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Date
: 04/06/2004
Source: Mpumalanga Provincial Government
Title: T Makwetla: Mpumalanga State of the Province address
ADDRESS BY PREMIER TSP MAKWETLA AT THE OPENING OF THE FIRST SESSION
OF THE THIRD LEGISLATURE OF MPUMALANGA, Riverside Government
Complex, 4 June 2004
Madame Speaker and Deputy Speaker
Honourable members of the Mpumalanga Legislature
Honourable members of Parliament
Honourable MECs
Your Excellencies Ambassadors and High Commissioners Your
Majesties Amakhosi
Chairperson of the House of Traditional Leaders
Representatives of Local Government, Mayors
Distinguished guests
Ladies and Gentlemen
On the occasion of the first convocation of the newly elected
representatives of the people of this province to begin the
daunting but exciting task of turning into reality the lofty goals
we advocated during the elections, allow me once again, to salute
the masses of our province and their talented leadership across all
areas and sectors of human endeavour, and say indeed to be free, we
too must strive to live our dreams.
In this context, let me take this opportunity to acknowledge all
our important guests; leaders of this region of all pursuits; our
traditional leaders as already acknowledged before; our religious
leaders; our political leaders from all parties; our business
leaders; labour leaders; leaders of various organs of the state;
senior civil servants and leaders of parastatals; community leaders
of all pursuits and leaders of non-governmental organisations. The
fortunes and prosperity of our province are in your hands, just as
they are in ours.
We all have reason to believe that our province is poised to make
further advances in many respects in the quest to make it a better
place for its citizens and future generations.
The possibilities are real, we must underline, because there were
two administrations before this third one, whose work constitute
the foundation from which we can launch a fresh offensive on
underdevelopment and the pulverising poverty that still grip many
of our communities.
To show grit and conviction in order to conquer poverty, we must
turn our provincial government into an economic administration of
excellence and efficiency. In this regard, we must build further
our provincial administration by consciously tackling the
challenges beyond the transformation imperatives of restructuring,
rationalisation and unification of our civil service.
To achieve this, we all support the compelling argument to conduct
a skills audit of our departments across the board, in order to
identify the gaps and shortfalls.
In the spirit of cultivating partnerships in the delivery of
services as government, our departments, without exception, are
enjoined to establish partnerships with research centres, including
those that are in institutions of higher learning, and policy
institutes, to augment our capacities.
As government we will also honour our obligation as an employer to
avail opportunities for further training of our employees to
acquire the requisite capacities in several areas of government at
the same time.
Madame speaker, honourable members, equally important in the task
of enhancing the capacity of our administration of the province to
deliver, is the need to promote professionalism among our civil
servants and to ensure revolutionary ethos, which include among
others, high levels of integrity and respect for the resources of
the needy public.
Over the past decade, we have made concerted efforts to redress
poverty and inequality through a substantial redirection of public
spending towards key social and economic programmes. We recognise
that the pace of economic growth had to be accelerated.
We correctly concluded that investment in industry and
infrastructure and an expansion of job opportunities were critical
challenges if we are to raise this country and province from the
legacy of the past. Simply put our task was to accelerate the pace
of growth and job creation and extend the scope of development and
empowerment.
As we enter the Second Decade of Freedom, our main challenge
remains speeding up the creation of work and further strengthening
the fight against poverty.
Madame Speaker, our gene-coefficient is lower than the national
average and yet our province has enormous wealth-creation ability.
We are the fourth biggest economy nationally and yet among the
smaller provinces considering our population. We are a province of
rich farmers and wretched farm-labourers; of rich plantation owners
and extremely poor plantation workers; of extravagantly wealthy
mine-owners and very poor mine workers; of world-class industrial
giants and over-populated jobless Bantustan areas.
Our challenge to conquer poverty and under-development is made
exciting by the very existence of a first world economy alongside
under-development and poverty. With the requisite commitment on the
part of all of us, to develop this province into a prospering
region, we can surpass our expectations.
In eradicating poverty and underdevelopment we must as a matter of
course encourage the growth, development and modernisation of our
regional economy, thereby increasing its ability to create jobs in
order to provide more people with incomes.
Government must provide the necessary support to the provincial
economic growth-drivers such as our world-class industrialists,
like SASOL and Columbus Stainless Steel, the farming sectors and
tourism.
In this regard the provincial government undertakes to tackle the
infrastructural needs of these big role players such as the
provincial roads infrastructure. In this financial year government
will spend approximately R276-million on roads infrastructure. The
conditions of our roads in the far South-Eastern part of our
province are reaching a calamitous level. The government will
convene a road Indaba in the next six months to address this
challenge.
