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USA/Africa: Sign-On Letter to Treasury Secretary
USA/Africa: Sign-On Letter to Treasury Secretary
Date distributed (ymd): 020513
Africa Action Document
Africa Policy Electronic Distribution List: an information
service provided by AFRICA ACTION (incorporating the Africa
Policy Information Center, The Africa Fund, and the American
Committee on Africa). Find more information for action for
Africa at http://www.africaaction.org
+++++++++++++++++++++Document Profile+++++++++++++++++++++
Region: Continent-Wide
Issue Areas: +economy/development+ +US policy focus+
SUMMARY CONTENTS:
This posting contains a letter initiated by Africa Action and
TransAfrica Forum to U.S. Treasury Secretary Paul O'Neill, in
advance of his trip to Africa later this month. As the cover note
below explains, we are inviting additional signatures from
organizations in the U.S. and Africa, to be included when the
letter is sent to Secretary O'Neill. See the note below for the
deadline and e-mail address to use to sign on. Signatories already
include ActionAid USA and Fifty Years is Enough. After the letter
is sent, the full list of signatories will be made available on the
Africa Action and TransAfrica Forum web sites. TransAfrica Forum's
web site is http://www.transafricaforum.org
[May 20: The names of 110 groups signing before delivery of the letter on May 17 are listed
below at the end of the letter.]
+++++++++++++++++end profile++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
Dear Colleagues,
Please consider signing on to the following letter to Paul O'Neill,
Secretary of the U.S. Treasury, in advance of his upcoming trip to
Africa. He leaves next Monday, May 20, for an 11-day trip that
includes stops in Ghana, South Africa, Uganda and Ethiopia.
This letter, initiated by Africa Action and TransAfrica Forum,
urges a new U.S. policy approach to Africa's development
challenges, based on the cancellation of Africa's illegitimate
external debt and increased U.S. public investment in social
development, particularly in responding to Africa's health crisis.
It is very important that these critical issues be raised by as
many groups as possible as the Secretary travels to Africa for the
first time.
The letter will be sent to the U.S. Treasury on Friday, May 17, and
will be released to the press on Monday, May 20, as the Secretary
leaves for Ghana on the first leg of his trip.
To sign on, please send your name, title and organization to
[email protected] by 5pm on Thursday, May 16. Please send
organizational signatures only. Signatories already include
ActionAid USA and Fifty Years is Enough.
Please circulate this letter widely for maximum sign-ons.
Many thanks.
Ann-Louise Colgan, Africa Action
Mr. Paul O'Neill
Secretary of the U.S. Treasury
Department of the Treasury
1500 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW
Washington, D.C. 20220
Dear Secretary O'Neill,
As you prepare to travel to Africa for the first time at the end of
this month, we write to urge a new U.S. policy approach to
Africa's development challenges. We believe that U.S. efforts to
support Africa's development should focus on the priority concerns
of African countries. The Bush Administration should begin by
removing the most obvious impediment to reducing poverty in Africa:
the burden of illegitimate foreign debt. The U.S. should also
support African initiatives with increased public investment in
social development.
The Millennium Challenge Account, proposed by President Bush as a
new vehicle for delivering U.S. bilateral aid to poor countries, is
inappropriately designed for promoting development in Africa. An
over-emphasis on the exaggerated benefits of free trade and the
private sector as the engine of economic growth is flawed. A
successful development agenda should be based on human
development. Greater investment in people through health and
education is proven to reduce poverty and promote economic growth.
What is required is a significant commitment of resources from
donors and creditors alike, and a new approach to partnership
between rich and poor countries. A true partnership would not
attempt to place the burden for sustaining health and education
services on the shoulders of the poor through cost recovery
measures such as user fees and the privatization of public
utilities.
While we agree that both rich and poor countries should be held
accountable, we strongly oppose the principle of tying aid to
specific criteria, including economic policies and governance
conditions, defined by Washington. It is correct to demand that
resources be used effectively to achieve their intended purposes,
but the monitoring mechanisms should be independent rather than
unilaterally imposed by donors. The performance of both recipient
countries and donor agencies should be evaluated in open and
transparent processes, including participation by independent
experts and representatives of civil society. For development to
be successful, it will require a paradigm shift away from
dictating policy to poor countries, toward supporting the poverty
reduction initiatives defined by these countries.
