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Third Meeting of UN Water Africa Opening Remarks by Josué Dioné, Chairman of UN Water/Africa 22-24 March 2005 Dear Colleagues Let me first extend to all of you a warm welcome to Addis Ababa and to the 11th formal Session of our group, and the 3rd since its baptism as UN Water/Africa. I am indeed pleased and heartened to note that more agencies have been able to attend this Session than the last one held in April 2004, just prior to CSD-12. We still need to work harder to get all the other members on board, especially at this beginning of the International Decade for Action: " Water for Life", which was just launched by the Secretary General Mr. Kofi Annan. This Session marks the end of my two-year tenure as Chairperson, and I would like to take this opportunity to take stock of the achievements, constraints and challenges, which we collectively face, in the coming biennium. First however, I wish to thank all of you for the support you have kindly extended to our Vice-Chairman, Mr. Sékou Touré of UNEP, who unfortunately could not be here today, and myself in carrying out the agenda we set in Nairobi. It is now time to hand over the responsibilities of chairing to the next other member institutions to ensure active involvement and ownership by all. Water is Life. As John Kennedy stated during his short life, " Anyone who can solve the problem of water will be worthy of two Nobel prizes- one for peace and the other for science." This reflects the aspirations of all United Nations institutions organized as UN Water/Africa. Whether we are worth a prize depends on what we seek to achieve and how we set about achieving it. What we must achieve has been set out in all the fora leading up to the Pan African Implementation and Partnership Conference on Water (PANAFCON). What progress have we made since our seminal meeting two years ago in Nairobi? It is my pleasure to inform you that most of the objectives we set out in Nairobi have been achieved as reported at our last meeting in April 2004.
Dear Colleagues and friends, These are signs of progress that we can build on. Yet, depending on how we look at the situation, one may see a partly full or partly empty bottle. Looking at it either way should provide ground and opportunities for constructive efforts in moving ahead, through a cumulative learning and building process by doing better and more to fill whatever void might be detected in light of the experience and lessons of the first biennium of UN Water/Africa. So, let's not shy away from pointing out from our different perspectives, what has worked reasonably well and where and how things should be fixed or re-crafted to keep us moving along, collectively. To identify constraints and challenges facing our group, it is worth recalling the outcomes of the comprehensive review we carried out prior to the 9th Session of IGWA. Some of the weaknesses recognized in the process were:
Over the last two years, we have learned to transcend these weaknesses to a large extent. Yet, our challenge for the coming two years is to do away with the same weaknesses, which may re-emerge if we do not fully acknowledge and pay due credit to our recent history. As Sékou and myself hand over the Chair to incoming member agencies we will elect or select, I will entreat all members to dedicate themselves to our collectivity, even and especially when the natural propensity to wear our individual caps seems irresistibly tempting. It has been a pleasure and invaluable learning experience, often exciting and rewarding, serving as your Chairman. I reiterate my sincere thanks to you for your support and cooperation during this first tenure of UN Water/Africa, and I hope and know we can count on you to extend the same to our successors. Thank you and God Bless.
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