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Southern Africa: A Challenge to the United Nations*

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 May 2019

Extract

Criticism is frequently expressed about the manner in which the African group at the United Nations injects southern Africa into discussions at every conceivable opportunity in the political, the economic, and the social forum. A question often posed is whether the emphasis on this issue, particularly at the international level, is proportionate to its import for the world community as a whole. As we Africans view the matter, the situation in southern Africa challenges the basic assumptions which brought the United Nations into being, and it is therefore the responsibility of the entire world community. In the political context, the situation is seen as a threat to regional and international peace and security; in the moral context it is considered a crime against humanity. The concern of African states was expressed by the late Kwame Nkrumah when, as President of Ghana, he declared: “The independence of Ghana is meaningless unless it is linked with the total liberation of Africa.”

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © African Studies Association 1972 

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Footnotes

*

This essay is based on an address delivered by Ambassador Far ah at the African-American National Conference on Africa in Washington, DC.

References

1 Special Committee on Apartheid Working Paper A/AC. 115/L.290.

2 Center Survey for the Study of Power and Peace, vol. 1, no. 8 (The Center for the Study of Power and Peace, Washington, DC , 1972).

3 Sean Gervasi, ST/PSCA/SER.A/10.

4 A/AC. 115/L288 of the Special Committee on Apartheid.

5 Financial Mail, Johannesburg, 18 April 1969.

6 Report of the Ad Hoc Working Group of Experts to the 27th Session of the Commission on Human Rights, Geneva. February—March 1971.

71639 th meeting of the Security Council, February 4, 1972, Addis Ababa.

8 Minly, A. S., South Africa's Defense Strategy (Anti-Apartheid Movement, London, 1969).Google Scholar

9 Ibid.