Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton addresses the Forum for the Future in Morocco, November 3. |
|
|
Secretary Clinton delivered a major speech on November
3 in Marrakesh, Morocco at the Forum for the Future, an
initiative of the countries of the Broader Middle East and
North Africa region (BMENA), the G8 countries, and civil
society and private sector groups.
She reaffirmed the commitment
of the United States to broad engagement with Muslim communities
around the world and outlined concrete steps the United
States is taking to follow up on the “New Beginning”
that President Obama launched in Cairo.
Secretary Clinton
focused on partnerships to promote civil society, entrepreneurship
and economic development, educational opportunity, scientific
and technological collaboration, women’s empowerment,
and interfaith cooperation.
Following is a transcript of Secretary Clinton's remarks:
REMARKS
Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton
At the Forum for the Future
November 3, 2009
Marrakech, Morocco
SECRETARY CLINTON: So it is a pleasure to join you for
this discussion, and I especially recognize the significance
of having governor – government ministers and civil
society leaders talking together about these issues of common
concern. That may be too rare at sight, but it shouldn’t
be, because our goal is to listen, learn, and discover new
ways that we can work as partners for the good of the people
that we represent.
Like all of you, I have experienced firsthand the warm
hospitality and openness of the Moroccan people. And yesterday,
I had the opportunity in a meeting with King Mohammed VI
to express my appreciation for the progress that Morocco
is achieving; in particular, the reforms that have granted
new freedom to women who now bring their considerable talents
to strengthening democratic institutions, accelerating economic
growth, and broadening the work of civil society.
On a previous visit to this beautiful country 10 years
ago, I had the opportunity to meet with many of the citizens
of Morocco. I remember well having a chance to listen to
an illiterate father who endorsed his young daughter’s
dream of becoming a doctor and meeting devout women who
had risen up to become advocates for human rights on local
councils. Examples like this remind us there is much in
Morocco’s experience that we can look to guide our
efforts today.
Five months ago in Cairo, President Obama called for a
new beginning between the United States and Muslim communities
around the world – a relationship that is comprehensive
rather than focused on a few political and security issues,
a relationship based on partnership between people as well
as government, and a relationship that lasts for the long
term. Those were some of the important words that President
Obama spoke in Cairo, and his speech generated a great deal
of enthusiasm around the world. Many people heard his call
and asked, what can we do; what can you, the United States
do; how will President Obama’s vision bear out in
a new approach to U.S. policy; and how will that new approach
translate into meaningful changes in people’s everyday
lives?
As President Obama and I believe, it is results, not rhetoric,
that matter in the end. Economic empowerment, education,
healthcare, access to energy and to credit, these are the
basics that all communities need to thrive. And the United
States seeks to pursue these common aspirations through
concrete actions. We know that true progress comes from
within a society and cannot be imposed from the outside,
and we know that change does not happen overnight. So we
will not focus our energies on one-time projects, but we
will seek to work with all of you in government and in civil
society to try to build local capacity and empower local
organizations and individuals to create sustainable change.
I have asked our Embassy to engage with local communities
to solicit ideas for how the United States could be a better
partner. I also appointed the first-ever U.S. Special Representative
to Muslim communities. The ideas we have heard have helped
to shape our plan. Farah Pandith, our new Special Representative,
is traveling widely and listening and coming back and expressing
the concerns that she has heard from those who are living
and working for a better life.
Now, we are focused on three broad areas where we believe
U.S. support can make a difference. The first comes from
the work and research that has been done over many years.
When you ask people in all countries in this region or anywhere
in the world what is the biggest concern you have and what
do you want to see that happens differently in the future,
the answer overwhelmingly is “I want a better job.
I want rising income. I want to give my family, especially
my children, more opportunities.” It cuts across every
society no matter where that society is.
I often say that while talent is universal, opportunity
is not. And so we are committed to building ladders of opportunity
to help develop the enormous talents that reside in the
people of this region. Early next year, the President will
host an entrepreneurship summit in Washington to convene
people focused on creating small businesses, expanding their
businesses, taking the talent that they have and translating
it into income generations to assist their families.
We have launched a website for this summit. It is www.entrepreneurship.gov/summit.
And I invite you to submit the names for delegates that
could possibly benefit from coming to this summit, and please
provide your comments on topics for the agenda. Because
this summit is part of a broader effort to expand support
for entrepreneurship in the region, including by establishing
new business development centers. It is also my hope that
together, we can launch a virtual entrepreneur network that
connects the range of people engaged in such activities
in the region and even beyond.
There are so many good ideas that die because the conditions
are not right for bringing those ideas to market. There
are so many people who work so hard every day that they
can’t realize the benefits of that hard work to the
extent that they should. Now we already, as you know, give
billions of dollars in ongoing direct aid programs in this
region, ranging from a community’s livelihood program
in Yemen to a youth employment program in Jordan to our
work here in Morocco.
We have invested $700 million in Morocco through a Millennium
Challenge Corporation Compact. And this is an approach that
we are working on that grows and has a partnership between
our government and the government of people of a country
– in this case, Morocco – where we say we’re
not here to tell you what you need from us; we’re
here to ask you what we can do to help you realize your
own goals. In this case, we are supporting to two agricultural
sectors – fruit tree farms and small-scale fisheries
– as well as artisan craft and strengthening financial
services and enterprise support. Over and over, we hear
from small and medium-sized businesses that cannot get the
financial assistance, they can’t get the technical
support that would grow their business. So working with
the Government of Morocco, we are hoping to really help
to see blossom a lot more economic activity at the lower
level that will then, from the bottom up, build prosperity.
