State of the Nation Address of the President
of South Africa, Thabo Mbeki: Houses of Parliament Cape
Town: 06 February 2004
Madame Speaker;
Chairperson of the National Council of Provinces;
Deputy Speaker and Deputy Chairperson of
the National Houses of Parliament;
Deputy President of the Republic;
Honourable leaders of our political parties
and Honourable Members of Parliament;
Ministers and Deputy Ministers;
Our esteemed Chief Justice and members of
the Judiciary;
Heads of our Security Services;
Governor of the Reserve Bank;
Distinguished Premiers of our Provinces;
Mayors and leaders in our system of local
government;
Our honoured traditional leaders;
Heads of the state organs supporting our
democratic system;
Directors-General and other leaders of the
public service;
President Mandela and Mrs Graca Machel;
President F.W. De Klerk and Mrs De Klerk;
Your Excellencies, Ambassadors and High
Commissioners;
Distinguished guests, friends and comrades;
People of South Africa:
I am honoured to welcome to this Chamber representatives
of two families whose loved ones were killed 30 years
ago in Gaborone, Botswana and Lusaka, Zambia, while
opening what proved to be parcel bombs sent by agents
of the apartheid system. These were Onkgopotse Tiro,
a leader of the South African Students Organisation
(SASO), and Adolphus Mvemve then Chief Representative
of the ANC in Zambia. I am very pleased that they were
able to join us today.
Nelson Mandela delivered our first State of the Nation
Address before the first democratically elected parliament
on the 24th of May, 1994. In that Address he quoted
from a poem by Ingrid Jonker.
In that poem Ingrid Jonker said:
"the child is present at all assemblies and law-giving
the child peers through the windows of houses
and into the hearts of mothers
this child who only wanted to play in the sun at Nyanga
is everywhere
the child grown to a man treks on through all Africa
the child grown to a giant journeys
over the whole world
without a pass!"
Nelson Mandela then went on to say:
"And in this glorious vision, she instructs that
our endeavours must be about the liberation of the woman,
the emancipation of the man and the liberty of the child.
"It is these things that we must achieve to give
meaning to our presence in this chamber and to give
purpose to our occupancy of the seat of government.
"And so we must, constrained by and yet regardless
of the accumulated effect of our historical burdens,
seize the time to define for ourselves what we want
to make of our shared destiny.
"The government I have the honour to lead and
I dare say the masses who elected us to serve in this
role, are inspired by the single vision of creating
a people-centred society.
"Accordingly, the purpose that will drive this
government shall be the expansion of the frontiers of
human fulfilment, the continuous extension of the frontiers
of freedom.
"The acid test of the legitimacy of the programmes
we elaborate, the government institutions we create,
the legislation we adopt, must be whether they serve
these objectives."
Today we begin the last session of our Second Democratic
Parliament. We begin this session two-and-half months
before we celebrate our First Decade of Liberation and
Democracy. We also meet in these Houses of Parliament
not long before we hold our third general elections.
It is therefore natural that our national legislature
should spend some time reflecting on what we have achieved
and not achieved during the last ten years. Inevitably,
all of us will also make speeches aimed at improving
our fortunes in the forthcoming elections.
But perhaps the correct starting point for the government
would be to recall what was said as we began our journey
into our democratic future. It was for this reason that
I quoted what President Mandela said at the start of
the first session of the first democratic parliament.
To repeat what he said:
"The government I have the honour to lead and
I dare say the masses who elected us to serve in this
role, are inspired by the single vision of creating
a people-centred society.
"Accordingly, the purpose that will drive this
government shall be the expansion of the frontiers of
human fulfilment, the continuous extension of the frontiers
of freedom.
"The acid test of the legitimacy of the programmes
we elaborate, the government institutions we create,
the legislation we adopt, must be whether they serve
these objectives."
Sometimes it is difficult fully to understand the fact
that we are barely ten years away from a time in the
lives of our people when our collective future was very
uncertain. Some among us will hardly remember that even
as we met in this House to listen to President Mandela
deliver the State of the Nation Address, fellow South
Africans were continuing to die as a result of political
violence.
For instance, the South Africa Yearbook 1995 reported
that "Although political violence declined during
and after the April 1994 election, extensive criminal
and political violence continued to persist in the country,
especially in KwaZulu-Natal and on the East Rand of
the Gauteng Province." Daily fatalities from political
violence still numbered six in May and just under four
in June.
