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A webinar of the International Association for Peace and Economic Development (IAED), a UPF project, was the final session of ILC 2020 organized by UPF of Africa and UPF of Europe and the Middle East.

The session “Perspectives from Business Leaders,” held on September 13, 2020, was titled “Creating Mutual Prosperity—the Essential Role of Private Enterprise and the Rule of Law to Rebuild Economies and Grow Employment.”

The IAED session led directly into the Closing Session of the International Leadership Conference.

Dr. Lilian Lem Atanga, Chair, Department of Linguistics and African Languages, University of Bamenda, Cameroon

Dr. Lilian Lem Atanga, Chair, Department of Linguistics and African Languages, University of Bamenda, Cameroon

Dr. Lilian Lem Atanga is a Professor of Gender, Discourse, and Politics and Chair of the Department of Linguistics and African Languages at the University of Bamenda, Cameroon. She is a visiting Professor at the Pan African University of Water and Energy Sciences in Tlemcen, Algeria, and a non-resident research fellow at the University of Free State, Bloemfontein, South Africa. As a Gender and peace advocate, Prof. Atanga is a member of the South West, North West Women’s Taskforce (for peace) in Cameroon. She is the Board Chair of Rhema Care Integrated Development Centre, Cameroon.

The moderator of the IAED webinar was Dr. Lilian Lem Atanga from Cameroon, the chair of the Department of Linguistics and African Languages at the University of Bamenda.

The speakers were:

Professor Fatou Sarr Sow from Senegal, the president of the African Network for Support to Women's Entrepreneurship

Mr. Joseph Makamba Busha from Zimbabwe, founder and group chief executive officer of the JM Busha Investment Group

Dr. Arben Malaj from Albania, former minister of finance and minister of economy

Mr. Dan Catarivas from Israel, chairman of the Israel-EU Chamber of Commerce and Industry

Dr. Thomas McDevitt from the United States, the chairman of The Washington Times and the HJ Magnolia Global Foundation

Prof. Fatou Sarr, president of African Network for Support to Women's Entrepreneurship (RASEF), Senegal

Prof. Fatou Sarr, president of African Network for Support to Women's Entrepreneurship (RASEF), Senegal

Professor Fatou Sarr Sow is Senior Lecturer at IFAN – University Cheikh Anta Diop, Dakar, where she directs the Gender and Scientific Research Laboratory that she created in 2004. Prof Sow is also a Gender Expert at United Nations Agencies for Gender Training, Evaluation and Program Development in 15 African Countries. She is a Knight of the National Order of the Lion. She was nominated as a leading educator in 2008 by FAWE, a title awarded to only ten women educators who contribute to the promotion of education in Africa.

The first speaker, Professor Fatou Sarr Sow, the founder and director of the Gender and Scientific Research Laboratory at the University Cheikh Anta Diop in Senegal, spoke about the difficulties that businesses run by women face in African nations.

“The businesses that interest me are the so-called informal ones, since I run a women’s organization in this sector,” she said. “They are mainly in agricultural production, food processing, catering, clothing, hairdressing, trade, crafts, services. … With COVID-19, some activities have slowed down and many have gone bankrupt. These micro-enterprises are confronted with … inappropriate legislation, unfair competition, difficult access to finance, corruption, poor access to technologies.”

She cited various studies that showed a link between gender equality and economic growth.

Professor Sow said: “Africa’s future depends on how the issue of women is addressed. This is why public policies must support women’s businesses, which are predominantly in the ‘informal’ sector.”

Click here for the full text of Professor Fatou Sarr Sow in session 6 at ILC2020

Mr. Joseph Makamba Busha, Founder and Group Chief Executive Officer of the JM BUSHA Investment Group, Zimbabwe

Mr. Joseph Makamba Busha, Founder and Group Chief Executive Officer of the JM BUSHA Investment Group, Zimbabwe

Joseph Makamba Busha is a Zimbabwean businessman philanthropist and presidential candidate for Zimbabwe. He attended the University of Witwatersrand in Johannesburg, South Africa. He received four degrees, one diploma and seven professional certificates in mathematical finance. Between 1994 and 2000, Mr. Busha worked for HSBC Securities (SA), Standard & Corporate Merchant Bank (SCMB) and NEDCOR. In 2000, he founded JM Busha Investment Group. Mr. Busha is President of Freezim Congress, a political party in Zimbabwe. He is also the founder of the NGO JM Busha 54 Races for Peace and Unity in Africa. 

