The OAU Special Summit on HIV/AIDS and Other
Related Infectious Diseases
Presentation at the Panel on the Way Forward
by
K. Y. Amoako,
Executive Secretary, Economic Commission for Africa
Abuja, 27 April 2001
Mr. Chairman
Your Excellencies Heads of State and Government
Honourable Ministers
Distinguished Delegates
Ladies and Gentlemen
It is a singular honour for
me to have the opportunity to address such an august gathering. On behalf of the Economic
Commission for Africa, and in my own personal regard, let me begin by expressing my
gratitude to President Olusegun Obasanjo and to the people of Nigeria for their warm
hospitality and their commitment to seizing the moment at hand.
So many pertinent issues have
been presented at this Summit by Heads of State, senior ministers and high ranking
international officials that there is little left to add. Many of you are grappling with
these urgent issues on a day-to-day basis. Having listened carefully to all that has been
raised, and on the basis of the work that ECA has been doing including the African
Development Forum 2000, which produced the African Consensus, a key input into this Summit
let me offer some brief thoughts on the way forward.
My starting point is that
HEALTH IS AT THE HEART OF DEVELOPMENT. Without a healthy population, economic growth is
going to remain a mirage. We may survive, but we certainly will not grow.
The question then is how we
are to operationalize a health-centred development agenda. As we have been repeatedly told
in this Summit, we need more money AND better health systems. So how do we get where we
want to go?
- First,
health sector planning and
financing should be mainstreamed within the context of overall national development
planning;
- Second,
all sectoral plans, including
education and agriculture, should integrate disease prevention, control and treatment
especially, but not exclusively, on HIV/AIDS;
- Third,
poverty reduction strategies, which
are a key operational modality for both comprehensive development and for unlocking
concessional financing, must put HIV/AIDS, TB and other infectious diseases at their
centre;
- Fourth,
we should link debt relief under
the Highly Indebted Poor Countries (HIPC) initiative to enhancing social sector
provision, including some of the critical health challenges, in particular HIV/AIDS;
- Fifth,
we should develop strong national
and regional strategic plans, with integral financing reporting and monitoring systems.
Mr. Chairman
Let me elaborate briefly on
the need to develop strong strategic plans, including monitoring and evaluation mechanisms
at the national, sub-regional and continental levels.
Working with our partners, we
at ECA have identified broad goals that must be achieved for us to successfully mitigate
the devastating effects HIV/AIDS and related infectious diseases have had, and continue to
have, on our people, on our nations and on our economies.
In order to meet this
historic challenge, and as many of you have stressed here this week, we must first and
foremost make sure that national efforts are commensurate with the scope of the challenges
we face.
To add value to the national
effort, we should aggregate common elements of the national response into sub-regional and
regional strategies. If we can articulate and advocate on the basis of well-crafted
African positions, we will be better placed in the global context.
We need to ensure that plans
agreed at sub-regional and regional level are implemented in a coherent manner. We should
put in place mechanisms to articulate specific ways to monitor the implementation of the
various plans of action that we already have on the table such as the African
Consensus that emanated from ADF 2000, and the Abuja Declaration and framework that we
expect to emerge later today.
African institutions should
take charge, together with their partners, of developing such mechanisms which will
identify indicators of success and report annually to Summits of Heads of State as well as
to different stakeholder groups.
It will also be of critical
importance to build on existing synergies between the multiple development agencies
working in Africa. Here we should look closely at the United Nations, which has more
agencies, funds and programmes working in Africa than in any other region of the world.
In particular, we should work
with UNAIDS and its co-sponsors, and leverage effective mechanisms already in place
such as the UN Country Theme Groups and the Resident Coordinator system. These mechanisms
can assume a pivotal role in providing the country-based content that will inform and to a
large extent drive regional monitoring and reporting.
An essential aspect of the
regional strategy will be to clearly articulate realistic expected outcomes. Without a
concrete sense of what we are aiming for, we may not be in shape to effectively monitor
Africas progress and success in rolling back HIV/AIDS, TB and other related
infectious diseases.
Another important element
that will add value is an appropriate communication strategy. We need to build
constituencies. We need to develop effective mechanisms for sharing best practices. We
need to involve all stakeholders in a sustained and participatory dialogue on African
development. We need to mobilize our international partners to support the implementation
of our plans. And we need to tell our own story.
To this end, we are
consulting with the OAU, UNAIDS and other UN agencies and stakeholder groups on the
establishment of a STRUCTURE to monitor and report on the implementation of
Africas plans and strategies. Yesterday, I had the opportunity to discuss this
proposal with President Obasanjo, The UN Secretary General, the OAU Secretary General and
other leaders, who strongly endorsed this approach.
Mr. Chairman
This is one modest level of
partnership that I am proposing, building on what is already in place. Above and beyond
this, we need a new Compact with our international development partners, including UN
agencies, multilateral institutions and bilateral donors.
This Compact should involve
not just increased resource flows more aid, debt relief and so on. The new Compact
implies a new way of doing business, based on African ownership of policies and
programmes, long-term commitment of resources, and mutual accountability towards the
shared goal of poverty reduction and sustainable development.
The Millennium Partnership
for the African Recovery Programme (MAP), initiated by our host, President Obasanjo,
together with Presidents Mbeki and Bouteflika, provides a means for doing exactly this.
THIS IS OUR WAY FORWARD.
At the Economic Commission
for Africa, we are closely involved with the MAP initiative. We are developing a Compact
for African Recovery as the technical underpinning of this new partnership. Next week,
African Ministers of Finance and Planning will be meeting in Algiers to map out the next
stage of this process. In particular, we will examine the domestic resource mobilization
requirements of meeting the challenges of the diseases of poverty.
Mr. Chairman
Your Excellencies Heads of State and Government
Honourable Ministers
Distinguished Delegates
Ladies and Gentlemen
This is indeed our decisive
moment. Within the context of a realistic appraisal of our predicament, learning the
lessons of the recent past, establishing new and better partnerships, and underlining that
HEALTH IS AT THE HEART OF DEVELOPMENT, we can, and will, move ahead.
Thank you. |