UNDP allocates $25 million for governance in Africa
22-Feb-2010The funds will also go toward
promoting inclusive governance programmes such as access to information
and channels that allow stakeholder voices to be heard in governance
processes.
This decision comes at the end of a week-long conference of more than
200 governance experts and delegates including former President of South
Africa, Thabo Mbeki, and former Prime Minister of Canada, Joe Clark.
Some $13 million of this amount will be spent on supporting election
processes in Sub-Saharan countries during 2010-2011.
“This week has shown us that there’s a very strong consensus that
capable, inclusive, responsive states are a prerequisite for
development, including for the achievement of the Millennium Development
Goals,” said Geraldine Fraser-Moleketi, UNDP's Democratic Governance
Practice Director. “Therefore we are fully committed to harnessing and
optimizing our resources to that end.”
The Dakar conference was held against the backdrop of new global
challenges that are threatening development gains, such as the economic
crisis and climate change, and which the conference participants said
called for a renewed focus on the role of the state.
It is generally accepted that lack of governance, insufficient
governance or outright bad governance at both global and national levels
have contributed heavily to the ongoing global crises and challenges
facing humanity at the moment. For UNDP it is therefore important to
ensure that democratic governance - with its focus on inclusive
participation, responsive institutions and values regarding human
rights, gender equality and women’s empowerment - becomes a critical and
strategic part of the response, the agency said in a statement.
The conference also dedicated significant attention to Sub-Saharan
Africa where some 20 countries are scheduled to conduct legislative or
presidential elections over the next two years.
“Sub-Saharan Africa has a very promising future if we can promote
inclusive states that speak and act on behalf of citizens, and that are
capable of confronting the challenges and complexities most nations in
the region face today,” said Ms Fraser-Moleketi, adding at the same time
that the need for capable states reaches far beyond Africa and there
are best practices to be shared through South-South cooperation.
Source: Afrol News
