Administering
the common patrimony
113. The
Synod also called on African governments to establish the appropriate policies
needed to increase economic growth and investment in order to create new
jobs.218 This involves the commitment to pursue sound economic policies,
adopting the right priorities for the exploitation and distribution of often
scarce national resources in such a way as to provide for people's basic needs,
and to ensure an honest and equitable sharing of benefits and burdens. In
particular, governments have the binding duty to protect the common
patrimony against all forms of waste and embezzlement by citizens lacking
public spirit or by unscrupulous foreigners. It is also the duty of governments
to undertake suitable initiatives to improve the conditions of international
commerce.
Africa's
economic problems are compounded by the dishonesty of corrupt government
leaders who, in connivance with domestic or foreign private interests, divert
national resources for their own profit and transfer public funds to private
accounts in foreign banks. This is plain theft, whatever the legal camouflage
may be. I earnestly hope that international bodies and people of integrity in
Africa and elsewhere will be able to investigate suitable legal ways of having
these embezzled funds returned. In the granting of loans, it is important to
make sure of the responsibility and forthrightness of the beneficiaries.219
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