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African-French Summit Tackles Immigration
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"Together,
Africans and Europeans, we have a duty to dismantle the illegal
immigration networks," Chirac told the African leaders.
(Reuters)
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BAMAKO, December 3, 2005 (IslamOnline.net & News Agencies) – African
leaders and French President Jacques Chirac opened a two-day summit
here on Saturday, December 3, aimed at tackling illegal immigration
and the problems of
Africa
's youth.
"Together,
Africans and Europeans, we have a duty to dismantle the illegal
immigration networks, behind which hides an appalling and mafia-like
traffic," Chirac told the opening of the two-day summit, reported
Agence France-Presse (AFP).
"Together,
we must encourage co-development and enable Africans to enjoy decent
conditions for living and working in their own countries," he
told THE African leaders.
"It
is also a matter of urgency to conquer poverty, to allow the emergence
of a middle class, to put the talents of the elites to good use,"
said Chirac, who turned 73 this week and is on his first trip outside
of
Europe
since a week-long hospitalization in September for a vascular
disorder.
All
53 African states are, for the first time, represented at the
Africa-France Summit, taking place for the 23rd time since 1973.
As
well as Chirac, more than 20 African heads of state attended the
opening in the Malian capital, Bamako.
They
included South Africa's Thabo Mbeki and recently-reelected Omar Bongo Ondimba of Gabon.
Problems
facing Africa's youth is the official theme of the gathering, but
informal talks are expected to cover conflicts on the continent such
as in
Ivory Coast
and
Sudan's Darfur
region.
Concern
over immigration has been heightened recently by the deaths of a
number of sub-Saharan immigrants trying to enter
Spain
's north African enclaves of
Ceuta
and Melilla.
Easing
Visas
France
will ease the issuing of long-term visas for African business people,
researchers, teachers and artists, Chirac said.
He
called for "the opening of a special area of exchange between
France and African countries, notably francophone".
The
activities of business people, executives, researchers, teachers and
artists are "by nature, linked to the exchange," Chirac
said.
"I
have decided, on a suggestion by the Malian president, to ease for
them the issuing of long-term, multiple-entry visas. It's
indispensable for their activities."
Development
aid
Chirac
said he would seek to convince the European Union to increase
development aid to
Africa.
"In
the space of 10 years, such aid will have more than doubled," he
told the assembled African leaders.
"I
have personally committed myself to convincing the European Union to
take the same step between now and 2015."
The
French leader also stressed that
Africa
must "take its rightful place in international trade, especially
in agricultural products".
He
went on: "African farmers must receive a fair reward for their
work. We cannot accept a situation in which hasty and generalized
liberalization of agricultural trade ruins the efforts of the least
developed nations".
Trade
ministers head to
Hong Kong
on December 13 to discuss flagging World Trade Organization
negotiations on further breaking down barriers to world trade.
Chirac
invited states to come to Paris
in February to discuss new ways of financing development.
France
plans to tax airline passengers up to 40 euros (47 dollars) per ticket
from 2006 to help pay for health programs in the world's poorest
countries.
Collective
Effort
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"We
must combat trafficker networks, but also agree on a better
organization of migratory flows," Toure said.
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Mali's President Amadou Toumani Toure said the problem involved countries
of departure, transit and destination.
"We
must combat trafficker networks, but also agree on a better
organization of migratory flows," he said.
He
quoted a projection by the International Organization for Migration,
according to which, if current trends continue, one African out of 10
will live outside of their homeland by 2025.
Toure
also cited the figure of 16.3 million migrants on the African
continent, underscoring that they also went to other African countries
as well as rich nations.
But
he said conditions must be improved to keep young people at home.
A
message on behalf of African youngsters was read out by a young
ecology activist, Marie Nkom Tamoifo of Cameroon, urging leaders to work to improve conditions for young people.
Sixty
percent of
Africa's population of 830 million is aged under
25 in
a continent wracked by poverty, where the UN says 320 million people
survive on less than a dollar a day, and ravaged by AIDS and war.
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