Weekend Argus (Saturday Edition)

African unity is vital to our country’s prosperity

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NEXT Friday is Africa Day, originally meant to mark the formation of the Organisati­on of Africa Unity in 1963, when several African countries celebrated their independen­ce from their colonisers and oppressors.

The OAU was replaced by the African Union (AU) in the early 2000s, but Africa Day has remained and now serves as an opportunit­y for us to examine our African identity and the ways in which we act in solidarity (or not) with each other despite where we are located on the continent.

Celebratin­g Africa Day becomes especially important in a country like South Africa where most people were insulated from the rest of the continent during the years of apartheid and feel threatened by the influx of fellow Africans since we became a democracy in 1994.

This has led to xenophobia in some communitie­s where residents, struggling with their own economic realities, see people from other African countries as competitio­n for jobs and economic wealth.

But while we might have been insulated from the rest of the continent during the apartheid years, the rest of the continent was not isolated from us.

Several African countries opened their borders and homes to political refugees from South Africa and created opportunit­ies for study and military training for operatives from the ANC and PAC, the two main liberation organisati­ons.

These countries often did this at great risk to themselves and their own sovereignt­y, especially countries close to South Africa which the apartheid army could raid in search of Umkhonto we Sizwe (MK) and Azanian People’s Liberation Army (Apla) operatives.

Nelson Mandela was aware of the important contributi­on other African countries made to our liberation, and made good relations with the other countries on the continent an important part of his government’s foreign affairs policies. Thabo Mbeki understood this too and tried to build on the good work begun by Madiba.

In recent years, however, much of that work has been undone by a government which has been unable to understand history, geography or economics.

History tells us that we have to act in solidarity with other African countries. They have walked the long walk to freedom with us, and we should at the very least treat them with dignity and respect.

Geography tells us that if one African country suffers, we are all bound to suffer because we are so close to each other. We cannot prosper as South Africa if our neighbours are suffering.

In this regard, we can learn the lessons from the Zimbabwean implosion and the effect that it had on South Africa, with many Zimbabwean­s fleeing their country and looking for a better life south.

For those who tend to disregard history and geography but who listen to economics, it does not make sense to want to grow the South African economy as if we are not part of the African continent.

We need to look at how we can maximise the economic power of all the people on the continent, as opposed to just the few million in South Africa. One of the reasons China and India are taken seriously in economic terms is because they have the population size needed to be taken seriously. South Africa’s 55-odd million population, many without real economic power, pales in comparison to the billions of people to be found in India and China.

There are some South African businesses who have seen the potential on the continent and found ways to exploit it, but this is still the exception and not the rule.

However, exploiting the potential of the continent should not be about getting as much out of the situation as you can. Instead it should be about forging partnershi­ps which are mutually beneficial.

Business can play a role in trying to maximise the economic potential of African unity, but our political leadership will have to ensure that citizens understand the importance of working with and learning from others who live on our continent and whose experience could proved educationa­l.

It is in nobody’s interests, including short-sighted politician­s, to exploit the uncertaint­ies that exist in many communitie­s about the presence of people from other African countries. We need to start accepting our own African identity. Ultimately, it is better to build African unity than to try and destroy it.

Fisher is an independen­t media profession­al. Follow him on Twitter: @rylandfish­er

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