I am privileged
to address the Joint Sitting of the Parliament of the Republic
of South Africa, at the beginning of this last session of our
Third Democratic Parliament.
I stand before the people of South Africa with humility at the
opportunity I have had to occupy the highest office in the land
as a consequence of the unique circumstance arising out of the
decision of the leading party in government to recall the former
President.
Mine is a responsibility, within a matter of a few months, to lead
the National Executive in completing the mandate accorded the African
National Congress in the 2004 elections, and in laying the foundation
for the post-election administration to hit the ground running.
That we were able five months ago to ensure a seamless transition
and continuity in the systems of government is thanks to the maturity
of our constitutional system, reflected in part in the co-operation
of members of the Executive – old and new – and the
steady hand of our public sector managers.
As we look back over the past fifteen years, I wish to acknowledge
the commitment and hard work of Presidents Nelson Mandela and Thabo
Mbeki and the many women and men who played their role in steering
the ship of state under democracy: in the Executive and the administration,
the legislatures across the three spheres of government and the
Judiciary; driven by the desire to improve the quality of life
of all South Africans.
Above all, I stand before you with pride and confidence that the
South Africa we celebrate today – worlds apart from the divisions,
conflict and exclusion of a mere 15 years ago – is a product
of the labours and toils of South African women and men from all
walks of life.
These South Africans represent the hope and resilience that characterise
our nation.
Within the galaxy of outstanding South Africans are Members of
our democratic Parliament to whom we had the misfortune since last
February to bid the final farewell. They include Brian Bunting,
Billy Nair, Ncumisa Kondlo, John Gomomo, Joe Nhlanhla, Cas Saloojee,
John Schippers and Jan van Eck.
To these, I would also like to add Ms Helen Suzman, a truly distinguished
South African, who represented the values of our new Parliament
in the chambers of the old.
It is these and other patriots who should take the greatest share
of the accolade when we pronounce that – whatever economic
storms may pound our shores, whatever political uncertainties may
visit our collective consciousness in a transition – our
nation is in a good state.
However, we should not underestimate the challenges we face. The
global economic meltdown does pose serious dangers for our economy
in terms of job losses and the quality of life of our people.
Naturally, the uncertainties of a political transition can pose
more questions than there are currently answers.
As a consequence, some of us may be mesmerised by the transient
waves of stormy weather and hunch our shoulders in the face of
these headwinds of economic turbulence and political tumult.
But ours is a journey of hope and resilience.
We may even say that, in a strange quirk of fate, many aspects
of our constitutional order have been tested in the recent past;
and every one of them has passed the test to reveal a democracy
that is exceptionally resilient.
Our democracy is healthy. It is steadily growing stronger, underpinned
by a Constitution hardly equalled in the world.
Indeed, the robustness of our political engagement during this
season of electoral contest – which we all agree should be
dignified and peaceful – is the surest guarantee of the continued
survival and deepening of our democracy.
It is South Africa’s people who have ensured its progress;
and it is they who shall secure our democracy in the years to come.
Allow me, Madame Speaker and Chairperson, in this context to urge
all eligible South Africans to register and to vote in the coming
national and provincial elections, so that we can shape our destiny
ourselves.
This we should do every working day in the municipal offices, before
the voters’ roll is closed. But we should also take advantage
of the special registration weekend arranged by the Electoral Commission
of South Africa (the IEC) tomorrow and Sunday, the 7th and 8th
of February respectively.
I should also take this opportunity to indicate that I will in
the next few days conclude consultations with the Electoral Commission
and the provincial premiers and announce the date of the elections.
Honourable Members
We owe our being as a democracy to the people of South Africa who,
on 27 April 1994, for the first time collectively took their destiny
into their own hands.
Through that simple but profound act of casting a ballot for a
government of all the people of our country, we turned our backs
on a past that dehumanised us all.
It is therefore appropriate on this occasion to celebrate the 20th
anniversary of the adoption of the Declaration of the Organisation
of African Unity (OAU) Ad-hoc Committee on Southern Africa on the
Question of South Africa adopted in August, 1989 – commonly
known as the Harare Declaration.
That initiative laid the foundation for global consensus, through
the United Nations, on the approach to negotiations in South Africa.
Within South Africa, it also informed the content the 1989 Conference
for a Democratic Future – bringing together patriots from
virtually all walks of life.
All this led to the negotiations process which culminated in our
first democratic elections in 1994.