Others among us will have forgotten that as we sat
here listening to that first State of the Nation Address,
the commitment made by President Mandela, to ensure
"the expansion of the frontiers of human fulfilment"
was to many little more than a promise they appreciated
but could not fully comprehend.
The question had still to be answered as to where the
resources would be found to finance the expansion of
the frontiers of human fulfilment, of which President
Mandela spoke. In the decade up to the middle of 1993,
the average annual GDP growth rate was less than 1 per
cent. During the first half of 1995, the annualised
growth rate stood at 1 per cent. For the fiscal year
1994/95, the budget deficit stood at 6.6 per cent. Consumer
price inflation in the 12 months up to April 1995 was
11 per cent.
By the end of that year, the interest rate stood at
13 per cent. On 14th of February, 1995, the then Governor
of the Reserve Bank, Chris Stals, said: "A more
restrictive monetary policy is needed to make sure that
the current economic upswing will not be of the boom-bust
nature of earlier times, but will be more durable."
On the 29th of June of the same year, Mr Stals sounded
an ominous note when he said: "Underlying inflationary
pressures are undoubtedly increasing again in the South
African economy
If left unchecked, this trend will
eventually force the abortion of the welcome improvement
over the past year in real economic growth, and will
frustrate the objectives of the Reconstruction and Development
Programme."
On the 28th of August, 1995, Chris Stals said: "Basically,
the South African economy is not competitive enough
to enable it to maintain an economic growth rate at
a level high enough for its own needs. More drastic
economic restructuring will be needed to lift the growth
potential of the economy to the desired and more acceptable
level."
In the same speech, he expressed the uncertainties of
the day when he said: "Economic growth will, in
the final situation, be dependent not only on an improvement
in the economic structure of the country, but even more
so on political and social stability. In the final situation,
all business decisions are influenced by the overall
environment in which they are taken."
On the 12th of October, 1995, he said that the country
was still faced with some political uncertainties, which
impacted on our economic prospects. He said:
"At this stage
the country still has to face:
· the first fully democratic election for local
authorities scheduled to take place in early November
this year;
· a more clear definition of the political, economic
and financial relationships between the central government
and regional governments; and,
· the drafting of a final Constitution to replace
the current Interim Constitution before the next general
election can take place."
Since time immemorial, the overwhelming majority of
our people had known nothing but despair. They knew
this as an incontestable matter of fact that tomorrow
would not be better than yesterday; it was also fixed
and given that the following day would be worse. But
then, April 27, 1994 came and things changed radically
and irrevocably for all South Africans.
For the black, and especially African majority, suddenly
a new dawn broke. After these masses had cast their
votes, they still had nothing in their stomachs and
their pockets. They walked away from the polling booths
to return to their miserable shacks, their children
made listless by hunger and the brutish thugs who prowled
the unlit dirt roads of the shantytown, ready to pounce
on their victims with no sense of mercy.
They walked the long distances to return to their homesteads
of rural squalor, to the mornings of the drudgery of
women with buckets full of dirty river water on their
heads, to the daily diet of mealie-pap, to the dark,
still and menacing nights broken only by the weak flickering
light of the paraffin lamp and the dying embers of an
exhausted fire on the humble hearth.
But yet they had a spring in their step because they
knew that a new dawn had proclaimed the coming of a
bright day. Though their hands carried the emptiness
to which generations of deprivation had accustomed them,
their hearts and minds were fired up by a new-found
sense of hope and the attendant feeling of dread lest
that hope turned out to be but a mere mirage, the false
creation of a wish that was intensely felt.
The experience of many decades had taught us to understand
that the black poor of our country valued a just peace
as deeply as they valued their lives. It had taught
us that their sense of pride in themselves as human
beings made it impossible for them to join in a mass
slaughter of other human beings, even to satisfy the
base instincts of vengeance and retaliating to settle
scores.
Over many decades, we had seen that these masses would
always refuse to turn racist simply because they were
subjected to cruel, racist rule. When a hero in their
midst, Chris Hani, was murdered in cold blood, they
refused to fulfil the prophesy of the poet that the
blood-dimmed tide would be loosed, to drown the ceremony
of innocence.
They stood in the voting lines side by side with those
who had been their oppressors, and never uttered a single
word of anger, nor jostled their white person next to
them because they felt that their time to become the
new masters had come. Black and white stood together,
acting voluntarily together for the first time in our
history, together to give birth to a new social order
that would serve the interests of all our people.
