STATEMENT BY MINISTER MAITE NKOANE-MASHABANE ON THE NAME CHANGE TO DEPARTMENT OF INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS AND CO-OPERATION (DICO).
In announcing names of members of the new cabinet on Sunday 10 May, President Jacob Zuma, among others, referred to changes in the government structures. The changes are aimed at making the state machinery more efficient and service-delivery oriented. Similarly the changes will ensure alignment of government structures with the electoral mandate and our developmental needs. The thrust of these structural changes is to advance our central objective of creating a better life for all South Africans.
In this regard, President Zuma alluded to the name change of the Department of Foreign Affairs to the Department of International Relations and Cooperation. The name change to the Department of International Relations and Cooperation is in line with international trends and is informed by the need to give greater clarity on the mandate of the department. In this regard, over and above its normal functions the department will also engage in dynamic partnerships for development and cooperation.
These decision was informed by deliberations of the ruling Party's Policy Conference as well as the resolution of the Ruling Party's 52nd National Conference held in Polokwane in 2007.
The name change moves from the premise that foreign policy is based upon and is indeed an advancement of our domestic priorities at an international level. Accordingly, our foreign policy features still remain:
* pushing back the frontiers of poverty and under-development in our country and Africa based on the continental economic and developmental plan, NEPAD