In this regard, we should salute the late President of the African
National Congress, Oliver Reginald Tambo, for initiating and piloting
through continental and world bodies what became a compass for
the peaceful resolution of the conflict in our country.
That courageous step to devise a framework that would seek peace
and reconciliation, in the place of war and conflict, reversed
for good the false dawn of a hundred years ago: that is, the conclusion
in 1909 of the National Convention which presaged the formation
of the Union of South Africa.
While that Convention defined the territorial integrity of South
Africa as we know it today, it was based on racial oppression and
exclusion.
And so, 15 years into our democracy, we can assert that the fear,
the insecurity and the loathing that 100 years ago generated an
exclusive and illusory peace among colonial masters, were not only
unfounded; but truly misplaced.
Those fears and insecurities gave rise to decades of resistance.
In this regard, we salute that brave son of our people, Solomon
Kalushi Mahlangu who went to the gallows 30 years ago with his
head held high, in the proud knowledge that his blood would nourish
the tree of freedom.
Allow me to acknowledge Lucas Mahlangu, brother of Kalushi, representing
the Mahlangu family.
Solomon Mahlangu was continuing a tradition of the warriors of
yesteryear, among whom we count those under King Cetshwayo who
in 1879 defeated the British army in Isandlwana, in defence of
the freedom of the indigenous people of our country and the sovereignty
of their lands.
A hundred and thirty (130) years on, we can only marvel at the
hope and the resilience that infused those stout hearts.
In the centres of learning, the same resistance fuelled the rekindling
of mass resistance during the cold winter after the banning of
the liberation movement and the imprisonment of most of its senior
leadership.
A group of valiant students broke away from the National Union
of South African Students (NUSAS)to found the South African Students’ Organisation
(SASO) 40 years ago.
Within this generation are the early leaders of South African Student
Organisation (SASO), which included: Strini Moodley, Professor
Barney Pityana, Steve Biko, Onkgopotse Tiro, Harry Nengwekhulu,
Themba Sono, Mapetla Mohapi, Mosioua Lekota, Johnny Issel and Mthuli
ka Shezi. For inspiring hope in a period of despair, we salute
them. In this regard, we wish to acknowledge Onkgopotse Tiro’s
cousin, Pat Tlhagwana.
In this context we also wish to acknowledge the late Ephraim Mogale,
the founding President 30 years ago of the Congress of South African
Students (COSAS), and his peers.
In the memory of these students of yesteryear resides an abiding
message, that the thirst for freedom and knowledge burns even stronger
in the bosoms of our youth.
The message of their heroic deeds rings true today as it did those
many years ago, that we should together expand the frontiers of
opportunity; that we should indeed, in the words of the Freedom
Charter, open ever wider “the doors of learning and of culture”!
We call to mind these organisations and leaders to emphasise the
spirit of hope and resilience that infused the democratic struggle
even when everything looked bleak; to underscore the responsibility
that rests on our shoulders to advance the ideals that so many
sacrificed for, refusing to be cowed by setbacks and hardships.
And so, Madame Speaker and Honourable Chairperson, we should ask
ourselves: how have our actions defined the path of South African
society’s evolution in the fifteen years since the birth
of our democracy; and how have we advanced the cause of human development
and human dignity since the 2004 democratic mandate!
We do have today a well-functioning democratic system, based on
principles of transparency and openness, with numerous platforms
for public participation and independent institutions mandated
by the Constitution to support democracy.
Over the years, we have steadily improved the structures of governance.
We have built a system of healthy inter-governmental relations
across the spheres, and improved integration within and among them.
Indeed, government can be proud that we have changed the demographic
composition of the public service, which in virtually all respects
approximates the character of our society.
However, while women constitute about 34% of all senior positions in the public
service, this falls short of the target of parity that we had set ourselves.
At the level of the national and provincial legislatures, indications are that
the nation will this year surpass the 32% women representation level achieved
in 2004 and hopefully, even the 40% achieved in the 2006 local government elections.
We hope that all political parties will, as they finalise their electoral lists,
make their contribution to this noble endeavour!
Though some progress has been made, at 0,2%, the situation is less impressive
with regard to people with disability employed in government, measured against
the 2% target we set ourselves.
On both counts, the private sector is lagging far behind.
Various measures have been put in place to improve the efficiency of the public
service, including financial management, Thusong Service Centres and other service
delivery innovations, izimbizo and, as currently in the Department of Home Affairs,
firm leadership.
However, much more needs to be done to improve the service culture and orientation
of some public servants, especially those at the coal-face of direct interaction
with the public.
