ADDRESS BY H.E. THE PRESIDENT OF THE REPUBLIC OF GHANA, JOHN DRAMANI MAHAMA TO THE 68TH UNITED NATIONS GENERAL ASSEMBLY
ADDRESS
BY H.E. THE PRESIDENT OF THE REPUBLIC OF GHANA, JOHN DRAMANI MAHAMA TO THE 68TH
UNITED NATIONS GENERAL ASSEMBLY
Thursday
September 26, 2013
Mr. President,
Mr. Secretary-General,
Your Excellencies,
Ladies and Gentlemen,
It is with a heavy heart that I address you today.
Mr. Secretary-General,
Your Excellencies,
Ladies and Gentlemen,
It is with a heavy heart that I address you today.
Before I
left Ghana to attend this assembly, I learned of the terrorist attack that took
place in Nairobi, Kenya. I was shocked and deeply saddened to hear of the many
lives that were lost to those senseless and cowardly acts of violence.
As the
death toll increased, so too did my grief, knowing that each additional number
symbolized one more human life. Those numbers symbolized individuals who may
have been strangers to you or to me but were of prime significance in the lives
of the people who loved them: parents, children, husbands, wives, friends,
colleagues.
Soon
enough, I got word that one of the people massacred was a person who held
significance in my life and in the lives of so many other Ghanaians.
Kofi Awoonor, a 78-year-old gentleman who had served his country loyally, as a distinguished poet and professor, a former ambassador to Brazil and Cuba, and past Chairman of the Council of State, a presidential advisory board.
Kofi Awoonor, a 78-year-old gentleman who had served his country loyally, as a distinguished poet and professor, a former ambassador to Brazil and Cuba, and past Chairman of the Council of State, a presidential advisory board.
Professor
Awoonor had once even been our country's envoy to the United Nations. On this
fateful day, however, Professor Awoonor was in Nairobi to perform his poetry at
a writers' conference. He had travelled there with his son, and they had
decided before the day's scheduled events to do what should have been one of
the most ordinary and uneventful of activities—make a stop at the shopping
mall.
Unfortunately,
what happened that day at the Westgate Premier Shopping Mall was anything but
ordinary. Professor Awoonor's life was taken away from him and those who loved
him, just as the lives of dozens of others were taken away from them and their
communities; each person with a unique story, and with accomplishments or
aspirations for which they will be remembered.
Professor
Awoonor's son, though injured, was among the many who were lucky enough to
escape the attack. It is a day they will never forget; they will carry the
scars, physical and emotional, with them. And we, who watched from a distance,
should never allow ourselves to forget because we have also been irrevocably
marked by this tragedy.
Mr.
President,
When
independence was upon us and our possibilities felt endless, the world saw how
brightly Africa could shine. Then, for decades that light was dimmed.
There was a time when killing seemed almost commonplace in Africa. Indeed, there are plenty of graves that remain unmarked. There was a time when the ruthlessness of dictators seemed to be the order of the day. For decades the corruption, greed and depravity of a few caused the suffering of an entire continent.
There was a time when killing seemed almost commonplace in Africa. Indeed, there are plenty of graves that remain unmarked. There was a time when the ruthlessness of dictators seemed to be the order of the day. For decades the corruption, greed and depravity of a few caused the suffering of an entire continent.
We so
easily could have succumbed to the wars, the poverty, the diseases; but we did
not. We staggered our way through, year after year, but eventually we made it.
We survived.
Mr.
President,
Last year
when I addressed this assembly, I began with the assurance that I had come with
good news from Ghana, and stories of success from the African continent.
This
year, it gives me great pleasure to do the same—even on the heels of this
terrorist attack—because I know that today's Africa will not be divided or
deterred by the heinous crimes of those who wish to disrupt our progress. I
know that our borders will no longer be used to undermine the brotherhood and
sisterhood of our citizens.
The days
of massacres must remain in our past. Our rivers will no longer flow red. Our
children must be students now; we will no longer allow their childhoods to be stolen
by those who wish to turn them into soldiers.
Africa is standing tall, walking confidently toward political stability, walking confidently toward economic prosperity, walking proudly toward ethnic and religious harmony and co-existence.