We certainly welcome moves towards more realistic levels of
development assistance, but the increase proposed by President
Bush is still too little, too late. These sums are considerably
less than what the U.S. -- in terms of its wealth and its share of
the world economy -- should provide. Unless the world's single
richest country increases its investment in poverty reduction,
meeting the Millennium Development Goals will be impossible.
Moreover, the two year delay in instituting the proposed increase
in aid is unacceptable when the need for greater resources is
immediate.
Most crucially of all, the Millennium Challenge Initiative fails
to address Africa's debt crisis. Unconditional debt cancellation
must be central to any effort to promote Africa's development. So
long as African countries are forced to spend almost $15 billion
per year repaying debts to rich foreign creditors, their efforts
to address urgent domestic needs will be undermined. Increased
development assistance from foreign donors will achieve little
when this trickle of additional resources is more than offset by
the unconscionable outward flow of debt repayments. Africa's debt
is not only unsustainable, it is fundamentally illegitimate. As
you well know, most loans were given for strategic purposes, to
prop up repressive and corrupt regimes in the context of the Cold
War. Now, Africa's people are repaying huge debts which were
mainly incurred before their time and which did not benefit them.
The current international debt relief framework, the Heavily
Indebted Poor Countries (HIPC) Initiative, has failed to provide
a solution to Africa's debt crisis. Even by the World Bank's own
criteria, this initiative is not even reducing debt to
"sustainable levels." Most African countries still spend many
times more on debt repayments than on health care for their own
people. The hemorrhaging of resources from African countries to
repay foreign debts is the single largest impediment to the
continent's development and economic independence.
Debt cancellation should be the very first priority of any U.S.
initiative that seeks to promote Africa's growth. The U.S. should
use its powerful position at the World Bank and International
Monetary Fund (IMF) to move these institutions in this direction.
African efforts to respond to the continent's devastating health
crisis and related economic and social challenges are crucial to
the continent's future. U.S. assistance in support of these
efforts is an appropriate form of public investment. This is not
charity, but rather an obligation and a responsibility of all rich
countries.
Moreover, increased investment in addressing the spread and impact
of the HIV/AIDS crisis in Africa will prove highly effective in
promoting sustainable growth. The pandemic has already cost
millions of African lives, and the social and economic effects of
the health crisis are undermining development across the
continent. African governments do not command sufficient
resources to tackle this global challenge alone. The U.S., as the
richest country in human history, must provide far greater
leadership and resources in combating the worst plague ever faced
by humankind.
Mr. Secretary, your trip to Ghana, South Africa, Uganda and
Ethiopia will afford you the opportunity to experience conditions
in these countries first-hand. You must meet with African civil
society groups in these countries, as well as with government
agencies, to truly gain an understanding of the concerns they
share and the challenges they face. You will, no doubt, learn
about the official African initiative called the New Partnership
for African Development (NEPAD). It is the most ambitious
self-driven African development plan for a generation. But it is
still an emerging initiative that is not yet fully informed by the
participation of African civil society. It cannot become the
basis for a partnership between African governments and rich
country governments until it has first become a partnership
between African governments and their own people, in which there
is shared ownership reflected through the active engagement of
African trade unions and civil society organizations. NEPAD will
be at the top of the agenda of the G8 Summit in Canada next month.
We will share our concerns with all of the Finance Ministers of
the G8 countries in advance of that meeting.
In the meantime, we urge you to use your influence within the U.S.
government and the World Bank and IMF to call for a new approach
to the development challenges of Africa, based on the priorities
outlined in this letter.
Sincerely,
Salih Booker, Executive Director, Africa Action
Bill Fletcher, Jr., President, TransAfrica Forum
U.S. Groups:
Rev. Dr. Wyatt Tee Walker, President, Religious Action Network (RAN)
James M. McGee, National President, National Alliance of Postal and Federal Employees
Irungu Houghton, ActionAid USA
Njoki Njoroge Njehu, Director, 50 Years is Enough Network
The Rev'd Canon Benjamin Musoke-Lubega, The Episcopal Church Office of the Anglican and Global Relations
Dr. Hilbert D. Stanley, Executive Director, National Black Catholic Congress
Marie Clarke, Director, Jubilee USA Network
Rev. Elenora Giddings Ivory, Director, Washington Office, Presbyterian Church (USA)
Dr. Valora Washington, Executive Director, Unitarian Universalist Service Committee
Naina Dhingra, Student Global AIDS Campaign
Deborah James, Fair Trade Director, Global Exchange
Fr. Phil Reed, Coordinator, Justice & Peace Office, Society of Missionaries of Africa
Leon Spencer, Executive Director, Washington Office on Africa
Asfaha Hadera, Executive Director, African Services Committee, Inc.
