Jacques Santer commends regional initiative
by Alex Kremer
Commission President's visit to West Africa
The European Union's commitment to regional development in
sub-Saharan Africa is as strong as ever, but sustainable development can only
come from Africa's own initiative. This was the message delivered by Jacques
Santer, President of the European Commission, in his address to African heads of
state at the UEMOA (Economic and Monetary Union of West Africa) summit in
Ouagadougou, Burkina Faso, on May 10.
'I wish to emphasise from the start,' Mr Santer declared to the
Presidents of Benin, Burkina Faso, Cd'lvoire, Mali, Niger, Senegal and Togo,
'that the European Commission and the European Parliament are both determined to
make our partnership even more dynamic and in tune with today's rapidly changing
world.'
The presence of the Commission President at the UEMOA summit
marks a milestone in the European Community's support for regional integration
in the developing world. With its own Commission, Council of Ministers and Court
of Justice, the UEMOA appears to be consciously following the supranational
model of regional integration pioneered by the European Union.
The sequencing of UEMOA integration, however, is almost the
reverse of the European model. Already linked by a single currency in the CFA
franc, the West African Union's member states are now pressing ahead with plans
for integration of their 'real' economies. The implementation timetable agreed
in Ouagadougou covers freedom of establishment, free movement of capital, mutual
macroeconomic monitoring and the first steps to customs union with the
harmonisation of external tariffs and the lowering or removal of intra-regional
barriers to trade.
President Santer indicated that the European Commission is keen
to discuss how the European Development Fund (EDF) can support these
initiatives. Such aid could take the form of technical assistance and training
as well as direct budgetary support to mitigate the short-term costs of customs
union.
UEMOA is not, however, an aid project. Its member states have
designed it to stand on its own feet financially from the start. A 'community
solidarity levy' was due to come into effect on 1 July 1996. The money will be
used for a structural fund programme beginning in late 1997, as well as to
finance the Union's operating costs.
Meeting with the President of Burkina Faso, Blaise CompaorMr
Santer said that it was particularly significant that his first official visit
to Africa as President of the European
Commission was to Ouagadougou. Not only was it a reaffirmation
of the partnership between Africa and the EU, and a statement of the EU's
willingness to support regional integration in the developing world. It was also
a tribute to the determination of the people of Burkina Faso and other African
countries to promote their own development.
The European Community is Burkina Faso's second largest donor,
contributing 10% of total aid payments in 1994. Since 1991, the EC has committed
an average of ECU 45 million each year to development cooperation with this
country, rising to a peak of ECU 100m in 1995.
Mr Santer visited the EDF-financed road improvement site at
Tougan, close to the frontier with Mali, and noted that intra-regional transport
links were an essential complement to the legislative programme of the UEMOA. He
concluded his tour of regional cooperation projects with a visit to a
photovoltaic pumping system financed by the EC under its West African solar
energy programme.
Finally, on a more personal note, the Commission President was
able to drop in on a project managed by the charity Chrens pour le Sahel. Mr
Santer worked for this Luxembourg-based organisation before starting his career
in politics and he was visibly pleased to see that it was still going strong -
supporting home-grown African initiatives with a little financial help from the
European Community.
A.K.