Thank you, Chairperson. We should not be an arrogant nation. Kent Durr would like us as South Africans to go and say that we would provide the leadership. We are going to go and make sure that ... [Interjections.] Does he want to meet me outside for that pizza issue? I would be happy to meet him. [Laughter.] We need to take all the resources of our line-function departments, all the resources that our economy, our parastatals and our big transnational companies can deliver, and we need to take all the resources that our scientists, technicians and so forth can deliver into the process of technology transfers, skills transfers and so forth, to make sure that we develop what we have in Africa as best we can in a reliable way. That is a very different approach from the one suggested by Kent Durr, that we go and lead the continent out of its darkness. As if this continent does not know what is good and bad and people like Kent Durr can help us find the solutions for that! [Interjections.]
If we manage to achieve even half the objectives that we have detailed in the Abuja Treaty, even half of them. We will have been able to bring together a continent that can challenge the world on almost every single issue in a manner that does not take into account the conservative way of looking at things, that does not conform to traditional methods of medicine, science, technology and so forth. [Interjections.]