Equally, we want to see industrial giants like SASOL opening up
opportunities for broad participation of previously marginalized
communities through equity and procurement policies.
Above all SASOL must show the way in promoting modern and
progressive labour policies and social responsibility initiatives.
SASOL should not only be a world-class industrial giant
technologically, but SASOL must also be known for the good
treatment of its workers. SASOL as an establishment can indeed
brand itself through the high living standards of its employees.
The same goes for our SAPPIs, Columbus Steel and others.
The intention of government is to make our farming sector even more
robust and competitive. To achieve this, government will conduct an
inspection of the capacities of our agricultural research centres
with the view to committing more funds to increase excellence in
our agricultural sector. The agricultural college in Nelspruit will
receive our urgent attention to ensure that its purpose is
optimally served.
It is our considered view that with the necessary support and
comparative advantage our agriculture enjoys, we can brand our
province as a region of high quality agricultural produce.
However, it will again be proper that in this sector too, we brand
our produce by the conditions and live-standards of those who work
on the farms. The decent treatment they deserve. The deprivation
that goes with life on the farms must be uncompromisingly combated.
After all farm workers are like all other workers, they only differ
because they work on the farms.
The challenge we must address in all our strong economic sectors in
Mpumalanga is the beneficiation of what we produce, from steel to
wood, from beef to maize. In the next financial year we hope to set
aside more funds for this purpose. They will exceed the R10 million
budgeted for in the current financial year.
Madam Speaker, agriculture is one of the most important sectors in
our province. But we are all aware of the historical difficulties
of total exclusion we have inherited within three months the
department will organise a workshop on establishing
cooperatives.
As a start we are providing Agriculture starter packs made up of
garden tools, fertilizer and seed to support 15 000 households who
are beneficiaries of the emergency food supply. An amount of R4,
8-million has been set aside for this project that is aimed at
helping very needy families to produce their own food.
In the next three months we will implement Land Care projects. An
amount of R5, 5-million of grant money is available to implement 25
approved Land Care projects. Through this project we hope to ensure
sustainable management of the natural environment and to create 1
088 temporary employment opportunities as part of the expanded
Public Works Programme.
An amount of R38, 2-million has been set aside for the
Comprehensive Agriculture Support Programme (CASP) to provide for
the development and rehabilitation of agricultural infrastructure.
We will continue to give pre and post settlement support,
particularly training the communities that have received land back
on the proper use of the land.
We have budgeted more than R5.5million for land rehabilitation and
we will continue playing a role in the promotion of commodity
groups.
From July 1 we will be providing Primary clinical service for
animals in the rural areas.
Through funding from the Development Bank of South Africa and the
Job Creation Trust formed by the trade union federations Cosatu,
Nactu and Fedhusa, we were able to assist in the establishment of
the Greater Moutse Cotton Umbrella Project. This project will
benefit more than 270 women farmers. Some of the project funds will
be used to purchase tractors and other implements for the project.
We hope to expand the project to other areas, funds
permitting.
Madame Speaker and Honourable Members. We will also work on
initiatives to reduce the costs of doing business in Mpumalanga and
will promote specific industries and economic sectors. These
initiatives are aimed at encouraging investment, economic growth
and job creation. We will maintain the existing government-owned
industrial infrastructure while we develop technoparks and
incubators. We will evaluate and develop projects along the Maputo
corridor.
As a matter of urgency there will be a review of the proper
location of the Mpumalanga Parks Board whether is it properly
placed under the institutional department of Agriculture.
Madame Speaker, everybody knows now that as far as tourism is
concerned, Mpumalanga is sitting on a gold mine. This is true
because the phenomenal growth we have witnessed over the last
twenty-four months occurred in spite of the limited infrastructure
we have. Our hospitality industry is not only lacking adequate
facilities, but the average training of those employed by the
industry is highly suspect. To this end, the newly-opened Tourism
and Hospitality Academy will help reduce the common cutting of
corners by our hoteliers and restaurateurs.
Madam Speaker, honourable members, what is most important is that
we must educate the broad public of Mpumalanga about what it
entails to be a thriving tourism region. To succeed we need to
infuse the awareness that all of us, everywhere we are, regardless
of whether we are doing business in tourism or not, we are
collectively playing hosts to those who come to our province.