As Honourable Members will be aware, our government has made the fight against
corruption one of the core areas of focus.
This is reflected, among others, in legislation, rules and regulations governing
public servants and political office-bearers alike, partnerships with civil society
and the business community, as well as anti-corruption hotlines.
It may as well be that the systems of preventing and punishing corruption are
still inadequate; but from the point of view of government systems, we can draw
solace from the fact that over 70% of cases of corruption reported in the media
become public because government has detected the wrongdoing and is in fact acting
against it.
The same challenges confront the private sector. In the end, the challenge is
as much about regulation; as it is about consistent enforcement.
Honourable Members;
I am certain that we are all agreed that the well-being of our society depends,
critically, on the progress we make in expanding the nation’s wealth and
ensuring that the benefits of economic growth are shared by the people as a whole.
It is common cause that, after the economic stagnation of the late 1980s and
early 1990s, South Africa has experienced the longest period of sustained economic
growth since the recording of such statistics started in 1940.
In the First Decade of Freedom, economic growth averaged 3% per year, and this
improved to 5% per year on average from 2004 to 2007.
While the consumer boom, impelled by rising employment and incomes and low inflation
and interest rates, played its part in this regard, we are encouraged by the
broad canvass of opportunities for further expansion going forward.
These include, in the first instance, higher rates of investment by both the
public and private sectors. In this regard, some five years ago, we were hovering
around 16% of gross fixed capital formation as a percentage of Gross Domestic
Product (GDP). Such has been the acceleration in investment that today this figure
stands at 22%, closer to the 25% that we projected to attain only in 2014.
This is in part a consequence of deliberate programmes by government to expand
public infrastructure.
It is also a result of policies to improve the climate for private sector investments;
and to conduct fiscal and monetary policy in a manner that expands access to
services and reduces the inflationary burden while at the same time ensuring
macroeconomic stability and sustainability.
The focus on micro-economic reforms in the past decade, and the efforts, especially
since 2004, more systematically to remove the variety of obstacles to growth,
have had a positive impact.
It is in this context that the Accelerated and Shared Growth Initiative (AsgiSA)
is being implemented, ensuring that all the critical blockages such as infrastructure
bottlenecks, integrated industrial policy and programmes, the skills challenge,
regulatory gridlocks and efficiency of government services are addressed in a
focussed and systematic manner.
Our economy has become more open, and since 1994 it has steadily become integrated
into the global system. Our financial institutions are a force of good example
which has somewhat sheltered us from the global economic storms.
Yet, the extent of their reach within our society remains far below expectations.
Our economy remains largely reliant on mining and agriculture for exports. Except
for the services sector, we have not seen a large enough expansion in critical
sectors, especially manufacturing.
As such, the rate of growth in exports has not been as high as in comparable
countries. It is precisely this weakness which accounts for the large Current
Account deficit particularly when we entered higher ranges of growth.
And because we have a low savings rate, we have had to rely on short-term capital
flows to finance the deficit as well as our investment programmes.
These are challenges that our country will certainly have to address going forward.
Of critical importance is the question: what in fact should economic growth be
about? Wealth is created in order to improve people’s quality of life.
Thus, the question whether growth is equitably shared should form a central pillar
of all economic considerations.
Importantly, sharing the benefits of growth should entail labour-absorption,
ensuring that there is decent work.
Indeed, it is a matter of proud record that between 1995 and 2003, the economy
created about one-and-half million net new jobs; and even more remarkable, about
500 000 jobs a year between 2004 and 2007.
In this latter period, for the first time since the attainment of democracy,
more jobs were being created than the number of new entrants into the labour
market, thus reducing the unemployment rate from 31% in 2003 to 23% in 2007.
Of course, this should not detract from our obligation to continue interrogating
the issue of the quality of these jobs, including the rights and benefits that
workers enjoy.
Sharing the benefits of growth should also include accelerated implementation
of affirmative action, including Broad-based Black Economic Empowerment.
This is not in pursuit of a so-called racial agenda. In reality, a country that
does not ensure the involvement of all of its population at all levels of economic
activity is certainly going to perform well below its actual potential.
The fact that the private sector lags behind in changing the demographics of
management and skilled occupations, in enterprise development and so on in part
makes our country a laggard in the high growth stakes.
Sharing the benefits of growth also means an efficient and equitable role for
the state in using the fiscus as an instrument of redistribution and sharing
the burden of providing public goods.