When the leadership of these black masses said to them
that, despite the fact that their children, their brothers
and sisters, their mothers and fathers had been slaughtered
in Boipatong and elsewhere on the many killing fields
in our country, they as leaders, were obliged to pursue
the peaceful advance to a just peace, these masses agreed
and urged that the dialogue chamber should bring to
the nation the gift of a just peace.
They thought and acted as they did because they knew
better than those who had been certified as learned,
that it was only a just peace that would end their despair
and bring into their lives the sense of hope that would
make it possible for them to bear the pain of hunger,
until the day came when they would no longer go hungry.
It was for these reasons that they had fought, ready
to sacrifice their lives, for the just peace and the
sense of hope they saw as the necessary condition for
their survival as human beings. Those among us who are
fond of threatening violence to promote their causes,
should learn to know this, that the masses of our people
are ready and willing to sacrifice once again, to defend
the peace and keep alive the sense of hope that enables
them to behave in mysteriously miraculous ways.
I must presume that many of us read the moving article
by Rian Malan published last Sunday. He says:
"On this day, 10 years ago, I was hiding gold
coins under floorboards and trying to get my hands on
a gun before the balloon went up. As a white South African,
I was fully expecting war as right-wing boers and Bantustan
chiefs conspired to annihilate Nelson Mandela's people
and the ANC leader squabbled with President F.W. de
Klerk over who deserved more credit for their shared
Nobel Peace Prize.
"In my view, peace would never come. There was
too much history, too much pain and anger
"Ten days before the predicted apocalypse, there
came a miraculous reprieve. A reverent quiet settled
upon the nation, and the election passed off entirely
peacefully
"I set out to discredit the outcome. The peace
is illusory, I sneered; anarchy is still coming. Look
at crime! Rape! Guns and mayhem! Decaying cities! Abandoned
factories! Incompetence and corruption everywhere! When
our new rulers dismissed such criticism as racist, I
said, fine: if that's the price one pays for speaking
the truth, I will consider myself honoured and continue.
Hospitals don't work anymore! Surly nurses! Drunken
teachers! A civil service where the phones just ring!"
He ends his personal testimony with these words:
"It is infinitely worse to receive than to give,
especially if one is arrogant and the gift is something
big, like mercy or forgiveness. The gift of 1994 was
so huge that I choked on it and couldn't say thank you.
But I am not too proud to say it now."
I have borrowed these honest words from Rian Malan
to tell the painful story that strangely, but not surprisingly,
because of April 27, 1994, our Freedom Day, despair
had changed its domicile. Now, because freedom for all
our people had become the defining feature of our reality,
those who had rejoiced in the supremacy of their race
opened their doors to despair.
Those who had had despair imposed upon them, rejoiced
in the triumph of the angel of hope, that brought a
new life of a shared neighbourhood to all our people,
no longer fractured by high, fortified walls of hatred,
fear and mistrust.
But this too, the transference of the burden of despair,
became part of the reality that the new democratic order
had to address. It became part of what had to be done
to achieve what President Mandela foretold, when he
spoke from this podium about the expansion of the frontiers
of human fulfilment, and the continuous extension of
the frontiers of freedom.
Almost ten years after its liberation from white minority
rule, our country still faces many challenges. Many
of our people are unemployed. Many of our people continue
to live in poverty. Violence against the person in all
its forms continues to plague especially those sections
of our population that are poor and live in socially
depressed communities.
The burden of disease impacting on our people, including
AIDS, continues to be a matter of serious concern, as
do issues that relate to the fact that many of our people,
including the youth, lack the education and skills that
our economy and society needs.
There are still many of our people who live in shacks
and others who have no access to clean water, proper
sanitation and electricity. Imbalances and inequalities
that impact on fellow citizens on the basis of race,
gender and geographic dispersal continue to persist.
In the 1994 State of the Nation Address to which we
have referred, President Mandela said: "We have
learnt the lesson that our blemishes speak of what all
humanity should not do." The point we have sought
to make in the last few minutes in referring to the
challenges we continue to face, is that the blemishes
of which Madiba spoke continue to disfigure our society.
We have not as yet eradicated the cruel legacy we inherited
that he characterised as the blemishes that all humanity
should avoid.
However, despite this reality, the answer we have given
and will continue to give to the question whether we
have made progress with regard to the fundamental tasks
of which Nelson Mandela spoke on the 24th of May, 1994,
is a resounding - yes!
