
5th September 2011
Lord Gardiner of Kimble.
My Lords, I too, congratulate my noble friend Lady Hooper because this debate provides an
opportunity to recognise not just that the Commonwealth has been a force for good but that it has a
strategic importance for our country now and in the future. Too often in the past, we have underplayed
the connections and interest we have with our partners in the Commonwealth. That is why I
wholeheartedly endorse what the Foreign Secretary and the Minister for the Commonwealth have been
working so hard to achieve: the re-energising of our relations within the Commonwealth. The Foreign
Secretary's visit to Australia and New Zealand last year was the first visit to those countries by a
Foreign Secretary in 20 years. It indicates in stark terms that our focus has been elsewhere. Fulfilling
the role that we have undertaken overseas in recent times may explain in part why, but it does not
entirely excuse it. Surely the skill in gaining new friends and working elsewhere is in retaining old
ones.
The Commonwealth family remains a unique forum for voices that would not necessarily be heard
elsewhere. It is not just Governments that come together. The Commonwealth has a key role in feeding
the world's growing population. We have seen in graphic and heart-rending terms the consequences of
nations-particularly in sub-Saharan Africa, where 19 countries are in the Commonwealth-being unable
to feed their own people. I therefore draw to your Lordships' attention and commend the work of the
Royal Agricultural Society of the Commonwealth-the RASC-which encourages the interchange of
information about developments in sustainable agriculture, forestry, aquaculture and the rural
environment throughout the Commonwealth. It aims to encourage member societies in developed
countries to help where agricultural education and expertise are needed to enable food production to be
increased.
British farmers are actively playing their part, and within the RASC emphasis is being placed on the
next generation and the generations of youth to come. Being the only Commonwealth agricultural
NGO, the RASC seeks to work more closely with the Commonwealth secretariat and to participate in
setting the agricultural agenda. The Duke of Edinburgh was president for more than 50 years, and this
influential role is now fulfilled by the Princess Royal. In 2012, the biennial conference of the RASC
will be held in Zambia and the theme will be feeding people and Africa's role in helping global food
security. Zambia has vast areas of sustainable agricultural production and commands some 50 per cent
of southern Africa's water resources. What a tragedy that its neighbour Zimbabwe has had its
agricultural production devastated.
The Commonwealth is held in great affection by so many. Many of us have family ties. It continues to
bind diverse nations together. Whether it is in the healthy rivalry of sport, the values of liberty and
tolerance or a desire to enable all our citizens to prosper, the Commonwealth is an institution on which
we should build so that all these ideals flourish. That is why I wish the Minister every possible success
in his endeavours and responsibilities.
Jennifer Dunn
Policy Researcher