Mobhare
Matinyi, Washington DC.
Please allow
me to report on the outcome of the Summit of the Group of Eight (G-8) held at
Camp David last Saturday as pertaining to African interests. Our continent
was represented by four leaders, President Yayi Boni of Benin in his capacity
as the Chairperson of the African Union, Ethiopian Prime Minister Meles
Zenawi who leads the New Partnership for Africa’s Development (Nepad),
Ghanaian President John Atta Mills and President Jakaya Kikwete.
The
invitation of the leaders of Tanzania and Ghana were influenced by the fact
that, currently the two countries are leading the continent in food security
initiatives, and coincidentally, or for some reasons, are increasingly
becoming the darlings of Washington, an opportunity which affords them many
privileges.
The theme of the summit was G-8 Action on Food Security and Nutrition, and it
saw the leaders of the rich nations, that is, the United States, Japan,
Germany, France, the United Kingdom, Italy, Russia, and Canada, which
comprise half of the global Gross Domestic Product (GDP), being asked to partner
with Africa by committing their governments to the New Alliance for Food
Security and Nutrition aiming at ending global food insecurity.
According to
reports from the US Department of State, the specific goals that call for
partnership between the G-8 countries and African countries aim to increase
responsible domestic and foreign private investment in agriculture. The goals
also want to take innovations that can enhance agricultural productivity to
scale, and reduce the risk borne by vulnerable economies and communities.
In that sense, the New Alliance for Food Security and Nutrition wants to take
advantage of agriculture to pull 50 million Africans out of poverty over the
next decade by aligning the commitments of Africa’s leadership to drive effective
plans and policies for food security. The dream also plans to involve private
sector partners to increase investment in agriculture.
To ensure success, the G-8 has welcomed the World Bank, the African
Development Bank, the United Nations’ World Food Programme, the International
Fund for Agricultural Development, and the Food and Agriculture Organisation
to the alliance.
The New Alliance originates from the 2009 summit held in L’Aquila, Italy,
where $22 billion under the so called L’Aquila Food Security Initiative, was
pledged to ensure hunger does not humiliate humanity any more. Unfortunately,
based on what has just happened in the Horn of Africa, I don’t think the G-8
leaders were serious in 2009, but this time let us take them by their word.
Now, based on the findings of the 2012 G-8 Accountability Report and
consistent with the Rome Principles on Sustainable Global Food Security, the
G-8 agreed to promptly fulfill outstanding L’Aquila financial pledges and
seek to maintain strong support to address current and future global food
security challenges.
Additionally, the G-8 agreed to strengthen coordination of their strategies,
to accelerate national progress in African partner countries led specifically
by Tanzania and Ghana, and launch new alliance cooperation frameworks that
align with priority activities within each partner’s Comprehensive African
Agriculture Development Programme (CAADP), and of course, that means reliable
funding commitments, specific policy actions, and the involvement of the private
sector.
The G-8 will also partner with the AU, Nepad and CAADP to implement the New
Alliance dream, and leverage in particular the Grow Africa Partnership to
create African ownership and replicate the results across the continent.
The New Alliance will further support the preparation and financing of
bankable agricultural infrastructure projects, through multilateral
initiatives including the development of a new Fast Track Facility for
Agriculture Infrastructure. Along the same line, the New Alliance will assist
the Global Agriculture and Food Security Programme with the goal of securing
commitments of $1.2 billion over three years from existing and new donors.
During the Camp David summit, the New Alliance also announced the signing of
letters of intent from over 45 local and multinational companies to invest
over $3 billion across the agricultural value chain in Grow Africa countries,
Tanzania included.
The summit further witnessed the signing by over 60 companies of the Private
Sector Declaration of Support for African Agricultural Development outlining
their commitment to support African agriculture and public-private
partnerships in a responsible manner.
To promote innovation, the New Alliance will launch several researches such
as the Technology Platform with the Consultative Group on International
Agricultural Research, the Forum for Agricultural Research in Africa, the
Scaling Seeds and Other Technologies Partnership, and programmes targeting
collection of data and information and communication technology innovations.
The New Alliance will also work with the World Bank to reduce and manage
agricultural risk, to improve nutritional outcomes and reduce child stunting,
and to ensure accountability for results by convening a leadership council to
drive and track implementation before the 2013 summit in the UK.
Briefly, and
without any analysis or skewed opinion, this is what Africa got from the G-8
in regards to agricultural development and food security.
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1 comment:
Thanks. this is good information; well put
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