Together with all other objective observers of social
development, we have always known that our country's
blemishes produced by more than three centuries of colonialism
and apartheid could not be removed in one decade. Nevertheless,
we have no hesitation in saying that we have made great
advances to ensure the expansion of the frontiers of
human fulfilment, and the continuous extension of the
frontiers of the freedom, of which Nelson Mandela spoke
almost ten years ago.
The statistics and concrete information of which the
Honourable Members, the distinguished guests and our
country are familiar, tell the real story of what we
have done and had to do to create the people-centred
society that has been central to the work of both our
first and second democratic governments.
This real story is that before 1994:
· Estimates of the housing backlog ranged from
1,4 million to 3 million units and people living in
shacks were between 5 million to 7,7 million;
· 60% of the population of South Africa had no
access to electricity;
· 16 million people had no access to clean water;
· 22 million people did not have access to adequate
sanitation;
· There were 17 fragmented departments of education
with a disproportionate allocation of resources to white
schools;
· There was 70% secondary school enrolment.
A decade later:
· About 1,9 million housing subsidies have been
provided and 1,6 million houses built for the poor of
our country;
· More than 70% households have been electrified;
· 9 million additional people now have access
to clean water;
· 63% of households now have access to sanitation;
· There has been a successful formation of an
integrated education system, even though there is a
clear need for more resource allocation and capacity
building in poor areas;
· Nutrition and early childhood interventions
have been established to improve better results for
children from poor backgrounds;
· By 2002 secondary school enrolment had reached
85%.
Again, the real story of our country tells us that
10 years ago:
· South Africa was in its twenty-first year
of double digit inflation;
· The country had had three years of negative
growth - the economy and the wealth of the nation was
shrinking;
· South Africa had experienced more than a decade
of declining growth per capita - the average income
of South Africans had been falling since the 1980's
and the overall wealth of the country declined by nearly
one-third;
· From 1985 to the middle of 1994, total net
capital outflow from our country amounted to almost
R50 billion.
· Government had run up a budget deficit equal
to 9,5% of the GDP, including the debt of the so-called
independent homelands;
· The net open forward position of the South
African Reserve Bank was $25 billion in deficit;
· Public sector debt was equal to 64% of the
GDP.
It is this unhealthy economic situation that led Chris
Stals to make the observations to which we have referred.
A decade later:
· Inflation is down to four percent if you use
the CPIX or less than one percent if you use the CPI
index;
· The country is experiencing the longest period
of consistent positive growth since the GDP was properly
recorded in the 1940's;
· The net open forward position of the South
African Reserve Bank rose to $4,7 billion in surplus
by the end of last year;
· Public sector debt has come down to less than
50% of GDP.
Since 2001, we have engaged our people in the various
provinces in the process of Iimbizo, the 7th and latest
being KwaZulu-Natal. By this means we have sought to
deepen the interaction between the national government
and the masses of our people. The national ministers,
provincial and local governments have also carried out
their own imbizo campaigns for the same reason.
We have just presented some of the statistics that
tell part of the story of our progress during our first
decade of freedom towards the creation of a people-centred
society. The imbizo process has given us an excellent
opportunity to hear directly from the people what these
figures mean to them.
It has been truly inspiring to hear directly from the
people as they expressed their concerns, communicated
their aspirations and made suggestions of what needs
to be done to take us further forward to meet the needs
of the people.
These masses, essentially, but not exclusively, the
poor of our country, invariably speak well of the improvements
to the quality of their lives that have occurred during
the last ten years. They talk about the increased access
to better housing, water, electricity, roads, land,
school meals and social grants.
But these masses are equally insistent about the need
for all of us to act together to address the outstanding
challenges. Regularly they raise the issue of the need
for jobs and the need to provide appropriate training
especially for the youth to ensure that on completing
their school years, they are able to find employment.
Like others of our rural communities, rural KwaZulu-Natal
called on the government to help with the provision
of tractors and seed to assist the people to till the
soil.
The people have not hesitated to make frank and critical
assessments especially of the quality of service delivery
in their localities, as well as the performance of the
municipal councillors. They also boldly raise other
questions, such as crime, health matters and instances
of perceived or actual corruption and malpractice.
On Thursday last week we were at Msinga in KwaZulu-Natal.
