-vital for achieving Post 2015 Agenda
With the on-going debate
on the successor to the Millennium Development Goals, Rev. Fr. Evaristus
Bassey, National Director of Caritas Nigeria, says there was the need for a new
consciousness for the inclusion of all to ensure the success of the Post 2015
Development Agenda.
For this to happen, he
said “Lifestyles have to change. Resources have to be freed for equitable
service,” stressing that we cannot go on living the way we have been living.
“There has to be a new consciousness for inclusion and for fighting structures
of inequality”.
Fr. Bassey was speaking
in Accra on The role of the Church in the implementation of the Post 2015
Sustainable Development Agenda, at the Second Country Forum of Catholic
Development Organisations in Ghana.
He highlighted the need
for effective collaboration between the Church, other civil society
organisation and the state at all levels, and urged the Church not to see the
government as an enemy, and should be careful not to dirty herself in the muddy
waters of corruption when engaging with the state.
“The church should raise
funds to support development progrrammes” said Fr. Bassey, who also entreated
her to develop a data base to showcase the Church’s contribution to development
in the country, adding that there was the need for policy coordination in the
Church’s institutions.
The two-day Forum on
theme: ‘Responding to challenges and opportunities of the Post 2015 Development
Agenda-Role of Catholic Development Organisation,’ was organized by the
Department of Human Development (Caritas Ghana) at the National Catholic
Secretariat; the Marshallan Relief and Development Service (MAREDES) and the
Catholic Relief Service (CRS) in Ghana.
The Executive Secretary
for Caritas Ghana, Mr. Samuel Zan Akologo, in a statement said the Forum seeks
to increase awareness and participation of Catholic Development Agencies in the
on-going processes towards a new global development agenda and also influence
the remaining process of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).
He said the forum also
creates a platform for Government to update its participation in the Post 2015
Development Agenda negotiations and how it will likely influence national
development.
Most Rev. Gabriel A. Mante, Bishop of Jasikan and Episcopal Chairman for
Caritas Ghana, in a welcome address expressed delight at the effort to
institutionalize the annual Forum as a means of sharing knowledge and
coordinate efforts in development practice.
He commended the organizers for their
foresight and proactive approach to engage in the new global development policy
with the universal church, urging the participant to seriously consider issues
on peace promotion, environmental protection, promoting food security,
protecting the poor and vulnerable in our society, as well as addressing the
sanitation menace in our country and finding ways to ensure responsiveness in
governance.
Mrs. Christine Okae Asare, of the National
Development Planning Commission (NDPC) and focal person on the Post 2015 Agenda
said the beauty of the SDGs was that it has 17 goals with 169 targets, but
noted that the biggest challenge has to do with monitoring the targets.
She said Government will soon roll up a
long term development plan for the country from 2016 to 2056 after the Shared
Growth and Development Agenda expires in 2017, adding that the long term
national plan was in line with the African Union agenda.
She noted that it was very important to
involve the citizenry in the development planning, and implementation processes,
adding that there was the need to create partnership between to Government and
all stakeholders to ensure the success of development programmes.
Mrs. Dadiari Chikwengo,
Coordinator of the Post 2015 Working Group of Caritas Internationalis, who
chaired the function, underscored the need for effective coordination of efforts
to build synergies to enhance the success of the SDGs.
She said the Church should
ensure that institutions worked and delivered on their mandate, noting that
when we work together, we can achieve more.
It is expected that the
forum will also agree on preliminary priority areas of the SDGs and develop
strategies to engage in the implementation and monitoring of success in Ghana
in a more structured and coordinated manner.
The forum sponsored by
Misereor, Germany, MAREDES, CRS in Ghana, the International Centre for Advocacy
and Social Research (ICASOR), Caritas Africa and the Ghana Catholic Bishops’
Conference was attended by over 20 Diocesan Development Officers from all Dioceses
in Ghana, and Catholic Development Partners from Germany, England and USA.
Others are Caritas
Member Organisations from Tanzania, Nigeria, Sierra Leone and representatives
of the Symposium of Episcopal Conferences of Africa and Madagascar (SECAM),
Ghana Immigration Service.