It was jointly organised by the World Council of Churches (WCC), the All Africa Conference of Churches (AACC), the Federation of Protestant Churches and Missions of Cameroon (FEMEC) and the Ecumenical Service for Peace (SeP), Cameroon.
Apart from nationals of Central African countries and Mauritius, the seminar equally saw the participation of resource persons from various organisations of the North and the South that advocate debt cancellation (Eurodad, Uganda Debt Network, Jubilee 2000 South Africa, Jubilee 2000 London Africa Initiative).
There was a consensus on the following leading ideas:
This concentration of misery in this part of the world is not the outcome of a curse of fate, but of the ill effects of frenzied capitalism, arbitrary terms of trade, the egoism of those in power and the racketeering of lenders.
Forty to fifty percent of the fiscal revenue of the above-mentioned states is devoted to debt servicing; added to which are expenditures on arms purchases. The Structural Adjustment Programmes (SAPs) bring about drastic cuts in social and environmental consequences. The death of millions of people could be avoided if the amounts devoted to debt servicing could be used for more just and human purposes.
Accordingly, the maintenance, in any form whatsoever, of the debt of poor countries is unacceptable!
This is our stance, We, participants at the Yaoundé meeting, inspired by the Biblical tradition of Jubilee (Leviticus 25:10-17; Nehemiah 5:11; Luke 4:16-20) and the action of many organisations and people the world over, advocate total debt cancellation and back the Jubilee Movement.
This seminar, which was held after the G7 summit in Cologne (Germany), was a timely opportunity to assess the anti-debt struggle, evaluate the actions of Jubilee 2000 and map-out future strategies and guidelines. In this connection, it was necessary to question why French-speaking countries were lagging behind English-speaking countries and reflect on the ways and means of taking the Central African sub-region out of its inaction.
Basically, it was a bid to build the capacities of the sub-region as regards awareness on the debt problem that the Yaoundé meeting set the following objectives inter-alia:
Yaoundé, 12 January 2000
ACTION PLAN AND PROJECT
The representatives of churches, syndicates, NGOs and media of the following countries: Burundi, Cameroon, Central Africa Republic, Chad, Congo-Brazzaville, Congo-Kinshasa, Gabon, Rwanda as well as representatives from Belgium, Mauritius Island, South Africa, Sweden, Uganda and the United Kingdom, meeting in Yaoundé, from 10 to 12 January 2000, as a sub-regional colloquium on debt for jubilee 2000 in Africa under the theme: "Empowerment of the Capacities of Churches and Civil Society";decided to realise the following sub-regional and country-specific plan of action (date, activity and objective):
- considering the various lectures delivered by eminent specialists,
- considering the animating and constructive discussions,
- conscious of the concrete follow-up actions by Churches and Civil Society in general and in Central Africa in particular;
January 2000, creation of a sub-regional network - "Jubilee 2000 Central Africa"
February - April 2000, meeting for information dissemination to target population through opinion leaders
- information diffusion
- co-ordinating activities in the sub-region;
May 2000, memorandum to the heads of state
- launching of national networks (where they do not yet exist)
- extension and official launching in Cameroon:
July 2000 (15 July), public meetings, coordinated Africa Action Day -- (end-July), evaluation
- insist that debt issue be discussed at the OAU summit in Lomé, Togo
Each country will develop a programme of awareness-raising, education on the issue of economic justice and to lobby their government according to their context and realities.
- Sensitise population and opinion on the G7 meeting at Okinawa, Japan
NB: The coordinators of the Ecumenical Service for Peace in Cameroon network will develop a data base on activities in the sub-region in cooperation with the World Council of Churches (WCC), European Network on Debt and Development (EURODAD), Jubilee 2000 London, etc.