Kampala Joint Assembly puts Uganda in the spotlight
The Ugandan capital, Kampala, played host at the end of February
to its first major international gathering for many years, when ACP and European
Parliament representatives came together for the latest session of the Joint
Assembly. Like Rome, Kampala is a city which is built on seven hills and one is
immediately struck by its scenic setting, its abundant greenery and the
spontaneous warmth of its people. One is also struck by a sense of optimism and
renewal in a city which still carries many economic and social burdens.
There must be few people who are unaware of the anguish suffered
by Uganda in recent decades - the civil strife which over many years halted
economic development, disrupted social services and provoked widespread human
misery. What is perhaps less widely known is that since 1986, Uganda has been
rebuilding from the wreckage. It was in 1986 that the National Resistance
Movement (NRM) of President Yoweri Museveni, took power. The legacy they
inherited was an unenviable one and in the last five years, they have had to
grapple with the challenge of reconstruction in an increasingly hostile global
economic situation and in the growing shadow of the AIDS epidemic.
It is a tribute to the human spirit that despite the scale of
the problems significant progress has been made on the road to stability,
reconciliation and reconstruction. While it would be foolish to underestimate
the problems which Uganda still faces, it would equally be unjust not to give
credit for the achievements of the last five years.
Delegates who attended the Joint Assembly were impressed, both
by the outstanding hospitality which was offered and by the smooth and efficient
way in which the event was organised. It takes time for a country to overcome
negative perceptions based on past events but in Kampala at the end of February,
the Ugandans went a long way towards doing just that.
The Joint Assembly began with a formal inaugural session
attended by President Museveni and members of the Ugandan Government as well as
by Mr Enrique Baron Crespo, the President of the European Parliament. The
opening speech was delivered by Mr Matthew Rukikaire, the Ugandan Minister of
State for Planning and the Economy. Welcoming the Assembly to Kampala, Mr
Rukikaire expressed the pleasure felt by Ugandans as hosts to so many visitors
from abroad. He noted that delegates had travelled a long way not just in
distance, but also in terms of fulfilled expectations.
Gulf preoccupations
Given that 3 000 kilometres to the north, events in the Gulf
conflict were reaching a climax, it is not surprising that the subject dwelt
heavily on the minds of many of the speakers. Mr Enrique Baron Crespo
emphasised, in his presentation, the central role of international law in the
global order and suggested that if the European Community had had a common
security policy and an appropriate instrument for controlling the arms trade,
it could have acted in a coherent and united way and that it might have
been possible to avoid war. As to the fears of ACP countries regarding
Community aid to Eastern Europe and, following the war, to the Persian Gulf
region, the President of the European Parliament reaffirmed that any new
engagements must not be made at the expense of pre-existing
obligations. Mr Baron Crespo also spoke of the financial assistance
provided by the Community to victims of apartheid, the progress of
democracy and human rights, and the problems of famine and development.
External burdens
The Co-President of the Joint Assembly, Mr Mamadou Diop
(Senegal) appealed to the Community to take further measures to help the ACPs in
the light of the dramatic situation facing them as a result of events which were
beyond their control. He pointed out that development was continually being
affected by external burdens with increasingly destabilising effects. As regards
South Africa, Mr Diop welcomed the spectacular transformation of
recent months but emphasised that a solution could only finally be reached once
apartheid was dismantled. He also focused on the debt issue and on the
deterioration of the terms of trade, pointing out that these had resulted in
Africa losing $200 billion in recent years. This figure would climb to $500
billion by the year 2000 unless steps were taken to relieve the burden.
A new order for Africa?
Mr Diops European counterpart, Mr Leo Tindemans (Belgium)
delivered a characteristically visionary speech in which he hailed the
dismantling of the Iron Curtain as an opportunity to carry forward the
dream of mankind as expressed in the UN Charter. He continued:
With the disappearance of East-West tensions, it is finally possible to
base international relations on international law and on the Universal
Declaration of Human Rights. Referring to Africa, Mr Tindemans commented
ruefully on the number of conflicts taking place - conflicts which prompted one
to wonder sometimes whether Africa was committing suicide. He then
spoke of his dream of a new order for Africa. If, in the world
order, he stated, the United Nations Organisation provides a model,
what is there to prevent the Organisation of African Unity from playing its full
role at regional level? If it agreed to take on the job, enjoying uncontested
and uncontestable authority, peace could reign in Africa. Mr Tindemans
drew his listeners attention to the success of the European Court of Human
Rights and went on to suggest a similar institutional procedure for
Africa in the context of the African Charter of Human and Peoples Rights.
ANC appeal
Originally, the Assembly was to have been addressed by ANC
Vice-President, Nelson Mandela, but commitments in South Africa prevented his
attendance and the ANCs Secretary-General, Mr Alfred Nzo spoke in his
place. Mr Nzo took the opportunity to remind the assembled delegates that South
Africa continued to be run by a white minority regime, that the majority of
political prisoners had not yet been freed and that the repatriation of exiles
had still to commence. The ANCs objectives, he stated, were the
adoption before the end of the year, of a new constitution which would
transform the Republic into a nonracial democracy, and the restructuring of the
South African economy, including the creation of a modern manufacturing sector.
Mr Nzo insisted that sanctions should be maintained, pointing out that
obstacles, notably the repeal of the apartheid laws and the opening of
negotiations leading to an interim government, a new constitution and elections,
had not yet been overcome.
Presidential address
The concluding speech of the formal opening session was
delivered by President Yoweri Museveni of the host country. The President, who
has the remarkable and enviable ability to address an audience of a thousand as
if he were conducting a small-group seminar, delighted his listeners with a
stimulating and witty presentation. He frequently departed from his prepared
text to give illustrations or analogies but the overall effect was always to
reinforce the serious points he had to make.
Nor did the President steer clear of controversy. Speeches at
formal events such as these have a tendency towards the anodyne but there was no
need on this occasion, to decipher coded messages. The approach was refreshingly
direct.
Why build houses for cows?
In an uncompromising criticism of agricultural protectionism,
the President noted that previous GATT rounds had always tended to leave
agricultural trade intact. The abolition of farm subsidies, he claimed, would
result in a $50 billion increase in foreign exchange earnings for third world
countries. He illustrated his point with a story about a visit he had made to
Canada. There, he was taken to a farm, where he was surprised to find cattle
shivering in their own houses - Why build houses for
cows?, he queried. Here in Uganda, we dont have to build
houses for cows and we dont have heating costs. The free market
lesson, of which Adam Smith would doubtless have approved, was not lost on the
audience. President Museveni went on to link the agricultural issue with the
question of liberalisation in the field of services - an item which is currently
high on the GATT agenda. He pointed out that complete free trade in this area
would badly hit service industries in the third world and proceeded to deliver
an unequivocal message. We shall not accept liberalisation of services
unless there is liberalisation of farm produce.
The President also focused on the debt problem facing developing
countries. He appealed to the international community to spare no efforts
in the search for more imaginative and comprehensive solutions to the debt
crisis arguing that if this issue was not tackled, the lost
decade of the 1980s would be followed by a decade of
catastrophe ill the 1990s.
Ideological independence
Among other issues discussed in his wide ranging speech, the
President referred both to South Africa and to the Gulf crisis. He urged the
ACPs cooperating partners not to relax their pressure on South
Africas apartheid regime and questioned whether it had been necessary to
use force in the Gulf. Commenting on the African political scene, he bemoaned
the lack of ideological independence in the continent. He then took
a side-swipe at both market party and one party systems,
suggesting that an African model of democracy which reflected the
continents pre-industrial stage of development was more appropriate.
Political pluralism will come, he argued, but in good time,
not at a forced pace. The President also objected to being cast in the
role of a consumer of political thought and commended the Ugandan
model, based on a mass movement, as being highly democratic and a positive
contribution to the evolution of political thinking.
It is doubtful whether everyone in the hall agreed with
everything President Museveni said, but he succeeded in establishing a
remarkable rapport with his audience. Although few were aware of it, his speech
lasted a full 75 minutes, and it became a talking point for the remainder of the
conference.