Archive for the 'Speeches of His Highness Aga Khan' Category

Asian Development Bank and Aga Khan Development Network Strengthen Partnership

His Highness Aga Khan Fatimid Imam Caliph, founder and chairman of the Aga Khan Development Network (AKDN), today 30th January 2008 met with Mr. Haruhiko Kuroda, President of the Asian Development Bank (ADB), for discussions on joint collaboration between the ADB and AKDN. The meeting preceded the signing of an agreement aimed at expanding the partnership between the two institutions.

“A strengthened partnership between ADB and the Aga Khan Development Network provides an effective channel for supporting inclusive development in the region, especially for the benefit of the poorest and most vulnerable people in society,” said Mr. Kuroda.

The Aga Khan’s younger brother, Prince Amyn Aga Khan, who signed the agreement on the Aga Khan’s behalf, thanked the ADB for its long-standing cooperation and lauded the Bank’s efforts to adopt a new long-term strategy this year in the face of growing challenges and opportunities in the Asia-Pacific region.

Prince Amyn Aga Khan expressed confidence that the agreement will enable an intensification of the collaboration between the two institutions, thereby helping to transform the lives of many.

He added that the agreement is “an expression of our shared commitment to ensure that marginalized and impoverished areas of South and Central Asia receive the attention and support needed to alleviate poverty and to create stability in cross border areas, by connecting isolated communities, developing markets, incomes, and employment, and fostering an enabling environment.”

The joint ADB/AKDN agreement stresses the need “to find ways to undertake investments to connect the poor to the opportunities of growth and to connect services to the poor emanating from national and regional growth benefits.”

The ADB and the AKDN collaborate across multiple sectors in Afghanistan, Tajikistan, India, and Pakistan. The agreement signed today reinforces the need for cooperation in sectors such as infrastructure, economic development, and human capacity building. It expresses the joint commitment of both institutions to local and regional ownership of development policies and programmes, long-term approaches to sustainable development, and investments which connect the poor to growth opportunities. Amongst the new areas for potential partnership are investments in higher education, including with the Aga Khan University and the University of Central Asia.

Notes:

ADB, a major development institution in the Asia and Pacific region, seeks to foster economic growth, good governance, human resource development, and the reduction of poverty for the benefit of its developing member countries.

The Aga Khan Development Network (AKDN) is a group of private, non-denominational development agencies working to empower communities and individuals to improve living conditions and opportunities, especially in sub-Saharan Africa, Central and South Asia, and the Middle East. The Network’s nine development agencies focus on social, cultural and economic development for all citizens, regardless of gender, origin or religion. The AKDN’s underlying ethic is compassion for the vulnerable in society. Its annual budget for social development is in excess of US$300million.

For more information please contact:

Jason Rush
Media Relations
Asian Development Bank
Tel: (632) 632-4444
www.adb.org

Aly Nazerali
European Representative and CEO
AKDN
3 Cromwell Gardens
London SW7 2HB
Tel: +442075916800
E-mail: aly.nazerali@akdn.org

www.ismaili.us

Aga Khan:The International Personality of The Year

The International Personality of The YearInternational Magazine for Collections, Apollo has declared Aga Khan as The International Personality of The Year.

Aga Khan Fatimid Imam Caliph, is the 49th direct lineal descendant of Prophet Muhammad through his cousin and son-in-law, Aly, the first Imam-Caliph, and his wife Fatima, the Prophet’s daughter. Aga Khan is the rope of love, wisdom and unity among interpretations of the Faith, and also bridge of confidence between West and Muslims. This year, the world is celebrating Golden Jubilee of the Imamat Caliphate of His Highness the Aga Khan.

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Ismaili.US

10:59 Posted in Aga Khan Fatimid Imam Caliph , Central Asia , Community , Culture , East and South-East Asia , Eastern Europe and the former Soviet Union , Economy , Environment , Freedom of expression , Ismaili.US , Latin America , Maghreb , Media , Middle East , North America , South Asia , Sport , Sub-Saharan Africa , Western Europe | Permalink | Tags: Aga Khan Fatimid Imam Caliph, Central Asia, World Peace, Pakistan, Fatimid Heritage Foundation, Middle East

Aga Khan Says Mozambique A Valuable Model for Developing World

Speaking at an official banquet Mozambique President His Excellency Armando Guebuza hosted in his honour at the palace  in Maputo, the Aga Khan praised Mozambique as a model for the developing world. The Fatimid Imam Caliph referred Mozambique as a model of successful post-conflict development and hailed the country’s economic performance and tenacity in overcoming difficulties.