Lonnie Turner, Cooperative Baptist Fellowship, Washington office
Claire Slattery, Development Alternatives with Women for a New Era (DAWN)
Neil Watkins, Center for Economic Justice
Tony Vento, Program Director, Pax Christi, USA
Kris Hermes, Health GAP
Kathleen McNeely, Program Associate, Maryknoll Office for Global Concerns
Marie Saint Cyr, Executive Director, Iris House, Inc.
Tom Barry, Co-Director, Foreign Policy in Focus
Dr. Paul Zeitz, Executive Director, Global AIDS Alliance
Darryl Fagin, Legislative Director, Americans for Democratic Action (ADA)
Bernard N. Somdah, Co-Chair, Oregon Africa Council
Steve Hellinger, President, The Development GAP
Paul Tennessee, World Confederation of Labor
Heeten Kalan, Director, South African Exchange Program on Environmental Justice, Boston
Nancy Alexander, Director, Citizens' Network on Essential Services
Wenonah Hauter, Director, Critical Mass Energy and Environment Project, Public Citizen
Sara Grusky, U.S. Coordinator, International Water Working Group
Marjorie Van Cleef, Coordinator, CT Peace Coalition/New Haven
Mary Turgi, Director, Holy Cross International Justice Office
Diana Bohn, Treasurer, San Francisco Bay Area Jubilee Debt Cancellation Coalition
Maura Browne, Justice & Peace Coordinator, Sisters of Notre Dame
Nancy McLaughlin PBVM, Chair, Conference of Social Justice Coordinators of Northern CA
John Iversen, ACT UP/East Bay, Oakland, CA
Elaine Hickman, Coordinator, Jubilee Northwest Coalition
Barbara Lubin, Middle East Childrens Alliance, Berkeley, CA
Lou Merle, Elders for Survival, Berkeley, CA
Marion Irvine, OP, Promoter of Social Justice, Dominican Sisters of San Rafael
Peter J. Davies, U.S. Representative, Saferworld
Dr. Bruce Roberts, Organizer, the Africa Interest Group, Minnesota
Rosemary Everett, snjm, Sisters of the Holy Names, CA Province Justice and Peace Committee
Dr. Marcia E. Sutherland, Co-Chair, Save Africa From AIDS (SAFA) Campaign
Christina M. Vogt, Executive Director, Genderwatchers
Fr. James E. Hug, Center of Concern
Stephanie Alston, Executive Director, West Africa Rainforest Network
Bob Kinsey, Peace and Justice Task Force, Rocky Mountain Conference, United Church of Christ
Dena Montague, Research Associate, World Policy Institute
Mike Prokosch, Global Program Coordinator, United for a Fair Economy
Chike C. Nwoffiah, Executive Director, Oriki Theater, CA
Rev. Elizabeth A. Braddon, Pastor, Park Slope United Methodist Church, Brooklyn, NY
Christine Vladimiroff, OSB, Prioress, Benedictine Sisters of Erie, PA
Lindsey T. Allard, Caribbean Education Forum student organization, Harvard University
Jacqueline Rose, MPH, Health Planner, New Orleans Regional AIDS Planning Council
Janet Gottschalk, Director, Alliance for Justice; Medical Mission Sisters
William J. Appel, Director, Metro Justice of Rochester
Ann Oestreich, IHM, Congregation Justice Coordinator, Sisters of the Holy Cross, Notre Dame
Cathy Arata, SHALOM: Justice, Peace Integrity of Creation Network of the School Sisters of Notre Dame
Tina Geiger, RSM, Institute Justice Office, Sisters of Mercy of the Americas
Clare Nolan, Congregation of the Sisters of the Good Shepherd
Sharon Altendorf PBVM, Executive Director, International Presentation Association of the Sisters of the Presentation
Mary Rose Kaczorowski, Plight of the Redwoods Campaign, CA
Chuks D. Eleonu, Secretary, African Alliance Foundation
Manna Jo Greene, Hudson Valley Sustainable Communities Network
Mwariama Kamau, 2nd Vice President, Universal Negro Improvement Association - African Communities League (UNIA-ACL) Division #330
Leslie Reindl, Administrator, Women's International League for Peace and Freedom, Minnesota Metro Branch
Marie Catherine Rabbitt, SL, President, Sisters of Loretto and Loretto Community