One of the participants at the imbizo complained that
though people had cellular phones in this rural and
mountainous area, they could not use them. He explained
that this was because the cellular phone companies had
not erected the necessary masts.
The staff of the President's Office immediately contacted
Vodacom and informed them of the complaint made at the
imbizo. I am very pleased to say that two days ago one
of the local leaders at Msinga called to say that the
service providers had come to the area within hours,
to attend to the complaint. In less than a week, the
people of Msinga had been given the possibility to communicate
among themselves and with the rest of the country and
the world by telephone.
We held our last imbizo in KwaZulu-Natal at Gamalakhe
near Harding, in the Ugu District Municipality. At this
imbizo a local resident drew our attention to instances
of corruption in our prisons. He then gave us details
of his experience of this corruption.
We have passed these details to Judge Thabane Jali
who heads the Judicial Commission investigating malpractices
in our correctional system, and who, I understand, is
also present in the Chamber. Again I am pleased to say
that within days of receiving this information, Judge
Jali has already instructed people assisting him in
KwaZulu-Natal to meet the complainant and follow up
on his allegations.
I mention these two instances because they demonstrate
both the positive response by the public and private
sectors to the call we have made for all our people
to work together in the spirit of letsema to tackle
the common problems facing our country and people, and
the fact that the government takes the imbizo process
very seriously and tries at all times to respond to
the issues raised by the people, within the context
of availability of resources.
Again, I mention this because some in our country,
for reasons best known to themselves, seem very keen
to criticise the government's response to the iimbizo
on false grounds. This happened recently when ill-informed
allegations were made about commitments we made to the
people of Bekkersdal in Gauteng.
I would like to take this opportunity to thank both
Vodacom and Judge Jali and express the hope that others
will follow the excellent example they have set for
all of us.
But perhaps more striking than everything we have said
so far about the imbizo process has been the palpable
sense of confidence among the people in a better future
for their country and themselves. This goes together
with the complete absence of any sense of distance or
alienation from the government they elected.
These masses attend the iimbizo confident of their
right to communicate directly with their government
and certain that the process presents them with a genuine
opportunity to have their concerns addressed. I have
listened to our people boldly expressing their views
even in areas that not so long ago were paralysed by
the fear that to speak one's mind was to invite death.
This has said to me that we have moved forward most
significantly towards the realisation of the objective
presented by President Mandela when he committed us
to the continuous extension of the frontiers of freedom.
Most of us present here will remember that not so long
ago, the government and the state were to the masses
of our people Public Enemy No 1. Then, some thought
that to advance the demand that the people shall govern
was mere rhetoric of politicians hungry for power. Institutions
that were the cause of our despair have today become
repositories of hope.
When we presented the State of the Nation Address to
our second democratic parliament on June 25, 1999, we
spoke of "the enormity of the challenge we face
to succeed in creating the caring society we have spoken
of."
We said that "For this reason this is not a task
that can be carried out by the government alone. The
challenge of the reconstruction and development of our
society into one which guarantees human dignity, faces
the entirety of our people.
"It is a national task that calls for the mobilisation
of the whole nation into united people's action, into
a partnership with government for progressive change
and a better life for all, for a common effort to build
a winning nation.
"The Government therefore commits itself to work
in a close partnership with all our people, inspired
by the call - Faranani! -to ensure that we draw on the
energy and genius of the nation to give birth to something
that will surely be new, good and beautiful."
The masses of our people, individuals and institutions,
among whom today we cited Judge Thabane Jali and Vodacom,
are responding magnificently to the call we repeat today
and will repeat in future - Faranani!
In a few months time, we will return to these Chambers
to inaugurate our third democratic parliament. Whoever
will be President then will deliver yet another State
of the Nation Address. That will provide an opportunity
to address the more detailed issues on the government's
programme as well as matters that will be covered in
the Budget Speech and the Medium Term Revenue and Expenditure
perspectives that will support the government's actions
as our country begins its Second Decade of Democracy.
Today we present the longer-term perspective for the
continued transformation of our country that will and
must be based on our country's achievements during its
First Decade of Liberation. In this regard, we would
like to restate this matter unequivocally that the policies
we required to translate what President Mandela said
in May 1994 are firmly in place.
Accordingly, we do not foresee that there will be any
need for new and major policy initiatives. The task
we will all face during the decade ahead will be to
ensure the vigorous implementation of these policies,
to create the winning people-centred society of which
Nelson Mandela spoke.