Our second area will be advancing science and technology,
something that we have heard from many of you, to help create
jobs and to meet global challenges. It’s not something
you don’t know; it is your history. But it was the
Islamic world that led the way in science and medicine.
It was the Islamic world that paved the way for much of
the technology and science that we now take for granted.
And now we face global challenges. How do we address water
issues? How do we solve the climate crisis? How do we eradicate
disease? Well, we want to look to your societies and we
want to help Muslim majority communities develop the capacity
to meet economic, social and ecological challenges through
science, technology, and innovation.
The State Department has established a science envoys program,
and I’m pleased to announce today that the first envoys
will be three of America’s leading scientists: Dr.
Bruce Albert*, a former president of our National Academy
of Sciences; Dr. Elias Zerhouni, a former director of our
National Institutes of Health; and Dr. Ahmad Zawawi, the
Nobel Prize-winning chemist. Each of these men has agreed
to travel to North Africa, the Middle East, South and Southeast
Asia to fulfill President Obama’s mandate to foster
scientific and technological collaboration. The State Department
will also expand positions for environment, science, technology,
and health officers* at our embassies. To finance these
solutions, the United States Overseas Private Investment
Corporation known as OPIC is launching a technology and
innovation fund.
Our third area of engagement is education. Last week, I
announced our support for a new program for higher education
in Pakistan. We have also begun a program to support partnership
between U.S. community colleges and institutions in Muslim
communities to share knowledge and to train students for
good jobs. We are expanding our scholarship opportunities,
particularly for underserved secondary school students.
One of our most successful education programs is called
Access. It provides English language instructions to bright
students in poor communities. I am personally committed
to this program, and I look for ways to provide additional
support, because I have seen firsthand its power.
Earlier this year, I visited an Access classroom in Ramallah.
I walked into an enthusiastic discussion of Women’s
History Month. These were students who did not come from
educated families, but they were students with the same
ambition and motivation that we heard described by our colleague,
the Palestinian foreign minister, about his own son. We
want to create more opportunities for students like these
to fulfill their God-given potential.
And this points to a related priority – the empowerment
of women. I have said, as some of you know, for many years,
and President Obama said it in Cairo, no country can achieve
true progress or fulfill its own potential when half of
its people are left behind. When little girls are not given
the same opportunities for education, we have no idea what
we are losing out on because they’re not going to
be able to contribute to the growth and the development
of their countries.
The United States has named our first-ever Ambassador-at-Large
for Global Women’s Issues, Ambassador Melanne Verveer.
We strongly support the call made at last year’s Forum
for the Future for the creation of a regional gender institute
to help advance women’s empowerment across the board
politically, economically, educationally, legally, socially,
and culturally. And we look forward to working with other
governments and civil societies to launch this initiative
soon. And we will provide initial funding to make it a priority.
We seek to support civil society efforts worldwide because
we believe that civil society helps to make communities
more prosperous and stable. It helps to drive economic growth
that benefits the greatest number of people. And it pushes
political institutions to be agile and responsive to the
people they serve. So the United States is launching an
initiative called Civil Society 2.0. This organized effort
will provide new technologies to civil society organizations.
We will send experts in digital technology and communications
to help build capacity.
Now, these are some of the ways that the United States
is pursuing President Obama’s vision for a new relationship.
Our work is based on empowering individuals rather than
promoting ideologies; listening and embracing others’
ideas rather than simply imposing our own; and pursuing
partnerships that are sustainable and broad-based. We believe
that despite our differences, there is so much more that
unites us. Fathers and mothers everywhere want safety and
opportunity for their daughters and sons. People everywhere
want to have a role in the decisions that affect them, to
express their needs to their leaders to be heard, and to
help chart their own futures.
I also want to make clear that the United States is committed
to a comprehensive peace in the Middle East. I know this
is a matter that is of grave and pervasive concern among
the countries represented here, but even far beyond this
region. We are committed to a two-state solution, and we
are determined and persistent in the pursuit of that goal.
It is important that we all work toward that objective.
And I think that does require that all parties should be
careful about what we say, the kind of recriminations that
are so understandable, but we need to work together in a
constructive spirit toward this shared goal of a comprehensive
peace.
I believe very strongly that it is attainable. I believe
that President Obama’s commitment is understood. And
I believe that with your support, we can find a way through
the difficult and tangled history that too often prevents
us from making progress on this most important issue. As
leaders of countries that have a direct stake and care deeply
about all of the final status issues that must be resolved,
I would just ask you to think about how we can each demonstrate
the commitment that is necessary for us to go forward.
Now, we can maintain an allegiance to the past, but we
cannot change the past. No matter what we say about it,
it is behind us. Or we can work together and follow the
vision and the inspiration of President Obama to help shape
a future that will be so much better for the children of
both the Palestinians and the Israeli families. I am hopeful
we can succeed in creating that better world together, because
I know what could lie ahead for us if we do.
And I thank you for having a forum about the future, because
that is what we have to determine together. And I appreciate
the opportunity to be here to build on the vision of the
President’s speech in Cairo, but to go to the concrete
actions with specific results that are necessary, whether
it is making peace, creating jobs, or educating our children
so that the people we represent can see their lives improving,
because at the end of the day, that is what we are all committed
to try to achieve. Thank you very much. (Applause.)
(end text)