Zimbabwean businessman Mr. Joseph Makamba Busha in his presentation said the key ingredients of mutual prosperity are: peace, oneness, and shared values; rule of law; property rights; and income security.

When these four ingredients are present, he said, “Private enterprises create not only jobs (employment) but personal value (financial security). They are the foundation on which great economies are built.

“Successful private enterprises thrive on the rule of law and property rights, including intellectual property and innovations.”

Click here for the full text of Mr. Joseph Makamba Busha in session 6 at ILC2020

Prof. Arben Malaj, former Minister of Economy and Finance, Albania

Prof. Arben Malaj, former Minister of Economy and Finance, Albania

Prof. Dr. Arben Malaj graduated in Finance at the University of Tirana, Albania. From 1997 to 1998, he served as Minister of Finance, from 2002 to 2003 as Minister of Economy and from 2004 to 2005 as Minister of Finance. From 2005 to 2006, he attended the Harvard Kennedy School (HKS) as Senior Fellow at M-RCBG, focusing on research into Western Balkans European integration. Prof. Malaj is currently serving as the President of the Institute for Public Policy and Good Governance, and as the Deputy Rector of the Ecampus university for Western Balkan countries. 

Professor Dr. Arben Malaj from Albania, a former minister of finance and economy and the president of the Institute on Public Policy and Good Government, began his presentation by saying, “Peace is a precondition for prosperity, but without prosperity we can’t provide sustainable peace.”

He continued: “To eliminate conflicts and to work together for peace and prosperity would be the priority not just for political leaders but also for academics, private business and our society.”

Dr. Malaj outlined the negative impacts of COVID-19 on the economy: declining consumption, declining investment, increasing government expenditure, and declining net exports. He also mentioned the spike in uncertainty and capital flight.

In reaction to the pandemic, he said, we must find a balance between protecting people through lockdowns and supporting economic and social life.

The challenges ahead, Dr. Malaj said, are:

  • Public credibility—reforms against corruption and state capture
  • Private business—reduce the costs of COVID-19 and restart economies
  • Use monetary and fiscal policies carefully
  • Economic and political environment should not increase uncertainties and instability
  • Structural reforms—to promote more competition and a vibrant economy—are more effective than monetary and fiscal policy.

Click here for the full text of Professor Dr. Arben Malaj in session 6 at ILC2020

Mr. Dan Catarivas, Chairman - Israel-EU Chamber of Commerce and Industry

Mr. Dan Catarivas, Chairman - Israel-EU Chamber of Commerce and Industry

Mr. Catarivas graduated from the Hebrew University in Jerusalem with a Bachelor's degree in Economics and Political Science. Dan Catarivas presently holds the position of Director General - Foreign Trade and International Relations at the Manufacturers' Association of Israel and in charge of International Relations at the Federation of Israeli Economic Organizations (PIBO). He is also the Chairman of the Israel-EU Chamber of Commerce and Industry. Beforehand he served for twenty-five years with the Israel Government. His last position was Deputy Director General for International Affairs at the Ministry of Finance.

Mr. Dan Catarivas, the chairman of the Israel-EU Chamber of Commerce and Industry, addressed the role of the private sector in bringing people together and strengthening peace, understanding, and mutual benefit.

“There is no question that the COVID-19 has demonstrated how interdependent the world is and how no one can actually solve his own problem or concentrate only on his own problem,” he said.

“The world is a small place. Everybody is connected to each other. If we don’t work together and act together, then we cannot overcome the problem.”

Mr. Catarivas said: “The post-COVID era is going to be different from the pre-COVID era. Definitely the world is changing, and we have to adapt to it.”

The private sector has become conscious “that it has to take responsibility and not just concentrate on making money. Making money is not bad, but more and more around the world the business community definitely feels that it also has a social responsibility … for bringing people together and contributing to better stability, to better prosperity.”

He continued: “The idea that business is a very important vehicle for bringing people together, working together, acting together – this is something that will promote more understanding.”

