr Jacob Zuma

 

to the General Debate of the 68th Session of the UN General Assembly

 

UN Headquarters, New York, USA

 

 

Your Excellency, President of the General Assembly,

Your Excellency, Secretary General of the United Nations,

Your Majesties,

Your Excellencies,

Distinguished Delegates and guests,

 

It is an honour and a privilege for me to once again address this august
body. 

 

South Africa attaches primary importance to the United Nations General
Assembly as the most representative and democratic organ of the United
Nations serving the international community. 

 

We congratulate you Mr President and the Republic of Antigua and Barbuda on
your election as President of the 68th Session of the General Assembly. 

 

We also thank Mr Vuk Jeremić for the splendid way in which he presided over
the 67th Session of the General Assembly. 

 

Mr President,

 

Let me begin by reiterating our condemnation of the horrific terrorist
attack over the weekend in Kenya in which a number of civilians, including a
South African national, were killed.

 

We express our deepest condolences to the Government and people of Kenya and
to all families who lost their loved ones, and wish the wounded survivors a
speedy recovery.

 

We continue to support Kenya's and the international community's efforts
aimed at peacekeeping, stability, democracy and nation-building in Somalia. 

 

Mr President,

 

The theme for our debate this year, "The Post-2015 Development Agenda:
Setting the Stage!" is most appropriate.

 

In the year 2000, the commitment was made by world leaders in the Millennium
Declaration to eradicate extreme poverty and adopted Millennium Development
Goals.

The MDGs are measurable and achievable targets that were specifically
crafted to address the most pressing development needs of the most
vulnerable.

 

The full implementation of the MDGs remains the key priority on the
development agenda for the next two years.

 

A development agenda beyond 2015, should allow individual regions and states
the space to address the development needs peculiar to their circumstances
and priorities.

 

For Africa in particular, the future development agenda should address
poverty eradication, income inequality and job creation.

 

We further believe that the new development agenda can only be effective if
it is focused on all three dimensions of sustainable development.

 

These dimensions are the eradication of poverty through economic
development, social development and environmental sustainability. 

 

Mr President 

 

We also wish to emphasise that any development agenda beyond 2015 must be
based on the principle of Common but Differentiated Responsibilities in
order to equalise the international playing field.

 

We raise this point out of concern because it appears that the global
economic meltdown has brought about new developments that are detrimental to
the developing world, especially Africa.

 

Some of the new developments include the tendency to renegotiate the rules
of the game.

New issues are being introduced as prerequisites for development and
partnerships which in fact become huge non-tariff barriers. These include
the green economy and clean technology.

While these issues are important for Africa and developing countries and
need to be attended to, the manner in which they are crafted restrains
economic development as they are used as obstacles.

 

We wish to emphasise as well our expectations that the developed North and
developing South should continue to engage in a genuine partnership. In this
regard, the developed North should stand ready to meet their commitment to
contribute 0,7% of their gross national income towards Official Development
Assistance. 

 

We are aware of the challenges in the North due to the economic meltdown,
but are of the view that investing in development in the South especially in
Africa, is of primary importance as a source of much-needed sustainable
development and stability in the world.

 

The tendency to attempt to delegate some of these historical
responsibilities to new emerging economies in the South is unacceptable and
unworkable as such emerging nations have their own historical challenges and
backlogs to deal with.

 

Furthermore, any commitment we make to the future beyond 2015 must build on
existing agreements.

 

These include Agenda 21, the MDGs, the Johannesburg Plan of Implementation
and the Rio+20 outcome. In our case as Africa, they must build on the New
Partnership for Africa's Development. 

 

Mr President,

 

Your Majesties and Your Excellencies,

 

Development and security are two sides of the same coin.  The best way to
ensure both is through good governance and the promotion of democratic
values in all societies.  

