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Date
: 15/12/2006
Source: Department of Foreign Affairs
Title: Dlamini Zuma: Foreign Affairs year end function
Address by Minister Nkosazana Dlamini Zuma at the Department of
Foreign Affairs' year end function
The Programme director
The Director-General is not here
Deputy Minister
Deputy Director-General's
Leadership of the department
All members of the department
It is a pleasure to be here today; at certain times we are not able
to share this end of year day. A few times I have been away when
you were having this function.
Today, I am very happy that we are able to come together, just to
celebrate the end of year because it has been a very hard year. I
know that all of you have worked very hard in your different
responsibilities and we can without a fear of contradiction say we
have done well this year, and hopefully we will do better next
year.
I would really like to thank every single one of you but to also
say that the work you are doing in many ways is a contribution to
what we have all committed ourselves in this country, a better life
for all. A better life for all starts with you, whatever
responsibilities you are given you have to do them well. We have to
all go to bed every day and be able to say, I have done my best
today. In that way you are contributing to a better life for
all.
Of course we have also as this department the responsibility to
contributing towards a better world and that means in whatever we
do; our foreign policy and how we implement it has to contribute to
a better world and we must say this year we have done well.
Peace and security
One of the highlights of our work has been the elections, the
democratic elections in the Congo. The Congo has not had democratic
elections for more than forty years but South Africa has
consistently been trying and contributing to a democratic
dispensation in the Congo.
We all recall a time when our former President Mandela, together
with his then Deputy President who is President now spent time on
the Antaniqua, that boat or ship ,where they spent time talking to
Mabuto, talking to Kabila Senior, Laurent Kabila. It has been the
long time, almost 10 years since that time. But we know that this
kind of work is not the kind of work where you plant a seed today
and eat the olives tomorrow.
The person, who usually plants olive trees in this department, is
not necessarily the one who will have it but the important thing is
to keep on planting the olive trees. So that there are people in
future who will be able to reap them. So our former president
started the process. It ended with the democratic elections and
there are a lot of people in this department, who in one way or
another have contributed to that process. We know that we have
contributed to a better life in the Congo just as we contributed to
a better life in Burundi.
All the efforts that we are making are in a small way consistently
contributing to a better life, so we should in that case
congratulate ourselves for the contribution in the Congo and
Burundi because South Africa played a very critical role in both of
these countries.
I think the defining moment of the Congolese process started on the
boat Antaniqua so this department has done well there. But there
are lots of other things that this department has done in various
parts of the world, all contributing to South Africa being seen as
an important player. Nationally, we are seen as a miracle. The
truth is, it is not a miracle its hard work.
Men and women in this country have produced the South Africa that
we live in today and are at the same time fashioning the South
Africa that our children will leave in tomorrow.
United Nations
So next year, in January will be serving in the Security Council as
a non-permanent member for the first time and of course that has
the implications for all of us, because that is not just a simple
role to be in the Security Council.
The Security Council has the responsibility for our collective
security worldwide. So, we will be taking decisions that have
direct implications for people's lives worldwide. A lot of
decisions of the Security Council are binding to the governments
the world over.
So it is a very responsible position, which means we have to work
hard. We have to understand the agenda and the issues. I am glad we
have a very good team. Just before we came here we were actually
discussing part of our agenda for the Security Council.
As you know the Security Council works 24 hours around the clock so
we have to be a step ahead in terms of understanding their agenda,
in terms of discussing the issues. But we have a good team and all
the support from the department and the government. I am,
therefore, quite sure will manage that responsibility very
well.
Department
I think the department itself has grown, and has also been
rejuvenated. I see a lot of young blood around which is nice
because it means the department has a future. Young people are the
guarantee of the future of this department.
So as young people you are very welcome to this department. But
being in this department is a very special honour and privilege.
You, therefore, have to conduct yourself with that in mind, to
represent your country internationally.
It is a big honour that your country has bestowed on all of us that
we are the representatives of South Africa that comes with huge
responsibilities and as young people we have to learn and
understand that you have to work hard. I know a lot of people who
make mistakes whilst working hard and that is acceptable.
I have really no time for people who are lazy. If you make a
mistake working hard, we are all humans but if you think you are
going to protect yourself from making mistakes by being lazy you do
not belong here. Anyone who is lazy does not belong here. I do not
see anybody who is lazy here. As long as you are not lazy, you are
welcome and behave yourself in a befitting manner.
Editor's note
The Minister deliberated at length on the role of women in society,
the empowerment of women in critical positions of influence in
business, government and our respective communities. Although
progress has been made in this regard, the Minister emphasised that
the departmental transformation process should significantly
spearhead the promotion of women to be entrusted to positions of
influence.
Women
She also referred to the Beijing Conference on Women that took
place almost twelve years ago in China and drew on the following
examples: "A clause there that is talking about non-discrimination
including sexual orientation. I am talking about this because is
something that is being talked about in the whole of the country
and the South African delegation was defending this clause, others
were saying no and a few delegation was defending it including the
South Africans, maybe in Africa we were not many.
I remember at some stage one of them, bolder African delegations
came to us and said what is wrong with you South African women? Why
are you defending this clause? So we said to them, we come from a
very difficult history of discrimination and as we were fighting
our struggle against discrimination, we were saying to ourselves
that we will be building a nation where nobody will feel
discriminated against.
So it has nothing to do with what you think as an individual, its
got to do with the principle that we are not going to discriminate
against people and it is important because the Deputy Minister (Sue
van der Merwe) was telling me, when she was accompanying a foreign
dignitary to one of our townships this foreign dignitary was
approached by an elderly South African man who the said, yes you
have passed this law, of course he did not realise that this was a
foreign dignitary, he thought he was a South African but where are
the children going to come from, tell me.
Now it is not for us to ask that question, its personal choices but
our Constitution says we should not discriminate. I think that is
what we should be explaining to our people in case we meet this, we
should not be defensive. It is an anti-discrimination law that the
Constitutional Court had said should be passed and because we
believe in non-discrimination, that is what we have done so that
our people understand where we come from, that this is a free
country.
Department
Having said that, please thank you very much for the hard work, I
hope most of you will get time to rest and recharge your
batteries.
I hope you will spend some time with your families because one
disadvantage in Foreign Affairs is that most of the time you spend
time away from your families. Some of us at one stage or another,
we will spend time away from our families and this is the time for
those who will not be working full-time, the skeleton staff that
will remain, to spend your time with your families.
Please to thank them on our behalf for having been patient with
your absence. Thank them for having tolerated the fact that
sometimes you will have to travel, sometimes you have to come back
home late and say to them, we are very grateful for their
contribution to your work, government's work, but it is also their
own contribution to a better life for other people. So look after
them and look after yourselves. We want to see all of you next
year. So do come back.
A lot of you will drink I know. Just drink moderately, do not drink
to a point where you will not remember who you are because lots of
things might happen which might have real consequences for your
future, the life of your family. Please do not put your life and
others at risk. So use a condom.
If you think you have drunk too much, ask a friend to drive your
car.
Please enjoy Christmas, enjoy the New Year and lastly I am very
happy to Mxo (Mxolisi Nkosi) smiling, welcome Mxo but enjoy
yourselves, this is the time to enjoy yourselves."
Thank you.
Issued by: Department of Foreign Affairs
15 December 2006