“I am pleased to express, Mr. President, to you and your guests, and to the people of this country, my profound gratitude for the extraordinary warmth of your welcome.

The Mozambican people have a great gift for making visitors feel at home. As a previous visitor, I know well the special quality of a Mozambican welcome - and I deeply appreciate the kindnesses you have shared with me.

An anniversary is always an occasion for reflection - for looking back and for looking ahead. As we reflect tonight, we can do so with a special sense of hope and promise- in the future of Mozambique and in the future of Africa.

As you know, the future of Africa has been one of my central preoccupations over the past five decades. My interest grew partly out of the history of the Ismaili people in Africa - stretching back over a century and a half. And I was also fascinated by the great drama of national independence in those early years of my Imamat, as proud, ancient cultures - after so many years of colonial rule - began the journey toward stability and progress as self-governing countries.

That journey has often been a difficult one, especially in Mozambique. But that past, sometimes deeply painful, is gone - and Mozambicans now look to a new era of progress and of promise. Over the past fourteen years of post-conflict history - you have gone from negative growth rates in the range of eight percent a year, to positive growth rates in the same range! That is a remarkable accomplishment.

Great challenges remain, of course. The problems of poverty, disease, and illiteracy here are still enormous. But your recent progress has been built on sound principles - and, for that reason, Mozambique has become a valuable model for the whole of the developing world.

Your growth record is one of the best in Africa - built neither on diamonds nor on oil, as Prime Minister Diogo has put it - but on the development of human potential and the consolidation of the democratic processes.

Mozambique has learned to set careful priorities - to establish clear markers for progress, and then, carefully, to measure its progress against those indicators.

One of the prime qualities which recommends Mozambique as a model is your reliance on professional expertise rather than ideological caveats. In that spirit, you have built a broad consensus among many stakeholders - public and private, from civil society, and from the international community. In pursuing your great goals, you have been inclusive, rather than exclusive. In an era when frustration often breeds cynicism concerning the possibility of progress, Mozambique can provide inspiration and encouragement to other post conflict societies.

And there is more. Even as Mozambique points a path to progress in the economic and social realm, it also plays a leadership role in regional diplomacy. The contributions of former President Chissano in sensitive regions have been particularly appreciated, of course. Mozambique ’s standing as a highly regarded member of the community of nations will enable it to play an increasingly important, strategic role in relations between its neighbors to the south and its neighbors to the north - between the Southern African Development Community and the East African Community.

The key ingredient in all of these efforts - within Mozambique and in its regional neighborhood, is a spirit of genuine partnership - an understanding that we can do things together that we can never do separately. The institutions of our Aga Khan Development Network (AKDN) have experienced that spirit of partnership here in many ways, over many years - including our Agreement of Cooperation, signed nearly ten years ago.

Much of our work, as you know, has involved the northern areas, and especially the Mtwara Development Corridor. One project I would highlight is the Unity Bridge, linking northern Mozambique with southern Tanzania. Here we literally reach across national frontiers in a way that will stimulate progress on both sides of the border. Because of the Unity Bridge –and related projects - our investments in the leisure and tourism sector in southern Tanzania can have a multiplier effect within Mozambique. In a similar way, here and elsewhere, progress will accelerate and dreams will come true, whenever we are able to span borders with bridges.

We must also help young people build “Bridges to the Future” - that is the name, in fact, of one of our new scholarship programs. Our philosophy is to build leadership for tomorrow by educating the young on the basis of academic potential – not on social status or family income. That philosophy is at the core of our Aga Khan Academies program.

Many of you were present three years ago when we laid the foundation stone for a new Aga Khan Academy at Maputo. It will be part of an 18 school network - in 14 different countries - all teaching the international baccalaureate curriculum. This system of schools will have significant commonalities. Each one, for example, will be supported by a Professional Development Center - a place for teaching the teachers - using best practice techniques from around the world. These teachers will serve both the Academy and other schools in Mozambique.

In all of these Schools, moreover, our watchword will be “Pluralism” as we develop leaders who can deal effectively with diverse peoples in a globalizing world.