 

Allow me therefore Mr President to register again our serious concern that
in close to 70 years after its establishment, the UN Security Council still
remains undemocratic, unrepresentative and unfair to developing nations and
small states, and disenfranchises the majority of the Member States of the
United Nations, who form the majority in this General Assembly.   

 

We cannot remain beholden indefinitely to the will of an unrepresentative
minority on most important issues of international peace and security.  

 

There has been too much talk about the need for reform, with too little
action.  

 

We would like to challenge the Assembly today: Let us set ourselves the
target to celebrate the 70th Anniversary of the United Nations in 2015, with
a reformed, more inclusive, democratic and representative UN Security
Council!

 

Mr President,

 

When discussing the UN Security Council, the matter of the Syrian Arab
Republic comes into focus.

 

We have expressed our dismay at the use of chemical weapons in Syria. There
is no cause that could justify the use of weapons of mass destruction, by
anyone or anybody under any circumstances.

 

It is our strongly held view that any political transition in Syria must
come about as a result of the will of the Syrian people, and not as a result
of a force of arms.  

 

We welcome the recent positive developments such as the decision by Syria to
accede to the Chemical Weapons Convention and the ongoing bilateral
consultations between the Russian Federation and the United States.

 

We support all the diplomatic efforts aimed at finding a solution to this
matter.

 

The international community has an opportunity to use the Syrian experience
to ensure that matters of this nature are handled correctly going forward,
using existing instruments within the multilateral system of global
governance.

 

Mr President, 

 

Next year South Africa will celebrate the 20th Anniversary of freedom and
democracy. 

 

We will forever be grateful to those in the international community,
including the United Nations, who stood beside us in our long struggle for
liberation.  

 

We look forward to celebrating our anniversary of freedom with the United
Nations and to strengthen our partnership.

 

A strong partnership with the UN is critical for the future we want for the
people of South Africa.  

 

We also take this opportunity to thank the United Nations and the
international community for support during the recent hospitalisation of our
beloved founding President of a free and democratic South Africa, His
Excellency Nelson Mandela.

 

We thank you for your support and good wishes. The UN declared 18 July, his
birth date, as International Mandela Day. 

 

This has become a catalyst to promote service to humanity worldwide. We
thank the UN for this gesture.

 

Our revered former President continues to respond to treatment at his home. 

 

His family and our people have warmly welcomed the support he continues to
receive from the global community. 

 

We are humbled and very grateful for this support.

 

Mr President

 

As we celebrate our freedom and democracy we remain mindful that our
struggle is not complete until the people of Palestine and Western Sahara
enjoy their right to self-determination.

 

In the same manner that the United Nations stood by South Africa, we would
like to see this organisation being at the forefront of efforts towards
self-determination for the peoples of Palestine and Western Sahara.

We are deeply concerned about continued illegal settlement activities in the
West Bank in violation of international law.

 

These illegal settlement activities jeopardize the realization of the
two-state solution.  

 

Mr President

 

The Cuban people hold a special place in our hearts because of that
country's sacrifice for African freedom.  We will therefore continue to
struggle with them for their economic liberation. 

 

In conclusion Mr President,

 

The 68th Session of the General Assembly will undertake critical work for
the future of our people.  

 

Let us tackle the work ahead in a manner that, when future generations look
back on this moment, they will be able to say that the leaders of this
generation laid the foundation for the eradication of poverty, for building
a world society of equality, and for world peace.

 

Let me borrow from the words of our former President Nelson Mandela on his
inauguration day in 1994 when he said;

 

"We understand it still, that there is no easy road to freedom. 

 

We know it well, that none of us acting alone can achieve success. 

 

We must therefore act together as a united people, for national
reconciliation, for nation building, for the birth of a new world. 

 

Let there be justice for all. 

 

Let there be peace for all. 

 

Let there be work, bread, water and salt for all. 

 

Let each know that for each the body, the mind and the soul have been freed
to fulfill themselves". 

 

I thank you.

 

 

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