| SADC—its own
biggest obstacle in achieving the MDGs? By
Gabriël H Oosthuizen
In two respects the 14-member Southern African Development
Community (SADC) differs little from most regional cooperation
organisations the world over. Things happen slowly.
And appearances are deceptive.
In 2001 the organisation started overhauling its structures,
operations and cooperation plans in both the political
and security cooperation and the socio-economic spheres.
This overhaul could be the key to boosting the region’s
ability to achieve the United Nations’ Millennium
Development Goals (MDGs) but it has run up against formidable
challenges.
The decision to revamp SADC was as much an effort to
break with the divisive, ineffectual 1990s as it was
the outcome of an honest stock-taking of the institutional,
policy, management and implementation shortcomings and
failures of SADC’s earlier attempts at cooperation.
The dawn of political freedom in South Africa and elsewhere
in the region during the first half of the 1990s held
much promise. Stakeholders were hoping for concerted
intergovernmental action to tackle the region’s
stark socio-economic underdevelopment, as well as peace,
democracy and rule of law deficits.
The promise was dashed. Enlargement fatigue set in.
Free-roaming South Africa, the region’s economic
giant, and older regional powers struggled to see eye
to eye on trade and other issues. ‘‘Africa’s
world war’’, centring on the Democratic
Republic of the Congo, split the members. SADC in effect
became paralysed.
Thus the overhaul. Included was the preparation of
a comprehensive regional socio-economic development
plan. After years of labour the Regional Indicative
Strategic Development Plan (RISDP) was launched in March
2004.
An ambitious 15-year plan, it is meant to give strategic
direction to SADC, aligning its policies and programmes
with its long-term objectives and priorities. SADC also
developed more detailed implementation and project plans
spanning one, five and 15 years to supplement the RISDP.
The RISDP identifies a number of interlinked priority
intervention areas, of which many overlap with the MDGs.
They include poverty eradication; combating HIV/AIDS;
gender equality; information and communication technologies;
the environment; trade and economic liberalisation and
integration; infrastructure development; food security;
and human-resources development.
It sets out strategies and timeframes for achieving
area goals. Laudably, it is in alignment with the MDGs
as it views poverty eradication as the overarching long-term
objective and main priority.
More controversially, it considers trade and economic
liberalisation and integration as chief catalysts for
achieving it.
In preparing the plan, SADC held half-hearted and limited
consultations with some organised sections of business
and other non-state communities. It also considered
the organisation’s existing treaties, policies,
as well as multilateral initiatives such as the MDGs
and the New Partnership for Africa’s Development
(NEPAD).
Officially, SADC regards NEPAD as one of the frameworks
for achieving the MDGs. The RISDP has been referred
to as ‘‘SADC’s NEPAD programme”,
highlighting the linkages between the two plans. The
secretariats of SADC, NEPAD and the African Union attempt
to coordinate their NEPAD and MDG activities.
The preconditions to the realisation of the RISDP,
and therefore the MDGs, are many. SADC’s leaders
recognised that good political governance is among them,
and that sustainable socio-economic development ‘‘will
not be realised in conditions of political intolerance;
the absence of the rule of law; corruption; civil strife;
and war’’.
In order to bring about such conditions, the equivalent
plan of the RISDP in the political and security cooperation
sphere, the Strategic Indicative Plan of the Organ on
Politics, Defence and Security (OPDS), and other instruments
vaguely map the route for the OPDS and the Summit of
Heads of State—the top SADC decision-making body—for
bringing about these conditions.
The leadership is forthright about the other challenges
to the RISDP’s successful implementation. For
example, the securing of the ‘‘significant’’
human and financial resources is regarded as a key challenge.
Furthermore, they see the enhanced interaction and
involvement of the members as ‘‘critical’’
to the success of the RISDP. SADC members have to ensure
that the SADC National Committees (SNCs) function. These
are new bodies which are supposed to include non-state
representatives, and to coordinate and oversee the plan’s
implementation while linking national and regional SADC
structures.
The SADC leadership is also aware of the mammoth task
that is involved in managing and coordinating the interests
and roles of all the various implementation agencies.
In these processes, the SADC Secretariat, closely guided
by the members, is supposed to play a facilitative and
coordinating role as government authorities and other
actors implement the plan at the national level.
The leadership acknowledges that this ‘‘poses
a major challenge that may require capacity strengthening
at the Secretariat’’. Moreover, the RISDP
and the (unnecessarily numerous) national, regional,
continental, global, donor and lender initiatives must
be coordinated and aligned. These challenges are even
more pronounced today than in early 2004 when the RISDP
was adopted.
Five years after the commencement of the overhaul,
it remains incomplete. The requisite institutional structure
is not in place, and the SADC Secretariat lacks authority
and sufficient human resources. The RISDP and its implementation
plans largely remain just that—plans. Little has
been done to address the identified challenges. With
this, SADC’s hopes of achieving the MDGs suffer.
There is now talk of further refining SADC’s
structures, and of recommitting to establishing ‘‘effectively
functional’’ SNCs. This ‘‘refinement’’
includes narrowing the scope of cooperation facilitated
and coordinated by the Secretariat to focus on a few
core areas of cooperation. Added to this is a renewed
push in diplomatic halls to speed up trade and economic
liberalisation and integration.
While it is unclear exactly what effect further structural
and policy refinements and changes would have on the
RISDP and its implementation plans, it is questionable
whether such steps would help improve SADC’s performance.
Something else is amiss in SADC. This ‘‘something’’
seems to go beyond the immediate, fundamental issues
that the challenges are mind-bogglingly big and complicated.
Or that there is too little human capacity to properly
govern and cooperate at the intergovernmental level.
This ‘‘something’’ is to be
found in the levels of mismanagement and corruption
and the misrule of the governing elites in Zimbabwe,
Swaziland and Angola. It can also be discerned in the
participation of most members in three different regional
economic cooperation schemes and in trade negotiations
with third parties, including the European Union—engagements
which undermine SADC’s agenda.
It is also in the lack of determination and urgency
with which cooperation in SADC is approached.
Such conduct raises two questions. Are the ruling elites
really convinced of the need for, and desirous of, effective
and concerted intergovernmental cooperation through
organisations such as SADC? And, more fundamentally,
do they really care about the plight of those on whose
behalf they supposedly govern?
(*) Gabriël H Oosthuizen,
a London-based specialist in international law, is the
author of the book The Southern African Development
Community: The organisation, its policies and prospects
(2006)
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