Honourable Members will be familiar with most of the data on matters relating
to the social wage. I will however cite a few instances again to sketch out the
nature of the progress we have made and the challenges that we face.
Government is painfully aware that abject poverty is still too widespread in
our society; and the level of inequality is too high.
We have in the past 15 years done our best to attack this scourge through the
social wage. To quote work conducted by a team of academics at the University
of Stellenbosch, led by Professor Servaas van der Berg:
“
Firstly, money-metric poverty declined substantially since the turn of the century.
The reduction is to a large extent due to a dramatic expansion in social grants
expenditure from 2002 onwards. This improvement is mirrored in access to basic
services – a rapid decline in asset poverty even preceded the decline in
money-metric poverty. Secondly, although the reductions in poverty have been
substantial, aggregate inequality increased during the 1990s. Thirdly, the dynamics
underlying the poverty and inequality trends determine the broad policy outlook…[P]poverty
has decreased since the transition, but … inequality has not improved.”
(Poverty since the transition: What we know, p8: van der Berg et al, August 2007)
On a critical matter of detail, the researchers further observe:
“…
Among households that include children (defined as those aged 17 and younger),
the number of households reporting that a child went hungry declined dramatically
(from just over 31 per cent to 16 per cent) between 2002 and 2006. This suggests
that the poverty situation has improved remarkably, particularly among people
experiencing the greatest degree of welfare deprivation. The prevalence of hunger
among children has virtually halved over four years.”
(Poverty since the transition: What we know, p25: van der Berg et al, August
2007)
Indeed, these observations are confirmed by our own research, which shows that
income poverty especially among African and Coloured communities has declined,
partly as a result of higher rates of employment and access to social grants.
While the number of grant beneficiaries was 2,5-million in 1999, by 2008 this
had increased to 12,4-million.
This is largely a result of massive expansion in access to the Child Support
Grant, which increased from 34-thousand beneficiaries in 1999 to 8,1-million
in 2008.
As part of the contribution to the income of the poor, the target for 1-million
work opportunities through the Expanded Public Works Programme was attained in
2008, a year earlier than envisaged in the 2004 electoral mandate. This has created
the possibility massively to expand this programme and improve its quality.
With regard to household access to basic services, the figures speak for themselves.
For instance, access to potable water has improved from 62% in 1996 to 88% in
2008; electricity (58% to 72%); and sanitation (52% to 73%).
Evidence of the social wage is also seen in massive improvements in access to
primary health facilities. 95% of South Africans now live within 5 kilometres
of a health facility; and we are informed that all clinics now have access to
potable water. Child immunisation coverage has steadily increased to about 85%;
and malaria cases have massively declined.
We are also heartened that research into HIV prevalence demonstrates stabilisation
and a slight reduction in rates of infection.
Further, our antiretroviral treatment programme is not only the largest in the
world; but it is expanding all the time, with over 690 000 patients having been
initiated on antiretroviral treatment since the commencement of the programme.
Yet many health facilities do not always have the required medicines, appropriate
staffing levels, and constant supply of basic services such as clean running
water and electricity. In some of these facilities, management is poor and staff
attitudes need improvement.
In education, we have seen a drop in the educator: learner ratio; almost universal
access in terms of enrolment at primary school level; and an improvement in the
number of pupils passing mathematics, to quote a few examples.
At the same time, much effort has been put into improving infrastructure in poor
areas.
Of course we do know that the drop-out rate particularly at secondary and tertiary
levels is unacceptably high, and the educational system has yet to produce the
requisite kinds of skills needed by society.
In addition, trends in performance, both in terms of teaching and learning, show
a worrying persistence of the social divisions of the past.
Ironically, precisely where education is most needed to help break the cycle
of poverty, is where infrastructure, administrative and teacher capacity are
least impressive.
Government’s social programmes have also improved the asset base of the
poor, in the form of housing – with 2,6-million subsidised houses provided.
We should of course acknowledge that the land redistribution programme as well
as post-settlement support could have been handled faster and better.
Overall, we are proud of the advances in our social programmes. But we cannot
satisfy ourselves merely with quantitative change.
Be it in education, health, housing, water or sanitation, the central question
that confronts us every day is how to improve the quality of these services!
On this we still have some way to go.
Honourable Members;
The scourge of crime remains a major source of insecurity for South Africans.
Daily experience, in poor and affluent neighbourhoods alike, is one of apprehension
at the possibility of violent attack.
Within public and private institutions, the possibility of nefarious schemes
siphoning off resources through corruption is always a source of great concern
Of course, the overall crime rate, having peaked in 2002, has consistently declined.
All kinds of statistics can be cited to attest to this.
But we do know that the reduction has not been fast enough, not even at the 7-10%
rate that we set ourselves for various categories of contact crime. The fact
that incidents of violent robberies in households and businesses have been on
the increase; and crimes against women and children have not abated in any significant
measure, is a matter of great concern.
This points to weaknesses in our neighbourhoods, especially in building the bonds
of community solidarity that would assist us in preventing and combating crime.
It points to systemic weaknesses in the criminal justice system, from investigation
of crimes to rehabilitation of offenders. It points to weaknesses in the efficiency
of the court system, both in terms of technical and other infrastructure and
management.
These are the issues that the comprehensive revamp of the criminal justice system
has started to address.
Yet, in being brutally self-critical, we should not lose sight of the fact that
what we are assessing is a system that enjoys, by far, better legitimacy than
ever experienced in our country.
This is because of the transformation these institutions have undergone, in terms
of their doctrines based on a human rights culture, their demographic composition,
and their systems of accountability.
But let us not delude ourselves: as with the rest of our social life, such transformation
is still at its nascent stages. We still have a long way to go.
I am certain that Honourable Members will agree that the humanity of our democratic
dispensation should find expression in the extent to which we pay attention to
the most vulnerable in society.
In this regard, we have through legislation, international conventions, regulations
and campaigns ensured that concrete efforts are made to improve of the conditions
of children, women, people with disability and the elderly.
Through advocacy campaigns and indeed as a result of the partnerships we have
built with organisations representing these vulnerable groups, we have improved
awareness around issues that affect them; and progressively encouraged the mainstreaming
of these concerns.
It is a matter of proud record that, for instance, female-headed households have
received a bigger-than-average share of the social wage including housing and
health care; and that among the most successful programmes have been campaigns
on child immunisation and nutrition.
Yet access to employment weigh heavily on rural women, youth and people with
disability. HIV impacts most severely on young women. Violence against women
and children is much too high.
All these are assignments for the coming period.
Madame Speaker and Honourable Chairperson;
These then are some of the advances that democracy has brought; and the progress
that government has made in fulfilling the mandate of the electorate.
There is no gainsaying that, by any measure, the progress made since 1994 has
been impressive. But neither can there be doubt that the challenges remain immense.
It is apt therefore to remind ourselves of that instructive observation of hope
and resilience, continuity and change, by former President Nelson Mandela, in
his biography, Long Walk to Freedom:
"
I have walked that long road to freedom. I have tried not to falter; I have made
missteps along the way. But I have discovered the secret that after climbing
a great hill, one only finds that there are many more hills to climb. I have
taken a moment here to rest, to steal a view of the glorious vista that surrounds
me, to look back on the distance I have come. But I can rest only for a moment,
for with freedom comes responsibilities, and I dare not linger, for my long walk
is not yet ended."
In a few months from now the people of our country will pronounce on the leadership
they prefer to carry forward the noble work of this great freedom fighter and
other founders of our democracy.
While our approaches may differ, the objectives that we need to aim for are clearly
and unambiguously set out in our Constitution: to create a united, non-racial,
non-sexist, democratic and prosperous society that plays a positive role in building
a better world.
Six years ago, leaders of our people came together in a Growth and Development
Summit and reached agreement on the tasks all of us should undertake to improve
the quality of life of South Africans, particularly to halve unemployment and
poverty by 2014. These include:
* creating more jobs, better jobs and decent work for all through higher rates
of investment, public works programmes, sector partnerships and strategies, local
procurement, small enterprise promotion and support for co-operatives;
* addressing the investment challenge by improving savings, appropriately deploying
resources from pension and provident funds, housing, financial sector contributions
and black economic empowerment;
* advancing equity, developing skills, creating economic opportunities and extending
services; and
* local action and implementation for development, including provision of infrastructure
and access to basic services.
I am certain, that, as part of and in addition to, these objectives South Africans
would hardly differ regarding the need to improve our education system; to provide
efficient, decent and equitable health care; to develop our rural areas and ensure
food security; and to intensify the fight against crime and corruption.
I cite these issues, not because they are all-encompassing nor that by identifying
them we would cure all the ills of our society. Rather, I have chosen to do so
to emphasise the point that South Africa does not suffer the poverty of ideals.
Our challenge is to translate these ideals into programmes and projects for effective
implementation.
These ideals are shared by virtually all of humanity, as reflected in the United
Nations Millennium Development Goals.
And yet humanity today faces the danger that the attainment of these objectives
could be postponed by many years, if not decades, as a consequence of the economic
crisis that has engulfed the global village.
What, on the surface, started off as a financial crisis among a few lending institutions
has exploded into a global credit crunch, with severe consequences for actual
production and trade.
We can decry the greed, the short-termism and the carelessness of managers of
big corporations which precipitated the crisis. We can condemn the policies of
governments which took their eyes off the ball and allowed the rapacious licence
of unregulated markets to wreak havoc on financial systems. We can do all this;
and we will be perfectly justified.
Yet our central and immediate task is fully to appreciate the consequences of
these developments on our own economy and our region, and devise responses that
will minimise their impact especially on the most vulnerable sectors of our society.
What we do know is that the regulatory environment in our country and the counter-cyclical
budget policies we adopted have helped us avoid the worst impact of the crisis.
But we are all too aware that, because we are strongly integrated into the world
economy, demand for our exports has declined; access to finance and inflows of
capital have turned for the worse; lower demand has precipitated a scaling down
of production; the creation of jobs is negatively affected and in some sectors
retrenchment has become a reality.
These difficulties have coincided with a period in which inflation and interest
rates are still too high.
Combined, these developments bode ill for the revenues we need to expand the
provision of services and to implement our infrastructure projects. As such,
we have been forced to tone down our forecasts in terms of growth and job-creation.
We know too that South Africa is less severely affected than many other countries.
Indeed, in a period in which others are experiencing or projecting recessions,
South Africa and the rest of the continent are still poised for growth, even
if at a slower rate.
In this regard, Honourable Members, I am happy to report that in the interactions
between The Presidency and leaders of various social partners, we agreed jointly
to devise interventions that would minimise the impact of this crisis on our
society. The task team dealing with these matters is still hard at work; and
the following broad categories of responses are under discussion:
Firstly, government will continue with its public investment projects, the value
of which has increased to R690-billion for the next three years. In this regard,
where necessary, we will find creative ways to raise funds.
This will include support by our development finance institutions and loan finance
from international agencies, as well as partnership with the private sector and
utilisation of resources controlled by workers such as pension funds.
Secondly, we will intensify public sector employment programmes. On the one hand,
plans to expand employment in sectors such as health, social work, education
and law-enforcement agencies will continue. On the other, we will speed up the
introduction of the next phase of the Expanded Public Works Programme.
Thirdly, mitigating actions can be undertaken within the private sector to counteract
an excessive investment slowdown and unnecessary closures of production lines
or plants.
On its part, government will adapt industrial financing and incentive instruments
to help deal with challenges in various sectors, and also encourage development
finance institutions to assist firms in distress because of the crisis.
Alternatives to layoffs will be explored, including longer holidays, extended
training, short time and job-sharing. This will be combined with promotion of
the Proudly South Africa campaign and stronger action on illegal imports.
Fourthly, government will sustain and expand social expenditure, including progressively
extending access to the child support grant to children of 18 years of age and
reducing the age of eligibility for old age pension to 60 years for men.
In addition, we will more widely utilise the Social Distress Relief Grant and
food security measures specifically also to target those either unprotected by
the Unemployment Insurance Fund or who have exhausted their benefits.
We shall also continue to pay special attention to the challenge of anti-competitive
behaviour on the part of some of our corporations. In this regard, we wish to
commend the Competition Commission for the firm hand that they are showing to
ensure that culprits are brought to book.
We do hope though that civil society will enhance its own level of activism to
ensure, among other things, that as input prices decline, the benefit is felt
by the population.
These immediate measures will be informed by the principle of a counter-cyclical
fiscal policy. However, we will ensure that the levels of borrowing by government
are prudent and sustainable. This also implies a rapid reduction in government
debt levels whenever conditions turn for the better.
Our efforts will also be informed by the appreciation that measures to protect
the environment and mitigate the impact of climate change can also contribute
to job-creation.
Both in the G20 meetings and other interactions in multilateral institutions,
our government has argued for appropriate and urgent interventions particularly
in the developed countries whence the crisis originated and where it is most
severe. We believe that the time has come to strengthen domestic regulation and
supervision of the financial system; but beyond this, that stronger surveillance
and action on a global scale have become unavoidable and necessary.
Critically, we should also safeguard the integrity of the world trade system,
complete the current negotiations on the Doha Round of world trade negotiations,
and ensure that development aid is not scaled down.
The abiding lesson from this experience is that we need stronger partnerships
among economic role players on a domestic and global scale, not only to stem
the impact of the crisis; but also to put in place measures that would obviate
a recurrence.
In our own country, we will embark on these undertakings as part of the process
of setting our society on a higher growth and development path. The length of
time towards attaining a higher trajectory may have been stretched somewhat.
But we are not in doubt that that moment will yet come sooner rather than later.
In this regard, how we position our country to take advantage of unique opportunities
that have come our way, will be of paramount importance. I refer here in particular
to the FIFA World Cup in 2010 as well as the Confederations Cup a few months
from now. Virtually all the projects and plans are completed or nearing completion – from
stadia, transport infrastructure, security measures, issues of accommodation,
to health and immigration plans – confirming the confidence of the global
soccer fraternity that ours will be a truly successful tournament.
And we believe that, after five consecutive wins, the national soccer team is
now more confidently gearing itself to perform above expectations!
But beyond this, the true legacy of this spectacle will be in our ability to
showcase South African and African hospitality and humanity – to change
once and for all perceptions of our country and our continent among peoples of
the world. That depends on all of us; and to that we can attach no price!
We also wish in this regard to congratulate all our sporting teams which have
asserted South Africa’s pursuit of excellence over the past year. Special
accolades are due to our cricket team which has climbed to the apex of global
rankings.
We are of course Rugby World Champions; Giniel de Villiers and his team have
won the Dakar Rally; our Paralympians continue to do us proud; and our under-20
soccer team did quite well in an extremely competitive environment.
Madame Speaker and Honourable Chairperson;
Just two weeks ago, South Africa completed with Mali part of the archives to
preserve the ancient manuscripts of Timbuktu.
This rich heritage points to Africa as a beacon of science and literature, philosophy
and commerce, interrupted by the slave trade and the scramble for Africa’s
wealth.
This initiative should spur us on to act in concert with other countries on our
continent and further afield to better the human condition.
Indeed, over the past 15 years we have spared no effort to ensure that Africa
experiences her renewal in what should in actual practice be the African Century.
Steadily but surely, our continent is progressing towards her renaissance, with
the interest of her people rising to the top of their leaders’ agenda,
asserting her hope and her resilience on the world stage.
It is this, and this alone, that has informed our persistence in assisting the
people of Zimbabwe to find a lasting solution to the crisis in that country.
We wish in this regard to congratulate all the parties in Zimbabwe for concluding
negotiations, delivering the ultimate prize that has always been the wish of
the people of that country and the sub-continent as a whole: that is, a stable
and legitimate government geared to address the challenges that the people face.
We are truly heartened that, yesterday, the Zimbabwean Parliament passed Amendment
19 of the Constitution, laying the basis for the installation of an inclusive
government.
Special mention in this regard is due to Southern African Development Community
(SADC) facilitator, former President Thabo Mbeki and the team that tirelessly
and patiently helped to bring the process to a successful conclusion.
Now the work of reconstruction can start in earnest; and South Africa stands
ready to assist wherever we can. In this respect, there is urgent need to assist
in dealing with the humanitarian crisis in that country. We are confident that,
because it cares, the international community will partner the people of Zimbabwe
as they blaze out along a new trail.
We are also encouraged that, whatever fits and starts may seem to characterise
the progress of the people of the Democratic Republic of Congo on their march
to stability and prosperity, that progress is inexorable.
The partnership built in the recent period between the leadership of the DRC
and Rwanda holds out a promise for advances in matters of security and in dealing
with the humanitarian crisis; but, hopefully, also with regard to political dialogue.
In the same measure, we will continue to work with other countries and the African
Union to pursue these objectives in Burundi, Sudan, Western Sahara, Côte
d’Ivoire, Somalia and elsewhere.
As would have been evidenced by various developments in the past few months,
South Africa will use the privilege of chairing SADC to strengthen this critical
regional institution, with particular emphasis on implementing Summit resolutions
and cementing regional strategic cohesion.
At the same time we will improve SADC’s interaction with the Common Market
of East and Southern Africa (COMESA) and the East African Community (EAC). These
initiatives will be undertaken in order to extend rather than weaken the deep
set of relations that we enjoy within the Southern African Customs Union (SACU).
We wish on this occasion to extend our congratulations to the people and the
leadership of Zambia, Ghana and the United States of America for elections the
symbolism of which transcends the narrow boundaries of their nation-states.
We will as always seek to strengthen co-operation with these and other countries
in pursuit of that which is good for humanity.
We are privileged that this year we conclude celebrations of the first decade
of our diplomatic relations with the People’s Republic of China. Over these
years, it has become clearer than ever before that there is much mutual benefit
to be gained from our partnership.
We also wish to affirm our commitment to the close relations that we have forged
with Brazil and India through the India-Brazil-South Africa trilateral (IBSA);
and indeed to the strengthening bonds that our country has been forging with
Russia, and countries in Asia, the Middle East, as well as Latin and North America.
We have on countless occasions expressed our concern at the persistence of conflict
in the Middle East in general and in Israel and Palestine in particular.
The depth of our disappointment at the recent escalation of the conflict and
massive loss of life, of especially civilians – including children, women
and the elderly – indeed defies description.
There can be no justification for such acts of wanton destruction and savagery.
And we do hope that this time round, the renewed efforts of the international
community to find a lasting solution to this conflict will bear fruit, so Israelis
and Palestinians can enjoy peace and security as neighbours within their sovereign
territories.
Our special congratulations to the government and people of Cuba on this the
50th anniversary of the attainment of their sovereignty and, with it, the freedom
to choose their path of development.
We were able in the past year to conclude further negotiations with the European
Union on our strategic partnership; and we do hope that the spirit which informed
that engagement will prevail as we finalise the multilateral negotiations on
the Economic Partnership Agreements with countries in our region.
We look forward to further strengthening this partnership when we host the South
Africa-European Union Summit later this year.
Along with other countries of the South we will continue to pursue the cause
of the restructuring of the United Nations, the International Monetary Fund and
other multilateral institutions so they reflect the changed and changing global
reality and operate in a democratic, equitable and transparent manner.
We also commit ourselves to meet the objectives of international agreements,
including the Kyoto Protocol and its successors for the benefit of future generations
among our own people and peoples of the world.
Madame Speaker and Honourable Chairperson;
Informing these our endeavours are two basic principles: the need for us to complete
the mandate accorded this government in 2004; and the imperative to ensure that
the government that comes in after the elections finds a ready platform to implement
its programmes without undue delays.
In the coming few months pending the national and provincial elections, we will
endeavour to complete that popular mandate. As part of the many detailed projects
contained in the government’s Programme of Action, we will pay particular
attention to:
creating the capacity necessary for improved service delivery and better integration
within and across the spheres of government, including national strategic planning;
continuing with the War on Poverty campaign and finalising the draft of the
Comprehensive Anti-poverty Strategy through the public consultations now under
way;
implementing the comprehensive programme we have put in place to eliminate
the incidence of cholera in various parts of the country;
continuing research and consultations on the Comprehensive Social Security
System, including the matter of National Health Insurance;
intensifying the campaign to save energy, so as to manage the current difficulties
and change our own behaviour, while at the same time speeding up the projects
to build new capacity and utilise alternative energy sources – recognising
that in addition to the consequences of climate change, resources such as fossil
fuels and water are declining in the same measure as demand is increasing;
integrating into the work of the relevant Clusters the findings of research
on Second Economy interventions such as the community works programme, support
for small and micro-enterprises and rural development initiatives;
intensifying efforts to revamp the criminal justice system, including better
forensic capacity, rapid increase in the number of detectives, optimal utilisation
of information and communications technology, and better management of the courts;
and
facilitating the processes aimed at strengthening the machineries dealing
with matters of gender equality such as 50/50 representation in decision-making
structures,
youth development, the rights of people with disability and children’s
rights – including completing consultations on the National Youth Policy,
preparing for the implementation of the African Youth Charter once it has been
processed by Parliament, and for the setting up of the National Youth Development
Agency; submitting the SADC Protocol on Gender and Development to Parliament;
strengthening advocacy on the rights of people with disability; and extending
the number of municipalities that have set up Children’s Rights Focal
Points beyond the current 60%.
These and other programmes, including the Apex Priorities identified in the State
of the Nation Address last February, form the bedrock of our efforts to conclude
the popular mandate and lay the foundation for the future.
We will intensify our efforts inspired by the enthusiasm, the hope and the resilience
of the South African people in pursuit of that which is good for all of us. This,
and this in the main, is the source of our confidence when we say that the nation
is in a good state. Our democracy is healthy. It is steadily growing stronger.
And so, in the words of former President Mandela, “[we] dare not linger,
for [our] long walk is not yet ended”
I thank you
[State Of the Province
Address]
[Provincial Budget Speech]
[National Budget
Speech 2009]