Hon Speaker, hon Chairperson, Your Excellency the President, Your Excellency Deputy President, hon Ministers, hon Deputy Ministers and hon members, of course there are many facets to the Presidency. Today, I wish to focus on its powers and functions in the international arena. Last week, the President and I, together with some of the hon Ministers, were at the World Economic Forum in Dar es Salaam in Tanzania. As many commentators have already observed, nothing of substance came out of that meeting, which reiterated the importance of Africa pursuing an agenda on which there has been consensus for a decade but on which there has still not been a concrete implementation plan.
The President's predecessor, His Excellency Mr Thabo Mbeki, carved a role for himself in history by being one of the many promoters of Nepad and the African Union. In fact, the perception is that he is one of the founding fathers of the African Union, if not the father. So I urge our President to keep up the momentum and maintain the leadership role that both Africa and the world have come to expect South Africa to play. We need to take immediate action to give substance to the often-declared commitments and agenda items for Africa, voiced in international forums.
At the opening of the King Shaka International Airport in Durban last weekend, His Excellency the President stated, amongst other things, that we must change the way the government works and that we must change the way the country works. I have expressed these sentiments myself for the past 20 years. So, as I endorse these sentiments today, I wish to add that we must also change the way Africa works to make this country work better, just as we must change the way this country works to make Africa work better.
I call for the time of empty declarations to end. I wish to make some very concrete suggestions, which highlight the relevance of the international dimension of the issues with which this Parliament is now seized. I urge the President to promote the immediate establishment of the free circulation of goods and capital within sub-Saharan Africa, and the related abolition of all internal duties, customs and checkpoints, in the same way the many diverse countries of Europe did and as the World Economic Forum has often suggested.
This initiative will open a completely different dimension for the debates we are having on our Industrial Policy Action Plan, which suffers under the difficulty of promoting industrial bases for a country like ours with less than 10 million consumers for a broad range of goods. The predictable and imminent creation of a continental marketplace will enable each country to specialise in the manufacturing of one or more products, thereby promoting continental trade as the basis for greater South-South transcontinental trade.
To a great extent, the Industrial Policy Action Plan is now predicated on the notion of protecting our industry by means of tariffs and subsidies. I am, rather, proposing that tariffs and subsidies be used within the parameters of a continental custom union to protect the continental internal market from unbearable external competition during its infancy. Well, the question may be asked: Is this too large a leap, too fast and too early? I say no, it is the bare minimum, way too late and way too slow.
I urge the President to champion the redress of Africa's lack of adequate and integrated infrastructure. It is a terrible indictment having to read in books, like the one recently published by our Professor R W Johnson, that throughout Africa, including our own country, infrastructure levels and adequacy have declined since liberation was achieved.
As the President has stated, we are all very proud of what we have achieved in preparation for the 2010 Fifa World Cup, including these beautiful scarves. Our roads are in a parlous state, with potholes enough to give our frogs a bath on rainy days. [Laughter.] What is worse is that those potholes have caused the deaths of innocent citizens. I would appeal to my homeboy, the Minister of Transport, not to take this as a personal attack on him because he inherited the situation. [Laughter.]
It is a demeaning but nonetheless inspiring fact that when European countries came together to partition Africa into African states amongst themselves in the Treaty of Berlin in 1885, they also set up a process of co-ordinated infrastructure development inclusive of harbours, highways, railways, factories, airports and electricity plants. Amidst hiccups and difficulties, this process lasted until the outbreak of World War II.
So, I urge the President to launch an initiative in terms of which African countries can now come together as equal and free nations to resume the co- ordinated and integrated development of infrastructure within the continent. In order for this not to become another talk-shop in which the problems are reiterated without the power to forge and impose solutions to them, it is necessary that real powers be vested in such an institution, along the lines of a European Commission.
This institution should receive funding and should plan the development of Africa not only in respect of building the required 19th and 20th century hard infrastructure, but also in respect of the soft infrastructure of the 21st century, ranging from the reticulation of broadband Internet to satellite communications.
It is disheartening to me, Your Excellency, that in spite of being the economic powerhouse of Africa, our country is today well behind even former socialist states like Tanzania and Mozambique as an attractive destination for investment. While it is encouraging that the President rejected the idea, for instance, of the mining industry being nationalised, I think he actually confused many people, both here and abroad, when in the same breath, he pronounced that the debate on the nationalisation of the mining industry within the ruling party should be accepted as an ongoing debate.
I shrink when Your Excellency suggests that something such as nationalisation can still be a subject for debate, when it has ruined so many countries. As a patriot, I resent my President saying anything that can be misinterpreted as him speaking out of both sides of his mouth. It is, however, not my resentment that is important, but that this kind of talk frightens away would-be investors.
I also urge that the President call for the creation of an institution which can represent a united African position in World Trade Organisation negotiations in order to achieve a common front on agricultural issues. We must exercise maximum moral and political pressure on the developed world to stop their subsidies of their farmers, so that Africa may finally become what it is supposed to be: the breadbasket of the world. This would address the critical unemployment situation in our country and in other African countries. Of all the debates that took place at the World Economic Forum on Africa, to me the one on agriculture was the most relevant for us in Africa.
The final aspect of this internationalist agenda, which I urge our President to consider, is that of unleashing the developmental and constructive capacity of our South African companies within the rest of the continent. As Americans and Europeans have done with their own companies, we should provide financial assistance for infrastructural development to other African countries, on condition that their work be conducted by South African companies, which will build a stronger and larger industrial base for us, effectively transferring subsidies to our industries while giving concrete assistance to the development of the rest of Africa in terms of schools, hospitals and even broadband Internet.
It is essential that, as part of this initiative, we call for the adoption of uniform legislation, making it a crime within our own country if one of our companies engages in corruption in a foreign country. Both Europe and the United States have such legislation on their Statute Books.
Mr President, I believe that this agenda would address a huge number of problems at home and abroad, and would show that under the present incumbent, yourself, sir, our Presidency has maintained, if not increased, its international leadership within Africa and the world.