Rev. Paul J. Ewers, Comboni Missionaries of New Jersey
Sr. Maria Hornung, North American Assembly of Medical Mission Sisters
Tom Ricker, Policy Coordinator, Quixote Center/Quest for Peace
Steve Watrous, Coordinator, Wisconsin Fair Trade Campaign
Africa Groups:
Zackie Achmat, Chairperson, Treatment Action Campaign (South Africa)
Mary Kusambiza, Executive Director, Uganda Association of Women Lawyers (FIDA Uganda)
William Ahadzie, Coordinator, Center for Budget Advocacy (Ghana)
Lorato Banda, Institute for Democracy in South Africa
Dr. Willy Mutunga, Executive Director, Kenya Human Rights Commission
Dede Bedu-Addo, Regional Gender Coordinator, ActionAid Regional Office, Ghana
Florence Kaddu Mulumba, Secretary, Lungujja Women's Association, Uganda
L. Muthoni Wanyeki, Executive Director, African Women's Development and Communications Network (FEMNET)
Ngunga Tepani, Information Technology Officer, Tanzania Association of Non-Governmental Organizations (TANGO)
Kagqiria Mbogori, Executive Director, International Commission of Jurists (Kenya Section)
Dr. Omofolabo Ajayi, Nigerian Alliance for Democracy
Janet Feldman, Director, Kenya AIDS Intervention/Prevention Project Group (KAIPPG/International)
Christine Mukamazimpaka, Education and Gender Officer, ActionAid Rwanda
Demba Moussa Dembele, Director, Forum for African Alternatives (Senegal)
Njoki S. Ndungu, Director, Center for Legal Information and Communication in Kenya
Dr. Abdel-Fatau Musah, Senior Program Officer, Open Society Initiative for West Africa
Dr. Mobolaji E. Aluko, Nigerian Democratic Movement (NDM)
Andy Mensah, President, Ghana Union
Akin Amaka-Ojomo, Executive Secretary, Continental Africa Network, US
David Ugolor, President, African Network for Environmental and Economic Justice (Nigeria)
Esther Chege, Executive Director, Young Women's Institute, Kenya
Dr. Meto Edgar Onwuamaegbu, Group Moderator, Flashpoint-Nigeria
Dr. John Dada, Program Director, Fantsuam Foundation, Nigeria
Hoteph Osiris, Chief Elder, The Pan-Afrikan International Movement
Dr. Henry Uro-chukwu, President, International Association of Nigerian Students
Ms Nneka Uchenna Ifeka, Women Economic Empowerment Action
Saba Berhane, Ethiopian Community Development Council, Inc. (ECDC)
Other Groups:
Jeff Powell, Communications and Research Officer, Bretton Woods Project, UK
Diana Bohn, Nicaragua Center for Community Action
Toyin, Director, Ligali.org
Betty Nicolaisen, Vice President, Norwegian Peace Society
Leif John Fosse, Environment & Development Adviser, WWF-Norway
Gunhild �rstavik, Coordinator, The Norwegian Forum for Environment and Development
Elsie Dean, Corresponding Secretary, Women's International League for Peace & Freedom, (British Columbia Branch, Canadian Section)
Arne Kjell Raust�l, Adviser, Norwegian Interdenominational Ofc for Development Cooperation
Albert Gyan, Jr., Coordinator, Kairos Europa
Oddvar Espegren, Stromme Foundation, Norway
Rita A. Clark, Director, Nicaragua-U.S. Friendship Office
Additional Signatures received after May 20
Elder Ron Gross, Chairman, Passaic County (NJ) Reparations
Coalition
Arthur Haywood, Africa AIDS Action Committee, Philadelphia, PA
Beverly Keene, Coordinator, Jubilee South
Marchel Smiley, National President, African American Caucus,
SEIU
This material is distributed by Africa Action (incorporating the
Africa Policy Information Center, The Africa Fund, and the
American Committee on Africa). Africa Action's information
services provide accessible information and analysis in order to
promote U.S. and international policies toward Africa that advance
economic, political and social justice and the full spectrum of
human rights.
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