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Date
: 26/06/2004
Source: Department of Foreign Affairs
Title: N Dlamini Zuma: Swaziland cleansing & healing
ceremony
SPEECH BY MINISTER OF FOREIGN AFFAIRS, DR NKOSAZANA DLAMINI ZUMA,
AT THE CLEANSING, HEALING AND SYMBOLIC REPARATIONS IN MANZINI,
SWAZILAND, 26 June 2004
Master of Ceremonies
Your Royal Highnesses
Your Excellencies Ambassadors and High Commissioners
Honourable Ministers and Deputy Ministers
Dr Wally Serote, representative of the Freedom Park Trust
Distinguished guests
Comrades and Friends
Ladies and Gentlemen
I bring you warm and fraternal greetings from President Thabo
Mbeki, the government and peoples of South Africa. I am happy to be
back here in Swaziland, that part of Africa, that has for many
years been home to many of us who were forced into exile.
My condolences to the Royal family, for the loss of Inkosikati Gogo
Zimba who passed away recently.
We, who King Sobhuza II fondly referred to as the "children of
Tambo" are greatly honoured to be amongst you, the Swazi people,
who in our hour of need received us as your own and by so doing
gave concrete expression to our common belief that we are indeed of
one people. It is also a time full of emotions as we remember those
who died so that South Africa should be free.
In keeping with this belief, the ANC in its NEC statement of 15
July 1982 stated profoundly that:
"Over the decades, the leaders of the peoples of Swaziland and
South Africa have worked strenuously to teach their peoples about
the fact that they were in actuality one people who had been
forcibly divided by the colonial powers. When the founding fathers,
including the distinguished Royal House of Swaziland (Queen
Mgwamile Dlamini), voted in January 1912 'to strive to bury the
demon of tribalism' they cherished the ideal not of the separation
of the peoples of Southern Africa, but of their unification,
emphasising the common African bonds that unite us and pointing to
the grave harm done to our welfare by the stress on ethnic
divisions."
Pursuant to this belief the late ANC President Oliver Tambo at the
funeral of 42 South Africans killed in 1982 during the raid on
Maseru, Lesotho by members of the South African Defence Force
(SADF):
"The ANC was formed by our people, it is the people. It was formed
by the people of this region, by the Kingdom of Lesotho, the
Kingdom of Swaziland, by the leaders of Botswana. It is an
organisation of this whole region"
Accordingly, those of us who are the beneficiaries of this regional
heritage, that President Tambo spoke of, recall with a profound
sense of gratitude that, Swaziland under the leadership of King
Sobhuza II and true to that great African tradition of solidarity,
opened up its homes, schools, universities, and their borders to
feed, house, educate, and clothe many of us in the liberation
movement who had found refuge in this country.
Indeed as President Nelson Mandela said at the OAU meeting in Tunis
1994:
"When the history of our struggle is written, it will tell a
glorious tale of African solidarity, of African's adherence to
principles. It will tell a moving story of the sacrifices that the
peoples of our continent made to ensure that, that intolerable
insult to human dignity, the apartheid crime against humanity,
became a thing of the past. It will speak of the contributions of
freedom-whose value is as measureless as the gold beneath the soil
of our country-the contribution which all of Africa made from the
shores of the Mediterranean Sea in the north, to the confluence of
the Indian and Atlantic Oceans in the South.
Africa shed her blood and surrendered the lives of her children so
that all her children could be free. She gave of her limited wealth
and resources so that all of Africa should be liberated. She opened
her heart of hospitality and her head so full of wise counsel, so
that we should emerge victorious. A million times, she put her hand
to the plough that has now dug up the encrusted burden of
oppression accumulated for centuries"
Accordingly, it is only correct that we assert today as did King
Sobhuza II, Queen Mgwamile Dlamini, President Tambo, President
Mandela, President Thabo Mbeki, Moses Mabhida and Stan Mabizela all
asserted, that ours is a common destiny tied together by the same
history, culture, tradition and language.