We all carry the duty to make those who come from outside of our
province to have pleasant experiences to take back home with. With
more and more visitors coming to see our heritage, we can then
exploit fully the business opportunities they create for us.
In the next few months we will be holding a tourism workshop where
we hope to deal in more detail with these matters.
As we spend more resources on attacking poverty, building economic
infrastructure and creating work opportunities, we will take more
and more young people through learnerships so they can gain skills
and work experience in order for them to access jobs.
Our partners must help in the area of human resources development
while addressing critical skills shortages in the economy. On
Tuesday this week we commenced in earnest with our skills training
of more than 50 of our public servants. In a fortnight the
Department of Education will commence with the training of the
first hundred unemployed people.
Madame Speaker, the Expanded Public Works Programme will be our key
strategy to unlock the problem of joblessness in the province. The
legacy of many policies of the apartheid order still lives with us
today. It was by design that approximately 46 percent of the
population of the province still live within the former homelands,
on 10 percent of its surface without jobs, without land and with
many infrastructural needs. The Expanded Public Works Programme
will create work where the people are in order to simultaneously
reverse the family dislocation revisited on our people by the
culture of migrant labour.
In the rural areas children are abandoned by their desperate
parents to grow by themselves without parental protection and
guide. The Extended Public Works Programme will not only restore
stability in many families, it will also mark the beginning of a
long-term goal of providing the critical community infrastructure
which must see us tackle the legendary struggle against rural
oppression imposed by the urban-rural dichotomy. To expedite the
work of the department in this regard, we will seek to urgently
acquire the in-house technical expertise, which was lost to
consultant's overtime. This has slowed down the speed of delivery
and the costs thereof. In the next thirty days we will be holding a
conference to put our ducks in a row, so to speak.
Madame Speaker, as often said, a nation that does not value its
youth doesn't deserve its future. The province renews its pledge
not to fail our young people. As government we will continue to
honour our commitment to support all programmes and policies
intended to benefit our youth.
In this respect, we shall endeavour to ensure that the resources
availed to the Youth Commission are commensurate to the mandate it
must discharge. In pursuit of the goal to provide our young people
with opportunities to develop their talents to the full, we will
strive to keep a healthy balance between promoting a spirit of
entrepreneurship and encouraging the youth to pursue high academic
and professional achievements in order to provide the country with
the critical skills-base it needs for it to advance and prosper.
Professional life has not stopped to offer good life too.
We believe we are on track to meet the target set out in the Growth
and Development Summit. We will, as a matter of urgency, put more
energy, time and money on developing the telecommunications and
energy sector while encourage more investment in key economic
sectors such as manufacturing, information and communications
technology, mining, crafts, tourism and cultural industries.
Before the end of July we will meet with our social partners to
consolidate a common vision on the promotion of rising levels of
growth, investment, job creation and people-centred development in
the Province. This will culminate in a Provincial Economic
Development and Investment Summit in September.
Before the end of June 2004 we will launch the Provincial Equity
Fund, which is aimed at dealing with the challenge of access to
finance. We will also strengthen the financial management and
administration capacity of our Village Banks and the process of
establishing co-operatives in the Province.
We will speed up the provision of housing, health-facilities,
classrooms, water and sanitation, electricity and recruit and
retain health personnel, improve infrastructure, enhance health
promotion and nutrition, promote awareness on, and provide
comprehensive care, management and treatment of HIV and AIDS.
We will spend more than R12, 047-million to improve the social
infrastructure in our communities by building clinics, community
gardens, information centres and small factories in the three
districts including the two cross-border districts.
Ladies and gentlemen, the health of our people is a priority. That
is why we aim to intensify our fight against HIV and AIDS, TB,
malaria, diabetes, hypertension, malnutrition and other illnesses.
But in order to do that we need to ensure that we have the proper
infrastructure.
We will, as a matter of urgency, take an audit of all our Public
Health Centre facilities to determine exactly what interventions we
must make in order to improve the standards of service delivery at
our Community Heath Centres and clinics. It is envisaged that this
Audit will be finalised by the 31st of July 2004.
The first Comprehensive treatment and care for HIV and AIDS
patients was rolled out on Tuesday this week at Witbank and Shongwe
hospitals. The other four accredited facilities will roll out this
programme by the end July 2004.
Ladies and gentlemen, the total budget for our HIV and AIDS
programme for the year has increased to R68, 4-million.
Let me also announce that we have started with the training of
Community Health workers on the 59-day programme. This is critical
in ensuring that the necessary capacity is available within
communities for the health workers to render health promotion and
provide essential care by visiting households in communities.
