Mr Speaker, I am sure the hon member's question was what he mentioned at the end - that is what he actually wanted to say. [Laughter.]
Well, as I indicated in the first part of my reply, Africa is aware of the problem. It is a historical problem in that Africa was colonised, and each part of Africa is called a country, and it had a mother country and that mother country was very possessive of its colonies - all of them. It was only the mother country that dealt with its colony, and no one else. So, if you had countries in Africa that were neighbours and one was under Portugal and the other under the French, they were not allowed to do any business together; until Africa decolonised itself from that system and changed it.
Therefore, you are now dealing with an Africa that is saying, let us work together. That is why I talked about the integration of regions here, which are economic regions. In addition, we are working on the infrastructure to connect Africa so that we can promote intra-Africa trade. That is what Africa is doing and that is what the other Zuma is going to do to ensure that that programme is indeed implemented. Because without that, even if we say today that Africa is growing faster, without Africa trading within itself, it will be very weak.
I hope the leaders in Africa have appreciated that, and we are therefore working very hard to ensure that we quicken that process. We can only quicken it by having infrastructure that connects us with land, air, sea or the huge lakes that we have. I think we will be supporting that particular Zuma on that programme.