Some commonalities will be easier to develop than others. Here in Mozambique, for example, there is no tradition of residential primary and secondary schools, and there is not a great deal of experience in educating in English. Yet both concepts - residential education and educating in both the national language and English - are two common goals for our wider network of academies. These are questions which we must resolve with prudence - pursuing sound long-term goals, but understanding short-term realities.

On the economic development front, we are planning a new garment factory for export, employing some 700 women in the first phase. We expect the project to begin next June - but its success will depend again on partnership - through an enabling labour environment.

Power generation and rural electrification is another critical area. The Aga Khan Fund for Economic Development recently played a central financing role for one the largest hydroelectric projects in African history, in Uganda - at Bujagali on the Upper Nile. We hope now to apply that experience to projects in Mozambique. Meanwhile, we have also invested in a new fibre optic cable linking Southern and Eastern Africa (including Mozambique ) with Mumbai in India and Marseille in France. This link will enable low cost broadband access to rural communities within Mozambique, and will require additional investment in the existing backbone structure.

While these major infra-structure projects move ahead on one hand, we also work at the micro level - in some 146 villages, including 21,000 households, in Cabo Delgado, for example. There the selling of cash crops, the storage of food, the development of diverse income sources and the creation of Village Development Organizations, have all become commonplace in a very short time. New rural development programs are helping to increase crop yields, to circulate health and nutrition information, and to expand inoculations and sanitation programs.

A recent World Bank report strongly recommends that the countries of Africa should improve agricultural productivity - as the government of Mozambique is working to do. Yet - our experience, particularly in Asia, teaches us that a time will surely come when agricultural productivity can simply go no further - the growth potential will simply run out. And, when that occurs, agricultural economies must seek new activities to sustain their populations.

This scenario may be many years ahead in the case of Mozambique, but diversifying the economy deserves immediate thought. One area where that can start happening now, in my belief, is the leisure and travel sector. AKDN has devoted considerable resources to expanding this sector. We are about to launch, for example, a major renovation project at the Polana Serena Hotel in Maputo, and we see enormous potential for extending into Mozambique our East African safari circuit of travel facilities.

At the same time, in and around Pemba, micro credit projects are creating new economic opportunities - we anticipate a tripling of these programs to the 3 million dollar level over three years. We have also noted the President’s concern about the lack of financial services in rural areas and are ready to address this concern by establishing a rural micro finance bank in northern Mozambique.

In all of these ways, then, our commitment is to add to the foundations you have already laid for future progress. As we do, we realize more and more, with each passing day, the importance of effective partnerships.

It is in that spirit of partnership, then, that I come to Mozambique, grateful for what we have done together in the past, and inspired by the things we will be attempting together in the future. We are proud that we can join you in the great, continuing story of Mozambican progress.”

Aga Khan at The Conference on Central Asia and Europe: A New Economic Partnership for Twenty First Century

It is appropriate that the word “Regional” is at the center of our deliberations on Central Asia. The countries are diverse in many ways — and the development approaches there must be sensitive to divergent requirements. But these countries also have a common historical experience, including several centuries of shared Islamic heritage. Each of them has faced the need to build new political and economic institutions following the breakup of the Soviet Union. And, as the EU Strategy document emphasizes, each of them can only optimise their development through a regional approach.

In this respect, the Central Asian experience parallels the European experience. In Europe, too, the end of the Cold War demanded new political and economic structures and it is striking how quickly Europe is now reaching out to Central Asia — offering, among other things, the great gift of a powerful regional example. >>>>  Full Speech Photos

Among the most difficult of challenges, of course, is connecting any progress we may achieve at a national level with more remote, rural areas — where poverty often seems most intractable. Mountain peoples, in particular, have endured economic hardship, civil strife, arms and narcotics trafficking, an insecure food supply, earthquakes, water shortages — the list could go on. But overcoming these problems will require a searching re-examination of what poverty really means. I am increasingly inclined to define poverty not only as a matter of income, but rather as a state of marginalisation in all of those conditions which contribute to the quality of human life. A state of poverty is a state of deprivation with respect to health and nutrition, education and security, housing and credit, and all the other conditions which are essen ……… Full Speech

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Aga Khan Fatimid Imam Caliph Awarded Honorary Doctorate by University of Evora for “Material and Spiritual Service to Humanity”

Aga Khan says more relevant education, stronger civil society institutions and renewed commitment to ethical standards - key to stability of modern democracies.