If I may say this, creating that winning nation must
include greatly improved organisation, management and
performance by all the national teams, Bafana Bafana,
the Springboks, the Proteas and our athletics teams.
The work we will do must move our country forward decisively
towards the eradication of poverty and underdevelopment
in our country. We must achieve further and visible
advances with regard to the improvement of the quality
of life of all our people, affecting many critical areas
of social existence, including health, safety and security,
moral regeneration, social cohesion, opening the doors
of culture and education to all, and sport and recreation.
We will have to score new victories in the struggle
to create an egalitarian society, successfully addressing
the important challenges of persisting racial and gender
inequalities, the disempowerment of our youth and people
with disabilities, and proper care for children and
the elderly.
We must ensure that our country and people are properly
positioned within the global community of nations, fully
understanding and responding to the diverse political,
economic, social and technological challenges of the
process of globalisation. In this regard, we will have
to persist in the work we are doing towards the regeneration
of Africa and the construction of a new and more equitable
world order.
The advances we must record demand that we ensure that
the public sector discharges its responsibilities to
our people as a critical player in the process of the
growth, reconstruction and development of our country.
In particular this will require that we further strengthen
our system of local government and ensure that the system
of traditional government plays the role ascribed to
it in our Constitution and legislation.
We must achieve greater progress with regard to the
integration of our system of governance, achieving seamless
cooperation both within and among all spheres of government.
At the same time, we must further consolidate the practice
of creating public-private partnerships and building
government-civil society cooperation, to ensure that
we utilise our collective capacities to give further
impetus to the overall development and transformation
of our country.
With regard to the public sector, I would like to take
this opportunity to salute and thank especially the
cadre of public sector managers and leaders that has
emerged over the last decade, many of whom are with
us in this Chamber. The work they have done and are
doing has placed them at the very forefront of the historic
processes that are giving birth to a new society.
I have no hesitation in saying that they stand tall
even among their counterparts elsewhere in the world.
We will continue to rely on them to lead the state and
parastatal machinery as we break new ground towards
the creation of a people-centred society.
As we enter our Second Decade of Liberation, we must
continue to build the sense of national unity, united
action and the new patriotism that have manifested themselves
in our people's response to the calls - faranani, masakhane,
letsema and vuk'uzenzele! Working together, in conditions
of entrenched democracy, respect for human rights, peace
and stability, we must continue to produce the Good
News that has made our country a place of hope even
for other people in the rest of the world.
We already have the policies and programmes that will
enable us to translate all the strategic objectives
we have just spoken of into a material factor in achieving
the goals of the expansion of the frontiers of human
fulfilment, and the continuous extension of the frontiers
of the freedom, of which Nelson Mandela spoke a decade
ago.
We have already identified the challenges posed by
the Second Economy, which economy constitutes the structural
manifestation of poverty, underdevelopment and marginalisation
in our country. We must therefore move vigorously to
implement all the programmes on which we have agreed
to ensure that we extricate all our people from the
social conditions that spell loss of human dignity.
These include the urban renewal and rural development
programmes, the expanded public works programme, the
expansion of micro-credit and small enterprises, the
provision of adult basic education and modern skills,
and the development of the social and economic infrastructure.
This will also help us enormously to achieve the goals
of non-racism, non-sexism, balanced urban-rural development
and social cohesion.
At the same time, we must continue to focus on the
growth, development and modernisation of the First Economy,
to generate the resources without which it will not
be possible to confront the challenges of the Second
Economy. This is going to require further and significant
infrastructure investments, skills development, scientific
and technological research, development and expansion
of the knowledge economy, growth and modernisation of
the manufacturing and service sectors, deeper penetration
of the global markets by our products, increasing our
savings levels, black economic empowerment and the further
expansion of small and medium enterprises.
We will have to focus on the implementation of the
measures we have identified to ensure that we achieve
better value for the money spent on social delivery.
Among other things, our successes with regard to both
the First and Second Economies must create the conditions
for us to reduce the numbers of our people dependent
on social grants.
This will increase the resources available for social
expenditures focused on investing in our people further
to empower them to become better activists for reconstruction
and development, away from trapping large numbers within
the paradigm of poverty alleviation.
We will also have to ensure that the institutions and
processes we have established and instituted to give
effect to the Constitutional and practical requirement
for cooperative governance function effectively. We
must also focus especially on raising skills levels
within the public sector, and ensure its managerial
and technological modernisation, driven by a clear understanding
of the developmental tasks of our democratic state.
