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Date
: 22/11/2002
Source: Ministry of Home Affairs
Title: Buthelezi: Opening of Inkosi Albert Lutuli Central
Hospital
OFFICIAL OPENING OF THE INKOSI ALBERT LUTULI CENTRAL HOSPITAL
CONGRATULATORY MESSAGE AND PRESENTATION OF HIS MAJESTY THE KING OF
THE ZULU NATION, BY MANGOSUTHU BUTHELEZI, MP, MINISTER OF HOME
AFFAIRS AND PRESIDENT, INKATHA FREEDOM PARTY, Durban, 22 November
2002
The Director of Programmes;
His Majesty the King of the Zulu Nation and members of the Zulu
Royal family;
Dr Albertina Luthuli and members of the Luthuli family;
His Excellency Deputy President J.G. Zuma, Deputy President of the
Republic of South Africa;
amaKhosi present;
Your Excellencies and members of the Diplomatic Corps;
The Honourable Dr LPHM Mtshali, Premier of the Province of
KwaZulu-Natal;
The Honourable Dr ME Tshabalala-Msimang, National Minister of
Health;
The Honourable Dr NC Zuma, Minister of Foreign Affairs;
The Hon Mr Reiner Schoeman, Deputy Minister of Health;
The Honourable Dr ZL Mkhize, provincial Minister of Health;
Other Honourable Ministers present;
His Worship the Mayor of Durban Metro and other Mayors and
Councillors;
The Chancellor and Vice-Chancellor of the University; Dr Mgojo and
other religious leaders of all faiths who are present;
Leaders of business;
Distinguished guests,
Medical and surgical staff of the hospital.
We have gathered here today to celebrate a momentous achievement
for our Province and for the whole of South Africa. The official
opening of the Inkosi Albert Lutuli Central Hospital marks the
shift away from several old paradigms into the new paradigms of the
future. Most evident in such shift is the fact that this new
hospital is fully digitised and is indeed the first "paperless"
hospital in Africa. The quality of medical care is indeed
increasingly reliant on the level of technology with which it is
equipped. The modern medical equipment of this hospital places it
at the forefront of quality health-care.
I have always advocated the need to leapfrog from the past into the
future by means of making substantial and courageous investments in
new technology. The fact that resources have been allocated to high
level technology in this hospital gives me confidence that there
begins to be recognition that we can do more and we can do better
through greater reliance on technology. Even when confronted with
the need to provide for a large number of people who are still in
desperate need of primary, secondary and tertiary health-care,
reliance on advanced technology can expedite service
delivery.
This hospital also reflects the shift into another paradigm, which
I have been advocating for several years, which is that of
privatisation, albeit in the political jargon it is referred to as
a public-private partnership. All non-core functions of this
hospital have been privatised, which is a step in the right
direction. As we walk down this road, I am sure that the
realisation will increasingly develop that one can also privatise
the rendering of medical services in hospitals of this nature
without the hospital becoming any less of a government function and
responsibility. When I began talking about privatisation, people
were not attuned to this paradigm. But then they embraced it in the
form of public-private partnership. I hope that further progress
will realise the wisdom of identifying the role of government as
that of a general contractor and supervisor of the delivery of
services such as medical care, rather than being responsible for
them directly. Therefore, I am pleased that the way service
delivery has been structured in this hospital is a major step
towards a new era in health-care delivered through the initiatives
of our Province.
However, in expressing my congratulatory message on this memorable
occasion, I cannot be oblivious to the fact that this hospital
carries the name of Inkosi Albert Lutuli, and that therefore it is
indeed also a monument to his memory. I feel compelled on an
occasion like this to say a few words to pay tribute to Inkosi
Albert Lutuli, which may provide a better understanding of the
relevance I ascribe to the fact that this hospital was named after
him. In fact, Inkosi Albert Lutuli was one of the greatest leaders
of the 20th century whose legacy must be better understood,
especially by young people. He was a champion of non-violence,
self-help, self-reliance and human dignity. He forged the African
National Congress within these values, which were then
unfortunately abandoned when the armed struggle was chosen as a
better option for the liberation struggle.
Inkosi Lutuli was my foremost mentor and I abided by his philosophy
and teachings throughout my life, and throughout my life I have
benefited from them because time and again they were proven right.
I have always felt that I was very privileged to spend as much time
as I did with him. Even when he was banned I used to go and visit
him, seeking his guidance to solve the many problems, which
developed in my relationship with the Government of Pretoria.
Giving full proof of what he meant by self-help and self-reliance,
whenever I asked for his advice on matters of this nature, he never
told me what to do, but he kept saying that I had to decide by
myself, following my heart and that he trusted my manhood (ubudoda
bakho).
He taught me to trust myself and he kept advising me to stand my
ground even if I were to find myself alone. He encouraged me to
stand up to Pretoria with the strength of somebody who knew that he
could stand before God with a clear conscience, and he gave me the
inspiration to be unafraid of standing alone against the political
beliefs of the time or the winds of political correctness. It was
for me the greatest of all the honours I have ever received to be
asked by the Lutuli family and the ANC to deliver the oration at
his funeral, and to then be asked by Dr Conco and the Lutuli
Foundation to assist with the unveiling of the tombstone and to
deliver the main address on that occasion. I still remember that it
was the 23rd of July 1972 and in looking back on the address that I
gave on that occasion, I can see how much of what was said then
still applies to the challenges confronting South Africa. I wish to
quote from that speech what I said then:
"Whatever catastrophe overtakes South Africa, whether it is now or
in the distant future, South Africa will not escape the harsh
judgement that things will have reached a bad pass because what
Chief Lutuli stood for was ignored for the sake of political
expediency."