Africa is standing tall, walking confidently toward political stability, walking confidently toward economic prosperity, walking proudly toward ethnic and religious harmony and co-existence.
There is
no place in today's Africa for hatred and intolerance and the murder of
innocent people. Not anymore. Not ever again. So we will mourn our dead. We
will console ourselves, and each other, through the grief. But we cannot allow
terror to defeat us. This must strengthen our resolve. Our stride will not be
broken.
Mr.
President,
Last
year, on this stage, I also declared Ghana's resolve to be a beacon of peace in
the West African subregion. On behalf of the citizens whom I serve, I promised
the world that Ghana would not allow its territory to be used in any manner
whatsoever to destabilize other nations.
Ghana has
been steadfast in our cooperation with regional neighbours to maintain the
security of those nations that are enjoying stability and to restore security
to those, such as Cote d'Ivoire and Mali, that have recently emerged from
turmoil.
Currently,
Cote d'Ivoire is in a stage of rebuilding. The recent overtures toward
reconciliation made by President Ouattara are a major step towards bridging the
country's political divide. After its own bout with terror, Mali made a solid
return to democracy by conducting an election that all observers, even the
sceptics and the cynics, hailed as being free, fair and peaceful.
West
Africa has seen enough war and strife. We want peace and security to persist in
our subregion. Ghana will continue to play its role in strengthening the
Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) to make sure it is able to
meet this goal.
Mr.
President,
With all
that I have mentioned in this address, I am sure it would not come as a
surprise to anyone that Ghana enthusiastically threw its support behind the
Arms Trade Treaty just adopted by the UN General Assembly. International trade
in conventional arms and ammunition must be regulated.
We like
to make mention of how the world has become a global village, especially when
speaking of technology, culture, and travel. The facility of that global
village exists for warmongers and terrorist groups as well. They are using it
to recruit new members, expand their cells, create intercontinental networks,
obtain weapons, and conceal their identities as well as locations.
If we are
to fight back, we must also work cooperatively. Nations in the developed world
must align themselves with nations in the developing world. We must form
partnerships and work together.
Ghana is
prepared to do this. We have signed the Arms Trade Treaty and we intend to do
everything possible to see that it is ratified in a timely manner.
Mr.
President,
Fledgling
democracies tend to be fragile. Their limits are still being tested; their
characteristics are still being defined. Democracy is not a one-size-fits-all
venture. Nor is it a one-time event. It is a system that takes decades to
build, a process that pushes you toward a
perfection
you will never reach, but must try nonetheless.
This past
year, the limits of Ghana's democracy were tested and I am proud to report that
we passed with flying colours.
The
results of our recent elections were contested. Since our return to
constitutional rule, Ghana has conducted six successive elections. These were
the first results to be formally challenged and heard by the Supreme Court.
What made this situation noteworthy was the reliance, by all parties involved,
on the rule of law.
The
proceedings were televised for the sake of transparency. The verdicts were
readily accepted, and there was not a single reported incident of violence.
Ghana's
victory is not an aberration. Other countries, like Kenya, have shared similar
experiences. This indicates that democratic institutions in Africa are growing
stronger.
It
indicates that the balance of power in African countries is shifting from the
authority of a sole individual to the more equitable process of a properly
designed system. Strong institutions are the hallmark of a nation's stability.
They are crucial tools in the fight for human rights.
Mr.
President,
It is our
intention to bring an end to youth unemployment. What we have done in Ghana to
address this issue is create the Youth Jobs and Enterprise Development Fund, a
program that will provide young people with entrepreneurial skills and access
to the funds needed to establish businesses or expand existing ones, thereby
creating new employment opportunities.
Six of
the ten fastest growing economies in the world are on the African continent.
However, this growth has not yet translated into sustainable employment
opportunities. Over the course of the last decade, African economies created
over 37 million wage-paying jobs, yet 63 percent of workers remain trapped in
low paying subsistence or self-employment endeavours.
With these
realities come the very real possibilities of income instability, exclusion
from the benefits of economic growth and social security benefits tied to
formal sector employment.
Africa
has a fast growing population, more than 50 percent of which is below the age
of 35. That means we must create more jobs for our growing numbers of youth.
