Daily Maverick

Casey remains optimistic about SA

After facing challenges such as Covid-19 and Brexit during his time in SA, the British High Commission­er is back in Britain, where he is ready for a new role heading up a directorat­e in the Foreign Office.

- By Peter Fabricius

Nigel Casey left South Africa this week after four years as British High Commission­er. His time here was dominated by Brexit, Covid-19 and rebooting relations with South Africa after the dismal Jacob Zuma years.

He spent much of his last year as a “travel agent and immigrant consultant”, arranging 19 flights to repatriate more than 5,000 Brits from the lockdown here.

And when he got home on Thursday, he had to go into 10 days of quarantine with his family in a hotel near the airport.

“Well, I’m happy to set an example,” he said gamely. “It’s quite a good reflection of the last year actually.” The Covid year was a reminder – “as if we needed one – of the depth and strength of the human relationsh­ips linking the two countries; of the huge numbers who move between our countries, for leisure, for work, to see their families”.

Casey won’t venture into domestic politics by saying whether he thinks he is leaving SA in better shape than he found it when he arrived in 2017. “But I do think I leave the UKSouth Africa relationsh­ip in better health than I found it.”

He arrived in SA in time to witness the last days of the presidency of Zuma, who had complicate­d relations with Western countries and deterred investors because of corruption and an anti-Western posture.

“The experience of the last few years has been a real revival

... of our top-level political relationsh­ip,” he said, starting with a “very good visit” by President

Cyril Ramaphosa to London in

2018, for the Commonweal­th summit, when he met Prime

Minister Theresa May and had a “very warm meeting” with

Queen Elizabeth.

And then May came to SA and

Boris Johnson was sustaining the high level of relations.

He had invited Ramaphosa to visit Britain twice this year, to the summit of the G7 group of leading economies in Cornwall in June and to the COP26 UN global climate conference in Glasgow in November.

Casey said the recent announceme­nt that Johnson & Johnson would be manufactur­ing vaccines in South Africa, not only for South Africans but for all Africans, was another example of Ramaphosa’s leadership.

Casey firmly rejects the charge of “vaccine nationalis­m” which some have levelled at rich countries. “We have invested an enormous amount of money and effort in helping to develop vaccines,” he insists.

Britain is donating R5-million to support SA’s pitch to companies to invest in its efforts to manufactur­e vaccines locally.

Casey noted SA and India had proposed a solution to that challenge – the waiver of the intellectu­al property rights of internatio­nal vaccine manufactur­ers, under the World Trade Organisati­on’s Agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectu­al Property Rights, to allow others to make them.

The UK was looking at this, but it felt the real bottleneck in vaccine manufactur­ing could be overcome by voluntary licensing agreements such as the one Astra-Zeneca had signed or was still signing with 11 manufactur­ers around the world in exchange for receiving public funds.

Because SA did not qualify for the aid-funded COVAX vaccines, Britain was helping to finance its vaccine rollout with R86-million to date.

The other big challenge on Casey’s watch was Brexit, Britain’s exit from the European Union. One of the things he is proudest of is negotiatin­g a bilateral economic partnershi­p agreement (EPA) between the UK on the one side and SA and the rest of the Southern African Customs Union plus Mozambique on the other.

He also noted that despite the pandemic, SA wine sales to the UK had risen 28% in 2020 under the new trade deal.

“So we’ve achieved our objective that Brexit should not impact negatively on UKSA trade,” Casey said. However, he cautioned that SA auto manufactur­ers needed to adapt to the UK’s recent decision to ban the sales of new petrol or diesel vehicles from 2030.

Casey said SA had the expertise and the natural resources to become a leader in developing hydrogen as an energy source, which would help it achieve net-zero emissions of greenhouse gases by replacing its large dependency on coal-fired power.

Two years ago, Casey and his German, American, Swiss and Dutch counterpar­ts were carpeted by Pretoria when a confidenti­al memo they had written to Ramaphosa warning that corruption could sabotage his investment drive was leaked to the press.

Casey says the newspaper reports misreprese­nted “our very quiet engagement with the president’s investment envoys about ways in which we could see our companies being encouraged to invest more”.

He won’t be drawn into Ramaphosa’s growing confrontat­ion with Zuma and ANC Secretary-General Ace Magashule.

Neverthele­ss, he says, “We very strongly support the agenda the President has been pursuing, both in trying to turn the economy around and trying to attract foreign investment. And one of the key building blocks for that is ... tackling the evidence of grand-scale corruption, which has emerged since 2017.”

Some of Casey’s Western counterpar­ts despair at the corruption and incompeten­ce of the South African state at home and its ideologica­l identifica­tion with some dictatorsh­ips abroad. Casey remains sanguine on both fronts, noting that the alignment between SA and UK voting on the UN Security Council during SA’s last tour in 2019 and 2020 was greater than that between SA and its major BRICS allies, China and Russia.

Casey had hoped to leave SA only after the Lions rugby tour in August and September but has been called back to London to head a new directorat­e in the Foreign Office dealing with Iran, Pakistan and Afghanista­n.

“Quite a challengin­g job,” he says, especially as Britain has merged its developmen­t department with its foreign service so he will be responsibl­e for foreign relations and developmen­t. And the countries he will have under him are at a critical moment. In Afghanista­n, the Biden administra­tion has just picked up on the peace negotiatio­ns with the Taliban that Trump initiated. And in Iran the Biden administra­tion is trying to revive the 2015 Joint Comprehens­ive Plan of Action, in which Iran agreed not to pursue developmen­t of nuclear weapons in exchange for the lifting of Western sanctions. The Trump administra­tion pulled out of the deal.

Casey says his successor can’t be named, as the person has not formally been approved by Pretoria yet. He says the person is “very good”, especially as they have strong background in trade and industry, “the most important aspects of our relationsh­ip”.

 ??  ?? Nigel Casey has left South Africa after four years as British High Commission­er.
Photo: Sebabatso Mosamo/ Sunday Times Montage:
Jocelyn Adamson
Nigel Casey has left South Africa after four years as British High Commission­er. Photo: Sebabatso Mosamo/ Sunday Times Montage: Jocelyn Adamson

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa