2003 New Year Message, 30 December 2002
Fellow South Africans:
Friends and guests visiting from other lands:
The year 2002 is rapidly reaching a close.
The last month of this year will be remembered in the
Southern hemisphere for the total solar eclipse in some
parts that for six seemingly long minutes blocked out
the sun from view.
I am told by those who were present in the Limpopo
Province that when this occurred, it felt as if a strange
silence and coldness fell over the land. In ancient
times, this wondrous event was considered something
to be feared.
The earliest people in Southern Africa created stories
about the sun and the moon and prayed to the stars.
Now in modern times, in the year 2002, we know better
and marvel at the miracle of nature. We understand that
the darkness is only momentary and that the sun will
return to bathe the earth with light. The symbol of
the rising sun is also present in our National Coat
of Arms. Such is our optimism in nature and also in
ourselves as a new South African nation.
Another year recedes into the past and we look forward
with joy to the new light of the New Year. We look forward
with confidence to 2003 because the foundations have
already been laid in 2002 that will ensure a brighter
future.
The year 2002 became known as the Year of the Volunteer.
Volunteers in a number of sectors in unprecedented numbers
participated in the Letsema Campaign and communities
across South Africa engaged in voluntary work aimed
at building a better life for all South Africans. We
must thank all of those who came forward to lend a hand
in this national effort. Volunteerism has fixed itself
in the minds of our people as a way of collectively
contributing to the growth of our country; and the challenge
in the coming year will be to make Letsema a permanent
feature of our society.
This second year in our African Century has also seen
the launch of the African Union that took place in Durban
in July. Through this landmark event, we can say that
Africa has taken a giant step forward into the future,
and that our task must be to achieve unity, development
and co-operation among the peoples of Africa. The New
Partnership for Africa's Development (NEPAD) has also
made progress in opening new space for the economic
advancement of the continent. We are grateful for the
sacrifices made by many people to build the new foundations
for African unity and social progress, even as we are
conscious of the hard work that lies ahead in the consolidation
of these processes.
The year 2002 has also witnessed the success of collective
efforts to bring peace to the war-torn regions of our
continent. The people of the Great Lakes Region, of
the Congo, of Burundi, will soon be able to experience
peace and stability and bring prosperity into their
lives. We must continue our work in assisting them to
reach this goal so that they are united, as we are,
in our own diversity.
Our thoughts are also with those among us who still
suffer from poverty and deprivation, for those of our
people who are jobless, those who are ill and those
who have been the victims of violence, especially women
and children. We shall not relent in the struggle to
build a people-centred society, where everyone shall
care for the other, where there is mutual respect, gender
equality and where the dignity of women and children
is paramount. We shall defend our democratic order from
rogues and continue to advance the interests of ordinary
people trying to do good things with their lives.
As South Africans, in 2002 we were the proud hosts
of the World Summit for Sustainable Development. We
welcomed the world to our country as a people conscious
of the social catastrophe caused by centuries of abuse,
believing that as we strive to end poverty and underdevelopment
in our own country, we should also speak out against
environmental degradation in the world and do all we
can to ensure that a healthy and sustainable global
partnership between people and the planet prevails.
We believe that the Johannesburg Summit has achieved
much and that the gains must be consolidated in the
year to come.
At the World Food Summit meeting earlier in the year
in Rome, we committed ourselves to eradicate poverty,
to achieve food security and promote sustainable development.
In a region threatened with famine, we will continue
to focus on putting in place the necessary policies
and programmes so that we reach the goal of sustainable
food security.
This year ends on a positive note for the South African
economy that has grown beyond expectations. One of our
biggest challenges will be to ensure higher rates of
economic growth and development and that greater confidence,
stability and certainty are maintained and further strengthened.
Government has worked hard this year to improve efficiency
and co-ordination so as to improve the quality of service
delivery and enhance our ability to push back the frontiers
of poverty and expand access to a better life. Work
has continued in the integrated rural development and
urban renewal programmes to create the conditions in
which communities can flourish and take control of their
lives.
As part of the Imbizo Programme, I visited the Free
State and Gauteng and interacted with many people to
listen to their concerns and advice about ways of accelerating
the transformation in our country. The Imbizo programme
will continue in to the New Year together with the strengthening
of the social partnerships that are central to the attainment
of collective prosperity.
This year also saw the launch of Freedom Park, a place
where we shall commemorate key events in South African
pre-history and history, and pay tribute to our heroes
and heroines and all the sectors of our society who
made great sacrifices so that we could achieve political
emancipation.
For the first time, in 2002 we presented our new national
orders, the Order of Mapungubwe, the Order of the Baobab
and the Order of the Companions of O.R. Tambo, to men
and women who have rendered distinguished service to
our people. May the people of South Africa be inspired
by their example and be more determined to build a united
nation with a common vision, aspirations and goals.
We must thank all South Africans for what they have
done over the last year to make us proud to be South
African as we work to build a better life for all.
For those who have to travel long distances to be with
their loved ones at this time of the year, I ask you
to be careful and to drive safely as you cross the length
and breadth of our country.
In 2003 the sun will continue to shine on the South
African people as we build this non-racial, non-sexist
and democratic country, instilling in all a shared sense
of nationhood and human solidarity.
Let us do everything in our powers to ensure that we
make real advances for the sake of the African woman
and for the future of the African child.
I wish all of you a happy, peaceful and prosperous
New Year.
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