Mr. Catarivas said: “It is important to use the economic vehicle and technology as a promoter of peace and prosperity. … People working together is the best way to create prosperity and promote peace and understanding.”

Mr. Thomas McDevitt, Chairman, The Washington Times, USA

Dr. Thomas McDevitt, Chairman, The Washington Times, USA

Dr. Thomas McDevitt is Chairman of the Washington Times; He has served in a number of leadership roles since joining the Times in 1994, including Business Director the TWT National Weekly, General Manager of TWT’s Magazine Division, Marketing Director, Vice President and President/CEO; former Senior VP of Marketing and Communication, Points of Light Foundation founded by President Georges H. W. Bush. Mr. McDevitt also serves as Chairman of UPF-USA and as President of UPF International.  

Dr. Thomas McDevitt, the chairman of The Washington Times, addressed the webinar through a pre-recorded message.

He explained that IAED seeks “to build a network of business, government and economic thought leaders committed to driving economic development toward establishing a global environment of interdependence and mutual prosperity.”

“We do this in three ways: Number one is professional development and thought leadership. We want to provide the best content that can inspire and motivate young entrepreneurs and seasoned veterans, like many of you, to take hold of the role of business and the question of purpose of economy, the purpose of wealth and that our businesses can make a difference in society. …

“We think that it is a time of international synergy like a grand strategy with global awakening of how we all fit together. …

“Number two, building a community and network. We bring each other together, we can cross-fertilize, we can learn from one another, do business with each other.

“And, most important, create a community, a network … [in] every country, of people like yourselves who ascribe to that value perspective that life is more than just what you see in the physical realm and we really are responsible for future generations.”

Dr. McDevitt referred to UPF co-founder Dr. Hak Ja Han Moon’s statement that the problems of the world cannot be solved by human efforts alone.

“We need to realize that there is a Creator,” he said.

“Greater than all [the] technology in the physical realm of change, there is a great revolution of the human spirit that is taking place beyond race, beyond religious boundaries, beyond national ethnic boundaries.

“It’s not just in the faith arena or the mental consciousness arena. It also involves business, it involves politics, culture, media, youth, women, academics. We have to transform culture, which is upstream from politics. And we have to do it together. We are truly a global family under one Creator.”

Click here for the full text of Dr. Thomas McDevitt, in session 6 at ILC2020

ILC Closing Session

Mrs. Maria Nazarova, Secretary General, UPF Russia, Russian Federation

Mrs. Maria Nazarova, Secretary General, UPF Russia, Russian Federation

Maria Nazarova graduated in psychology and social work from Ural State Pedagogical University. She has worked at various organizations affiliated with UPF in both the USA and Japan. She currently serves as the Secretary General of UPF Russia.

The IAED session was followed by the ILC’s Closing Session. UPF-Russia Secretary General Mrs. Maria Nazarova, as the moderator, introduced several leaders of UPF and its affiliated organizations who offered closing remarks.

Dr. Michael Balcomb, Regional Chair, FFWPU Europe and the Middle East, United Kingdom

Dr. Michael Balcomb, Regional Chair, FFWPU Europe and the Middle East, United Kingdom

Dr. Michael Balcomb currently serves as the Regional Chair of the Family Federation for World Peace for the combined 72 nations of Europe, the Middle East and Eurasia. Previously he served as the President of the Family Federation USA from 2013 to 2017. He was born in Abeokuta, Nigeria in 1957, educated in England and the United States, and joined the Unification Movement in California in 1976. He and his wife Fumiko have five children — two girls and three boys —aged from 30 to 20, all still living in the US.

Dr. Michael Balcomb, the group chair for Europe and the Middle East of the Family Federation for World Peace and Unification (FFWPU), an organization that is affiliated with UPF, gave a presentation titled “What Have We Learned?”

He started by saying, “One thing we have learned is that Africa and Europe make great partners!” He added, “One thing we have learned is that we do better when we’re working together.”

The main points of his presentation were “Peace Is Everyone’s Responsibility,” “Peace Is My Responsibility” (“It can’t be left to the ‘professionals’”), “Peace Starts with Me,” and “Peace Is Beyond Human Effort Alone.”

Speaking about why the Universal Peace Federation was founded, he listed the “external” reasons: to create partnerships and alliances for peace; to support the success and address the shortcomings of the United Nations; and to start innovative peace projects such as World Summits and the Peace Road.