We must be impatient with those in the public service
who see themselves as pen-pushers and guardians of rubber
stamps, thieves intent on self-enrichment, bureaucrats
who think they have a right to ignore the vision of
Batho Pele, who come to work as late as possible, work
as little as possible and knock off as early as possible.
We have also established institutions and processes
to give effect to our shared desire to mobilise all
our people voluntarily to act together to achieve the
tasks of reconstruction and development. Quite clearly,
the sustained calls for all of us to respond to a new
patriotism have struck a chord among all our people,
black and white, with the exception of the most selfish
and self-centred among us.
Needless to say, the further translation of the vision
of faranani into a powerful motive force for progressive
change can only be achieved within the context of the
democratic, popular and open participation of all our
people, black and white, in determining our shared destiny.
In this regard, I notice that the traditional doomsayers
are back at their favourite sport of trying to frighten
us with scarecrows. Seemingly, these have not achieved
the maturity of a Rian Malan. Instead, they are painting
monstrous pictures of impending violence during the
forthcoming elections and radical constitutional amendments
after the elections, by the very people who drafted
this constitution.
The masses of our people sacrificed everything to achieve
peace and democracy for all of us. These masses will
not allow that desperate politicians do desperate things
to win or retain power for themselves.
We are all perfectly aware of the tasks of the African
Renaissance, or should be. Together we have worked very
hard to ensure that we make the necessary progress with
the challenges of the regeneration of our continent.
At the same time, we will still have to contribute as
much as we can to the common African effort to strengthen
such institutions as SADC, the African Union and NEPAD
and help ensure that they discharge their responsibilities
effectively. We must do this work driven by the conviction
that we will not allow anything to stand in our way
towards the building of a peaceful, democratic and prosperous
Africa.
In this regard, I would like to pay tribute to the
officers, men and women of the South African National
Defence Force who are doing sterling work to help advance
the cause of democracy and peace in various parts of
our continent. The new equipment they are receiving
will give them increased capacity to meet this and other
obligations.
Other regions of the world, including the most developed
countries, are hard at work to change their neighbourhoods
for the better. We can only ignore or minimise this
task with regard to ourselves at our own peril, driven
by a lingering sense that we are not an integral part
of the African continent. This we will no do.
All major current international developments emphasise
the importance of constructing a new world order that
is more equitable and responsive to the needs of the
poor of the world, who constitute the overwhelming majority
of humanity.
The Iraq affair, the continuing and painful conflict
involving Israel and Palestine, the WTO failure at Cancun,
the seeming paralysis around issues relating to the
democratisation of the UN and other multilateral institutions,
the dissonance between the process of globalisation
and a multilateral system of governance, the issue of
global terrorism - all these matters underline the importance
of moving forward significantly towards the building
of the new world order that has been spoken of, for
a long time already.
We must stand ready to play our part in addressing
this urgent challenge, in our own interest.
During our Second Decade of Liberation, we will ensure
that Freedom Park is built and completed, together with
other legacy projects that celebrate our humanity, our
commitment to the all-round emancipation of all human
beings, and human dignity.
A decade ago, Nelson Mandela said "The acid test
of the legitimacy of the programmes we elaborate, the
government institutions we create, the legislation we
adopt, must be whether
" they help to create
a people-centred society, the expansion of the frontiers
of human fulfilment, and the continuous extension of
the frontiers of freedom.
As we progress to the celebration of our First Decade
of Liberation and Democracy, I trust that the national,
provincial and local legislatures will give themselves
the opportunity to answer the question whether they
have passed this acid test.
What I will say is that during this First Decade, we
have made great progress towards the achievement of
the goals we enunciated as we took the first steps as
a newborn child. We also laid a strong foundation to
score even greater advances during the exciting and
challenging Second Decade ahead of us, as a people united
to build a better South Africa and a better world.
When he contemplated the advent of the end of the 20th
century and the beginning of the 21st, the Chilean poet,
Pablo Neruda, wrote:
"The era's beginning: are these ruined shacks,
these poor schools, these people still in rags and tatters,
this cloddish insecurity of my poor families,
is all this the day? The century's beginning, the golden
door?"
("The Men").
We have it within our power to build our own golden
door into our Second Decade of Liberation. We have demonstrated
that we have the will to answer the question in the
affirmative, and say - yes, this is the day!
Thank you.
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