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Past Event

Speech by Nelson Mandela

Africa's Time Has Come: The Role of the United States in Aid and Development Efforts

Africa, Global Economics, Development


Event Summary

Africa, with a population of more than 840 million, is the giant among the impoverished regions that the United Nations Millennium Declaration of 2000 identified as critically in need of aid. The Declaration set forth eight goals to be accomplished by 2015 and is the largest effort to date that realistically proposes solutions to the global issues of poverty, illiteracy, environmental degradation, disease, gender inequality, and child and maternal mortality.

Event Information

When

Monday, May 16, 2005
11:30 AM to 12:15 PM

Where

Falk Auditorium
The Brookings Institution
1775 Massachusetts Ave., NW
Washington, DC
Map

Contact: Brookings Office of Communications

E-mail: events@brookings.edu

Phone: 202.797.6105

Now, in 2005, United Nations progress reports show that Africa is the furthest behind in the quest to eradicate extreme poverty and hunger by the 2015 deadline. Therefore, this period is crucial in determining whether the continent, in concert with the rest of the world and in particular with wealthy nations, will be able to make up the ground already lost. With the appointment of Paul Wolfowitz to head the World Bank starting in June, and his public commitment to make Africa a top priority, the question that comes to the forefront is when and how the United States will contribute.

In this global context, Nelson Mandela, the former president of South Africa and the African National Congress, offered remarks on the role of the United States in development and aid efforts for Africa.

Mr. Mandela is the recipient of the Nobel Peace Prize, the International Gandhi Peace Prize, and the Presidential Medal of Freedom. He is also Founder of the Nelson Mandela Foundation, which was established in 1999 to develop a living legacy that captures the vision and values of his life and work. Along with the Nelson Mandela Children's Fund and The Mandela Rhodes Foundation, the three institutions make up the family of "Mandela Legacy Organizations". While visiting the United States, Mr. Mandela will be supporting the establishment of the Nelson Mandela Legacy Trust (USA), a United States-based charitable structure designed to support his Africa-based bodies.
 

Transcript

NELSON MANDELA: We can today bring good news from Africa, where it can truly be said that the commitment to human rights and democratic values is broader and deeper than ever before. This progress must be deepened and speeded up by concrete support from developed countries in the West.

At the heart of this more positive relationship between Africa and the West is a new recognition of mutual obligations and responsibility. The U.S. and other donor nations should provide substantially greater economic assistance on terms that are more flexible and responsive to the priorities set by African concerns. At the same time, African leaders need to agree to abide by internationally accepted standards of transparency, accountability, and good governance, and to work to hold each other responsible for meeting these standards through such measures as the African peer review mechanism.

Participants

Speaker

Nelson Mandela

Former President of South Africa; Former President, African National Congress

Opening Remarks

John L. Thornton

Chairman of the Board, The Brookings Institution


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