Africa Day is the annual commemoration of the 1963 founding
of the Organisation of African Unity (OAU), presently recognised as the African
Union (AU).
Africa Day 2016 is being celebrated in
furtherance of the AU’s theme for this year: “Human rights, with a particular
focus on the rights of women”.
The day demonstrates the commitment of
African leaders to place women – as key drivers and enablers – at the front and
centre of all efforts to implement the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development
and the AU’s Agenda 2063.
UN statement
A statement from the UN Secretary
General, Mr Ban Ki-moon, said both frameworks shared similar strategic
principles, with a focus on people, prosperity, environmental sustainability,
justice, human rights and mutually accountable partnerships.
He said the alignment between the
global and the continental agendas called for a harmonised approach in
planning, implementation and monitoring.
Under Agenda 2063, Africa’s priorities
include investing in its people, with an emphasis on women and the youth;
developing manufacturing and agro-processing; building transport, water,
sanitation, energy and ICT infrastructure; domestic resource mobilisation and
stemming illicit financial flows; ending conflict; promoting human rights and
expanding democratic governance.
Mr Ban said Africa also had the
opportunity to pursue industrialisation in a more environmentally sustainable
manner, including through climate-smart agriculture, renewable energy and
arresting deforestation.
He encouraged African nations and their
partners to spare no effort in advancing these priorities, saying the UN was
committed in its support.
Africa’s economic prospects
“Africa’s economic prospects are good,
despite the uncertain global economic landscape. Growth is projected to
increase to 4.4 per cent in 2016, from 3.7 per cent in 2015. I urge Africa’s
leaders to use these gains to address rising social and economic inequalities
and ensure that no African is left behind,” he added.
He said that was crucial for tackling
the root causes of conflicts, terrorism and violent extremism and fostering
peace and stability.
“I also commend Africa’s bold
initiative on ‘Silencing the Guns by 2020’ which is one of the flagship
projects of Agenda 2063’s First Ten-Year Implementation Plan,” he said.
Mr Ban said the successful
implementation of these new agendas would require a renewed partnership for
development cooperation among African governments, UN entities, the AU
Commission, the NEPAD Agency, the regional economic communities and the
development partners.
He said the private sector also had a
key role to play in creating jobs, promoting innovation in technologies and
services and supporting the massive infrastructure transition needed to fulfil
Africa’s sustainable development objectives.
“On this Africa Day, I urge all
stakeholders to rally behind the transformative vision set out in the SDGs and
Agenda 2063. What is good for Africa is good for the world,” he said.
In 2002, the OAU established its own
successor, the AU. However, the name and the date of Africa Day have been
retained as a celebration of African unity.
Africa Day is observed as a public
holiday in six African countries — Ghana, Mali, Namibia, Zambia, Lesotho and
Zimbabwe.
However, celebrations are held in some
African countries, as well as by Africans in the Diaspora.
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