Modern societies must improve the rigour and relevance of their educational curricula, strengthen the institutions of civil society and build a strong ethical framework of tolerance and respect if they are to be stable and secure democracies, able to protect the interests of their citizens, His Highness Aga Khan said here on 12 February 2006. Aga Khan The Fatimid Imam Caliph was speaking at an international symposium at the

University of
Évora entitled: “Cosmopolitan Society, Human Safety and Rights in Plural and Peaceful Societies.” Speaking at the Symposium, chaired by His Excellency President Sampaio, the Aga Khan said that the inability of political and civil leaders in rich and poor nations alike to protect citizens from an array of persistent stresses – ranging from poverty and the impact of natural disasters to civil disorder — represents a failure of democracy to achieve its ideal. “For many centuries, it was the conviction of enlightened people that societies would truly come to grips with their problems once they became democratic,” he said. “The great barrier to progress, they said, was that governments listened to the special few – rather than the voice of the many. If we could only advance the march of democracy, they argued, then a progressive agenda would inevitably fall into place. But I am not sure that such an analysis holds up any longer.” He noted that nearly 40 per cent of UN member nations are now categorized as “failed democracies” and too often failures were the result of sheer incompetence, both personal and institutional. Corruption, lack of an informed electorate and superficial media reporting, combined with weak or divided legislatures that lack expertise to deal with complex problems — all contribute to democracies making poor decisions. The Aga Khan said the challenges of democracies were compounded by the rapid growth of cosmopolitan populations as a result of increasing migration. Consequently, nations are becoming more pluralist, but these cosmopolitan social patterns have not yet been matched by “a cosmopolitan ethic.” He called for an ethical sensibility which can be shared across denominational lines and which can foster a universal moral outlook. “The search for justice and security, the struggle for equality of opportunity, the quest for tolerance and harmony, the pursuit of human dignity – these are moral imperatives which we must work towards and think about on a daily basis,” he said. In addition to a stronger ethical framework, modern societies require greater focus on education to build democratic competence for leaders and the electorate, as well as stronger institutions of civil society. “Democratic society requires much more than democratic politics,” he said. “Governments alone do not make democracy work. Private initiative is also essential, including a vital role for those institutions which are collectively described as “civil society. “Sometimes, in our preoccupation with government and politics, we neglect the importance of civil institutions,” he said. “A thriving civil sector is essential to renewing the promise of democracy.” In addition, rigorous, responsible and relevant education is needed to meet today’s more demanding tests of competence and higher standards of excellence. We must move beyond the notion that better education simply means wider access to formal learning and ensure that educational systems develop quality curricula that address issues confronting leaders and citizens in the 21 st century. “For too long, some or our schools have taught too many subjects as subsets of dogmatic commitments,” the Aga Khan said. “Economic insights, for example, were treated as ideological choices – rather than exercises in scientific problem solving. “An important goal of quality education is to equip each generation to participate effectively in what has been called ‘the great conversation of our times.’ This means, on the one hand, being unafraid of controversy. But it also means being sensitive to the values and outlooks of others.” Referring to the offensive caricatures of Prophet Muhammad, first published in a Danish newspaper, the Aga Khan said it was more a “clash of ignorance” than a clash of civilisations. The newspaper had conceded it had not realised the sensitivities it had raised with the caricatures. “To attribute the problem to ignorance is in no way to minimise its importance,” he said. “In a pluralistic world, the consequences of ignorance can be profoundly damaging.” “This is not to say that governments should censor offensive speech. Nor does the answer lie in violent words or violent actions. But I am suggesting that freedom of expression is an incomplete value unless it is used honourably, and that the obligations of citizenship in any society should include a commitment to informed and responsible expression.” He hoped that the controversy might also be an educational opportunity: “an occasion for enhanced awareness and broadened perspectives.”In thanking him for his participation in the Symposium, Rector Manuel Patricio described the Aga Khan as “an international personality of the highest importance.”