They must have opportunities available to them. We cannot do this unless we
transform the economies of Africa. It all comes down to value. We must value
our resources, including our human
resource.
We must value our people.
We cannot
continue to be exporters of raw material and primary produce. We need to add
value to our exports. We cannot continue to export raw cocoa beans in Ghana.
What we need to do instead is process more of those beans into value-added
products. We cannot continue to export unrefined gold.
We need to add value to our gold exports. We cannot continue to export oil and gas. We need to integrate that industry into our economy. We need to process petroleum products and produce power with the gas. We cannot continue to export bauxite and then in return import alumina to feed our local aluminium smelter. We need to work toward creating an integrated bauxite and aluminium industry in Ghana.
We need to add value to our gold exports. We cannot continue to export oil and gas. We need to integrate that industry into our economy. We need to process petroleum products and produce power with the gas. We cannot continue to export bauxite and then in return import alumina to feed our local aluminium smelter. We need to work toward creating an integrated bauxite and aluminium industry in Ghana.
In this
way, by keeping the concept of value at the forefront of our economies, we can
create new jobs for our young people. We can do this with local and foreign
investors who share our vision. Often the Western world wrongly assumes that we
in Africa do not know our worth.
We do.
It's not sympathy we want; it's partnership, the ability to stand on our own
feet. It's not handouts we're in search of; it's opportunities. We have already
shown that with time and the right opportunity, Africa can make it.
Mr.
President,
Ghana
achieved the Millennium Development Goal target for reducing poverty and hunger
far ahead of the scheduled date of 2015. We are on track to achieving MDGs 2,
3, and 6 as well. School enrolment, gender parity and reduction of HIV/AIDS
have all seen dramatic progress and statistical shifts as a result of the work
that has been done to reach our targets.
While we
are lagging in MDGs 4, 5, and 7—infant and maternal mortality as well as water
and sanitation—the figures show that there has been a vast improvement. Since
2000, the number of maternal deaths for every 100,000 births has decreased by
more than half, from 740 to 320.
We
recognize that when you're talking about human lives, even a 50 percent
decrease is too little. That is why in 2010 we launched the MDG Accelerated
Framework and Action Plan.
Women
account for more than 50 percent of Ghana's population. We believe that
empowering them through education and encouraging them to take full control of
their reproductive rights will not only help us realize our MDG goals faster,
it will help us build a better nation.
It's not
enough to put girls in school and allow them just enough education to be deemed
literate. We must keep them in school. Removing teen girls from school for any
reason, let alone to marry them off, is an unacceptable practice that must end.
African women have always been the backbone of our societies. Imagine the
change they could effect in our countries if only we'd help them reach their
full potential.
As a
President and a father, I owe it to my children—my sons and my daughter—and all
the children of Ghana to create for them a country where they walk with their
dignity intact and their heads held high and stand shoulder to shoulder with
the children of Europe, South America, Asia, North America and the rest of the
world.
Mr.
President,
Ghana is
encouraged by the new initiative to resolve the Israeli-Palestinian issue. We
are still firm in our belief that an independent Palestinian state existing
side-by-side with a peaceful and secure Israeli state is a desirable outcome we
must all support and work towards.
In
working towards this, we must realize that the continuous construction of
settlements in Palestinian territory increasingly shuts the door on a two-state
solution.
Ghana calls,
once again, for the embargo against Cuba to be lifted. It is a relic of the
Cold War era and has no place in our current global dispensation.
We have
come a long way since the end of the last global war, yet the makeup of the
U.N. Security Council is not a reflection of that development. Ghana,
therefore, supports a reform of the U.N. Security Council.
Ghana
will continue to pursue the principle of constructive engagement in our
relations with other countries in the world. We are fully committed to
promoting honest global partnership that is informed by mutual respect and
reciprocity.
In
closing, I would like once again, to pay my respects to those who have lost
their lives in Kenya, in Syria, in Palestine, in Egypt, in Libya, in Pakistan,
in Iraq, in Nigeria, in Mali, in Somalia, in Turkey, in India, in the United
States and all the other places where terrorists have attacked in this year
alone.
The
reason we are all gathered here today is to find the ways and the means to
create a better, more peaceful and prosperous world.
Thank
you, Mr. President.
Comments
Post a Comment