Yet our common history also speaks of pain especially just after
the death of King Sobhuza II, when the Apartheid regime and its
secret agents took advantage of the loss of the father of the Swazi
nation and sought to create a divide between our two peoples.
Accordingly, the apartheid regime would spare nothing in its
relentless effort to destroy the ANC wherever it was found,
including here in Swaziland.
Consequently and sadly, our common history speaks in pain of a time
in which we endured assassinations of so many of our dearest
comrades that saw the blood of heroic and brave Africans spilt on
this land - Cassius Maake, Lennie Naidoo, Zweli Nyanda, Jabu,
Nzima, Nyawose, Keith MacFadden, to mention but a few!
This history also speaks of midnight cross-border raids on refugee
camps, police stations and private homes that saw many of our
compatriots kidnapped only to resurface in apartheid jails and
detention across South Africa.
It speaks of daylight shootouts between cadres of our movement and
elements of South African security forces that saw many of our
people lay down their lives in the noble struggle to free our
country.
Yet we know all too well that during this very hour of darkness,
this history also speaks of the heroic determination of ordinary
Swazis, including those who paid the supreme sacrifice like Mr
Nyoga, who continued to assist the people of South Africa in their
endeavour to help bring about an end of apartheid.
As we celebrate our 10th year anniversary of freedom, our common
destiny demands of us that we confront with honesty and openness
our common suffering of the past. Accordingly, we must welcome this
effort of traditional cleansing, healing and symbolic reparations
as a focused response to what we have to do as Africans to heal our
motherland.
It is our hope that through the work of the Freedom Park Trust
under the able leadership of Dr. Serote we shall create here, as
President Thabo Mbeki said yet another "... place of peace and
quiet contemplation, of the silent remembering of the heroes and
heroines who have departed from the land of the living, but to whom
we owe the gift of liberty.
"... a place to which all our people of all colours, cultures, ages
and beliefs, men and women, will come to pay their quiet tribute to
those whose memory will never be extinguished, who will live on in
every generation that lives, summoning each to be the standard
bearers of the cause of the freedom of all humanity.
"It will therefore not be a place of grief and mourning, but of
celebration that we and all humanity have such as they whose names
will be inscribed in our memories, etched forever in our
consciousness, to light our way to the genuine emancipation from
oppression, from hunger, and from the tyranny of ignorance, that is
due to all human beings."
The ceremony is a reclamation of our collective history, in its
true and complete form and a tribute to all those who forged ahead
with us in realising freedom.
Although the days shall pass, each year giving birth to its
successor. What has passed becomes the past as time erodes the
memory of what was living experience. In their recalling, old joys
expand into enlarged pleasure.
Old wounds fade away into forgotten scars or linger on as quiet
pain without a minder. Not anymore, today we are saying our old
wounds will not fade away into forgotten scars.
This symbolic ceremony is a step further in efforts to work
together, to produce a full account of what the people of this
region did to contribute to the liberation of South Africa.
I am certain that this initiative will tell a story to generations
to come of outstanding courage, heroism, solidarity and commitment
to principle, demonstrated by the people of South Africa and the
ordinary people of Swaziland during a difficult period of our
common history.
It is these bonds of friendship and solidarity forged in the
trenches of the struggle against apartheid that demands of a
democratic and free South Africa today, as part of the regional
African collective leadership, to assist the people of Swaziland to
help find a solution to the political and economic challenges that
face their country. It is those bonds that will strengthen the
spirit of solidarity and friendship and spare us on regional
integration, in the implementation of the New Partnership for
Africa's Development, NEPAD. It is those bonds that will see the
renewal of our Continent, the African Renaissance.
We will do so, in the context of that people's contract, adopted
exactly 49 years ago today - The Freedom Charter, which compels us
to do so in a manner that respects the rights and sovereignty of
all nations; to strive to maintain world peace and the settlement
of all international disputes through negotiations.
I thank you!
Issued by: Department of Foreign Affairs
26 June 2004