Earlier in the day, the Aga Khan was awarded the Honoris Causa Doctor Degree at a University ceremony presided over by the Portuguese President, Jorge Sampaio and Rector, Manuel Patricio. Attendees included the Portuguese Minister for State and Foreign Affairs, Diogo Freitas do Amaral, international diplomatic representatives, members of the senate and faculty of the university, and local dignitaries.

The University citation for the Honorary Doctorate recognised the Aga Khan Fatimid Imam Caliph for “material and spiritual service to humanity” as well as “the extraordinary work of economic, social, cultural and educational assistance” through the Aga Khan Development Network. It also cited his commitment to “creating bonds and promoting dialogue between civilizations and cultures, namely between the East and the West.” The University was founded in 1559 by Cardinal Henrique, later King of Portugal. The city of
Évora is listed by UNESCO as a world heritage city in recognition of its diverse Muslim and Judeo-Christian cultural history and architectural heritage. In his laudatory remarks at the award ceremony, Professor Adriano Moreira, a former Portuguese foreign minister and former Vice-President of the Assembly of the Republic, said the Aga Khan “has been unbreakably guided by the defence of human dignity that is available equally to all, without distinction as to ethnic, cultural or religious backgrounds.” Accepting the award, His Highness Aga Khan said “I am deeply touched by your warm welcome and generous remarks. I accept this honour with the utmost gratitude and humility, conscious of the great distinction and achievements of past recipients.”The occasion was of special happiness since it continues the long-standing relationship that the Imamat and Ismailis enjoyed with the Republic and people of
Portugal, remarked Aga Khan. “Our ties are the stronger for being rooted in a shared sense of responsibility to strive together for the greater good of all” he said.“The

University of
Evora is an ancient bastion of this sense of equitable and moral order which supports its tradition of academic excellence, nurturing merit wherever it exists.These are the values which the
Iberian Peninsula radiated as an inspiring beacon of light, representing the truly glorious epochs in human history when the Muslim and Judeo-Christian worlds developed constructive linkages, enriching their civilisations and empowering their institutions of higher learning with new sources of knowledge. It is a privilege to be associated with a University which has remained true for so many centuries to the principle that the fruits of learning are to be at the service of all humanity.In Islam, this is a core principle of belief. In that tradition, my forefathers, the Fatimid Imam-Caliphs of Egypt, who founded
Al-Azhar
University and the
Academy of
Knowledge in
Cairo a thousand years ago, viewed the acquisition of knowledge as a means to understanding, so as to serve better, God’s creation. For them the true purpose of scholarship and the gift of reason were to help build society and guide human aspirations. Lest it be forgotten, the society of their times was richly pluralistic when the Quranic notion of the Ahl al-Kitab – the People of the Book – and of one humanity were the driving force for tolerance and respect for difference.One of history’s great lessons is that a society can underwrite human progress only when it overcomes its insularity and suspicion of “the other,” and instead, looks upon difference as a source of strength. For, while our new century continues to be marred by conflict and tension, the effective world of tomorrow is a pluralist one which comprehends, welcomes and builds on diversity.That is why I passionately view the struggle against poverty, and respect for the values of pluralism, as two of the most significant tests of whether the 21st Century is to be an era of global peace, stability and progress.These two challenges engage the entire spectrum of the institutions and programmes of the Ismaili Imamat which constitute the Aga Khan Development Network, cornerstones of which are its educational endeavours from the pre-school to the tertiary level. The Network’s agencies and programmes are non-denominational and open to all without discrimination, guided by the Imamat’s policy of replacing walls that divide with bridges which unite.

Their ethic is that of global convergence and the development of civil society that manages, and harnesses the forces of pluralism so as to elicit the best in human endeavour.I am profoundly honoured that this historic institution of higher learning, that has contributed so much to the human cause, has seen fit to consider me henceforth as one of its esteemed graduates.”In December 2005, the Government of Portugal and the Ismaili Imamat signed a Protocol of Cooperation signalling their common intent to work toward the improvement of the quality of life of vulnerable populations in Portugal and the Portuguese-speaking countries of Asia and
Africa. The Protocol establishes the framework under which the Government of Portugal will work with the agencies and institutions of the Aga Khan Development Network (AKDN), one of the largest private development networks in the world, to implement initiatives for social, cultural and economic development.

Published in:Aga Khan Fatimid Imam Caliph, Speeches of His Highness Aga Khan |on September 21st, 2007 |Comments Off