I also had the great honour of being asked by Inkosi Lutuli's
widow, Mrs Nokukhanya Luthuli, to accompany her to Maseru to
receive the OAU posthumous award bestowed upon Inkosi Albert
Lutuli. It was handed over by the King of Lesotho, King Moshoeshoe
II, and I had the opportunity to pass the vote of thanks on that
occasion on behalf of Mama Luthuli. On that occasion, as I had done
before, I highlighted how Inkosi Lutuli abandoned a rewarding
teaching position at a training college to answer the call of
serving his people as an Inkosi of Amakholwa Tribe of Groutville,
which meant choosing a life of penury. He was a highly educated man
who did not consider embracing the institution of traditional
leadership as a step down. He was not a hereditary Inkosi, but was
chosen by his people. His life experience should be studied by
those who support the view that amaKhosi have little to contribute
to the development of the new South Africa.
This Nobel Prize Laureate was proud to serve his people as a
traditional leader. When he was ordered by Pretoria to consider
whether he should not step down from his position as traditional
leader to avoid any conflict with his position as President of the
ANC, he indicated that such option was just not possible because he
had been chosen by the people and it was not for him to relinquish
his position. He was living proof that traditional leadership and
modernity need not be a contradiction in terms. He also played a
major role in the life of our nation and together with my late
father, Inkosi Mathole Buthelezi, and other amaKhosi of the
Kingdom, they attended Imbizos which my late uncle, Prince Mshiyeni
ka Dinuzulu as Regent, called from time to time at KwaSokesimbone
Royal Residence.
After the apartheid regime banned him and confined him to
Groutville, I went to see him with Prince Gideon ka Mnyayiza, and
on a few occasions he and Mrs Luthuli visited me at KwaPhindangene.
On more than one occasion the late Dr Wilson Zamindlela Conco and
his wife, Mrs Shimi Conco, drove them to my home. On those
occasions, Dr Conco would park his car in my garage and my car was
parked outside, because there were spies everywhere. Inkosi Lutuli
and his spouse would rest during the day and in the evening we
would then sit up and talk politics.
It is therefore quite appropriate that I present His Majesty the
King today as even in those days, Inkosi Lutuli asked me as the
Traditional Prime Minister of the King's father, King Bhekuzulu
Cyprian ka Solomon, to arrange appointments for him with the King
so that he could stop at the King's Khethomthandayo Royal Residence
to pay his respects to the King. He was very close to the Royal
House, which underscores how the Royal House and the Kingdom of
KwaZulu have always been part and parcel of our struggle for
liberation.
In fact, it is no under-statement to say that the struggle for
liberation began within the fight of the Zulu Nation for its
survival and the struggle that the Zulu Kings and amaKhosi waged to
maintain the integrity of our Kingdom and to emancipate our people.
Most of our Kings suffered and paid the price to promote the
liberation of their people and to serve South Africa. King
Cetshwayo was the first King who can rightly be defined as a true
South African. His regiments were defeated on the plains of Ulundi
on the 4th of July 1879 after fiercely battling to preserve the
integrity of our Kingdom. He travelled to England for discussions
with Queen Victoria in an effort to preserve the territorial
integrity of his Kingdom. We knew how unsatisfactory the settlement
by Lord Kimberley, the then Secretary for Colonies, was. Prior to
going to England, King Cetshwayo had been a prisoner at the Castle
in Cape Town and later on at the farm Oude Moulen. We knew of how
he was attacked shortly after his return to Ulundi, as a result of
which he died as a fugitive in Eshowe. That is why he was buried in
Nkandla Forest. King Cetshwayo was a great African patriot who sent
money to King Sekhukhuni to assist him in his fight.
King Cetshwayo's son and heir, King Dinuzulu, suffered as much as
his illustrious father for the Zulu cause. We know that he was
exiled on the Island of St Helena where the King's grandfather,
King Solomon, and his brother Prince Mshiyeni were born. On his
return from St Helena King Dinuzulu was implicated in the Bambatha
Rebellion in 1906 and was convicted in Greytown for treason and
sentenced to life imprisonment. When his friend General Louis Botha
became the first Prime Minister of South Africa, he had him
released from Newcastle and exiled to Uitkyk Farm in Middleburg in
the then Transvaal where he died in 1913.
His son, King Solomon, would have to carry the legacy of unifying a
people who had been artificially divided by those who were
determined to dismember the Zulu Kingdom, using the old and vicious
tactic of divide et impera. King Solomon was a very wise man and
his wisdom imbued the life of Inkosi Albert Lutuli as well as the
lives of many of those who followed him. His son, King Bhekuzulu
Cyprian, suffered many humiliations, the memory of which still bear
very painfully in my heart to this day I still have a vivid image
of my having to restrain tears when I often saw him having to
respond to many orders he used to receive from Pretoria, which he
would accept with a sombre sense of dignity, knowing well that
albeit we had lost our power, we had maintained the greater moral
courage and the high moral ground over our oppressors.
King Bhekuzulu Cyprian ka Solomon was the father of our present
King, who is with us today. Our King carries the legacy of our
struggle for liberation. The struggle for liberation runs in his
veins. He carries the legacy of these great and heroic ascendants
and holds the hopes of all our people for a life, which will
finally liberate them from the enslavement of poverty,
malnutrition, unemployment and ignorance for lack of education,
knowledge and exposure. For this reason, as we celebrate this
important achievement in our struggle for liberation which has been
dedicated to the memory of Inkosi Albert Mvumbi Lutuli, it is
proper and fitting that our King addresses us and gives us his
special message on this very special occasion. Therefore, with
these few words it is a great honour for me, as the Traditional
Prime Minister of the Zulu Kingdom, to introduce His Majesty the
King of the Zulu Nation and to invite him to address us.
Bayede!
Issued by Ministry of Home Affairs
22 November 2002