(L-R) EAC Deputy Secretary
General in charge of Political Federation, Mr Charles Njoroge, First
Vice-President of the Republic of Burundi, HE Bernard Busokoza and Burundi EAC
Affairs Minister, Hon Leontine Nzeyimane during the offical opening of the 2nd
EAC Peace and Security Conference in Bujumbura, Burundi.
(Seated L-R) EAC Deputy
Secretary General in charge of Political Federation, Mr Charles Njoroge, First
Vice-President of the Republic of Burundi, HE Bernard Busokoza and Burundi EAC
Affairs Minister, Hon Leontine Nzeyimane in a group photo with delegates at the
2ns EAC Peace and Security Conference.
******
The First Vice-President of
the Republic of Burundi, His Excellency Bernard Busokoza has exhorted the region
to collectively work to ensure that East Africa remains peaceful, secured and
investor friendly.
“There is need for the
region to collectively work so as to ensure that EAC is a haven of peace and
security, for investments to prosper for the benefit of both our respective
countries and people”, he said, when opening the second EAC Peace and Security
Conference in Bujumbura 13 November, 2013.
He decried the region to be
a hide-out for ill-doers, adding that strong and effective mechanisms needed to
be urgently put in place to tackle new peace and security
challenges.
He mentioned some of the
threats as home grown terrorism with strong external ties, piracy, sectarianism
and ethnic/tribal confrontations, religious radicalism, resource-based
conflicts, climate change effects, wildlife destruction, increasing illegal
small arms and light weapons and illicit drug trafficking, human trafficking,
money laundering, and cybercrime.
As a result of these
emerging illicit activities, the Burundi Vice President noted that the region’s
enormous potential was being undermined. “Our region continues to lag behind in
terms of development of its people, the majority of whom still survive on less
than one dollar a day,” he told the delegates drawn from peace and security
experts, civil society, religious leaders, ministers, non-governmental
organisations, academia, politicians, youth, women, media, relevant EAC
Ministries and EAC Secretariat, among others.
H.E Busokoza also urged the
region to strengthen the involvement of non-state actors in the field of
conflict prevention, management and resolution. “The involvement of communities
at large need to be strengthed,” he stressed.
The Burundi EAC Affairs
Minister Hon Leontine Nzeyimane said that peace and security was a prerequisite
to social and economic development within the Community, underscoring that it
was vital to the achievement of the objectives of the
region.
She added that the
Conference, whose theme is “Promoting a culture of dialogue and tolerance for
conflict prevention and peaceful co-existence’’ would effetcively contribute to
the noble objectives of the Community.
“What we are doing here
[Bujumbura] is a great contribution to the building of the future of our
humanity, the world of coming generations, our children, our grand children, and
great grand children,” she told the attentive delegates.
The EAC Deputy Secretary
General in charge of Political Federation, Mr Charles Njoroge reiterated that
the East African region reflects a diversity of cultures, languages, ethnic and
religious identities.
“As the East African
integration process deepens, culture, identity, religious heritage, business and
natural resource governance issues in the region will become of vital
importance,” the EAC official said, however, adding that how beneficial such a
rich diversity could be to the people of East Africa largely depends on the
decisions taken at various levels.
The participants are
expected to generate and exchange knowledge to inform and improve conflict
prevention and resolution capacities as well as help define potential future
activities for the region.
The delegates are expected
to assess peace and security challenges facing their communities, past
experiences, best practices and identify operational steps that can be taken to
promote dialogue, tolerance and peaceful co-existence.
Article 5 of the Treaty
Establishing the East African Community stipulates promotion of peace, security
and stability within, and good neighbourliness among EAC Partner States as one
of its core objectives. The founders of the Community agreed that peace and
security are prerequisites to social and economic development and vital to the
achievement of the objectives of the Community.
0 comments:
Post a Comment