He added the “internal” component: to promote the family as the cornerstone of peace; to acknowledge the fundamental limitations of human effort and capability; and to be humble before God (but not advocating for any particular faith).

Dr. Balcomb read the words of UPF co-founder Rev. Dr. Sun Myung Moon, spoken at UPF’s 2005 inauguration: “Heaven is summoning you to be the wise leaders who will set aright this world of evil and establish a new heaven and new earth, a new culture and an ideal kingdom.”

Dr. Balcomb commented: “These [words] are a battle cry to a spiritual battle but also a diplomatic battle, a peace battle – to be wise leaders who will set aright this world of evil. Yes, we have to be honest about the state of the world we live in. Not to be afraid of it but to recognize that there is a need for lasting and profound change.

“I think that’s exactly what we’ve been doing in this International Leadership Conference. We have indeed set aside the barriers of our race, our nation, our language, and we have joined together in a commitment to be peacebuilders.”

Click here for the full text of Dr. Michael Balcomb in session 6 at ILC2020

H.E. Goodluck Jonathan, President (2010-2015) Nigeria

Mr. Jacques Marion, President, UPF Europe & Middle East, France

Mr. Marion is a French citizen, born in Cameroon. He has worked for twelve years with Unification Movement programs in Africa. Between 1998 and 2006, he worked in China as a vice president of the International Educational Foundation, based in Beijing. From 2006 to 2013 he served as Secretary General of UPF Eurasia, based in Moscow. He is currently the president of UPF Europe and the Middle East and president of UPF France.

Mr. Jacques Marion, the UPF regional president for Europe and the Middle East, then read the proposed resolution of the International Leadership Conference, which recommended a working committee for each of the UPF-related associations.

Dr. OtsukaDr. Katsumi Otsuka, Chair, UPF Europe & Middle East

A citizen of Japan, Dr. Otsuka graduated from Kanazawa University and from the Unification Theological Seminary in the United States. As president of the student movement World-CARP Japan, he organized world conventions and initiated solidarity meetings among students and youth from Japan, Korea, Russia and China in the 1980s and 1990s. He served as president of the Family Federation for World Peace and Unification in Japan, as president of the Corporation for Building the Japan-Korea Tunnel, and as the leader of numerous organizations, focusing on the reunification of the Korean Peninsula. He is currently the Chair of the Universal Peace Federation in Europe and the Middle East.

Dr. Katsumi Otsuka, the UPF chair for Europe and the Middle East, expressed his thanks to all the participants and his deep appreciation for all the staff who had worked for the success of the three-day conference.

Click here for the full text of Dr. Katsumi Otsuka in session 6 at ILC2020

Mrs. Kathy Rigney, Chair, UPF Africa Dr. Kathy Rigney, Chair, UPF Africa

Dr. Kathy Rigney serves as the Chair of UPF-Africa. She was sent by Rev. Sun Myung Moon to West Africa in 1975 and has devoted most of her life since then to the people of Africa. Her prime activity is to teach the peacebuilding principles of UPF, and offer a new vision for peace and human development. She received an honorary doctorate degree from the New Covenant International University and Theological Seminary, USA honoring her work for a culture of peace, universal values, character education, and service to humanity.

Dr. Katherine Rigney, the UPF chair for Africa, recognized Dr. Bakary Camara, the African group chairman for FFWPU, as the main force behind many peacemaking efforts in Africa.

She said, “In order for all of us to experience happiness, we must solve the problem of our ignorance of God, our Heavenly Parent, and His providence. …

“The age we are in at this moment is a time of extreme change for humanity, like almost no other time in human history,” she said. “Therefore, a new dialogue must begin, and we must search for solutions that heretofore have not been part of our dialogue worldwide. We must experience a necessary revolution of the human spirit, and now is that time.”

Dr. Rigney concluded by saying: “We must become active members of this world family and participate in the important discussions that can truly change our world. [This is] a time of spiritual emphasis that can bring us together as one human family under one Creator. And that is God.”

Closing Session moderator Mrs. Nazarova then announced: “We conclude our conference, and at the same time we open the door to a whole new level of development for the Universal Peace Federation. Fifteen years is just the beginning!”

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