Over the next five years we will improve the functioning state of
hospitals in the province, ensuring that they use modern business
principles.
Our focus would be on empowering hospital management with
appropriate skills to manage their facilities; ensure that our
hospitals have the latest and most appropriate equipment and to
ensure that they maintain a quality of service that is in line with
what our people expect.
The hospitals we are targeting on the revitalisation drive are Rob
Ferreira, Themba, Ermelo, Piet Retief, Bethal, Witbank, Standerton
and Philadelphia.
Community Health Centre's and clinics to the value of R31-million
will be constructed in the near future and accommodation at the
various facilities to the value of R5, 249 million will also be
constructed.
Madame Speaker, Honourable members, the one level where we impact
more strongly on communities as government, is at the local
government level. As part of our celebrations of "10 years of
freedom" all our municipalities will commence and complete within
the next twelve months the process of renaming streets and other
facilities in conjunction with the "Mpumalanga Geographical Names
Committee".
The Department of Local Government and Housing, in conjunction with
the Department of Culture, Sports and Recreation, will immediately
establish a task team for this purpose to help guide the process
and advise municipalities.
Our province is littered with MAMPARA names that disgrace all the
people of Mpumalanga, black and white. We must correct this
negligence in order not to allow this relic of our shameful past to
interfere with the consolidation of our new nationhood and values
of our Constitution. We must totally free ourselves from the
clutches of our conflictual past.
In the next three months we will construct 4115 houses in order to
decently house our people. We hope to launch the Emalahleni
Presidential Job Summit housing programme during the second week of
July. By the end of July we would have handed over houses at
Witbank, Uitvlugt in Groblersdal, Steenbok at Nkomazi and in the
Govan Mbeki municipality. We will do this while ensuring that we
complete our survey on "mud houses and shacks" by the end of July
2004.
Madam Speaker, we are also in the process of adopting by-laws
relating to Credit Control and Debt Collection by the end of
September 2004.
We are working all out to draft, pass and implement by-laws
relating to Credit Control and Debt Collection in municipalities by
the end of September 2004.
We will provide clean water to more that 99 000 people with a
budget of R61, 5 million. We will provide sanitation to more than
61 000-households and we hope to wipe-out the bucket-system by the
end of March next year.
Let me confirm that the infrastructural needs of our schools are
daunting. Many of our school are still short of classrooms,
electricity and sanitation. Accurate data is being collected with
the view to ascertain our budget shortfall in order to work out a
funding strategy.
To improve our year-end results we will continue our winter school
programmes in all regions while taking teachers from
under-performing schools on refresher courses during the June
holidays.
In order to deal with the problem of population migration, we are
looking at the provision of moveable classrooms. In order to
address the weaknesses in the school nutrition programme, we will
tighten our monitoring and evaluation mechanisms. The department
has employed officials in all three regions to do this task.
Madame Speaker, Honourable Members, we will ensure that all who are
eligible for social grants, including poor children up to 14 years
of age, receive these grants which increase at least at the rate of
inflation.
On top of that we will fully integrate the institution of
traditional leadership into democratic governance and
development.
In order to protect our people from those who steal, maim and rob,
we are glad to announce that there will be more visible policing
through the recruitment, training and deployment of more police
officers in our province.
We will increase our crime-scene response time through the
purchasing of 379 new vehicles to the value of R39, 2
million.
An additional 848 officers will be employed by the end of 2004 to
augment the 7152 police officer in the province.
We know we can do all these things and in the process creating more
jobs, increase investments, empower those who in the past were
excluded from the economy and develop the skills of our
people.
We have no doubt that all these things are formidable challenges,
however, the resilience of our people in struggle will always serve
as an inspiration.
Madame Speaker, we have reason to celebrate. There are many reasons
why our people are buoyant. Next year we will, as the province of
the Mpumalanga, host the 2005 World Gold Panning Championships. We
will do so while at the same time ensuring that preparations are in
full-steam to showcase Nelspruit as one of the host cities of the
2010 World Cup.
Madame Speaker, in the our midst today is a true patriot, a
tireless single-minded individual who at a great cost to his family
comfort set out to achieve almost impossible mission and succeeded.
In the process he has become a sophisticated campaigner and a
shrewd strategist. The man who brought the World Cup home, a person
who convinced the world that the "World Soccer Cup" was a misnomer
and that Africa has indeed come of age.
Madame Speaker, allow me to ask the CEO of the 2010 World Cup Bid,
Mr. DANNY JORDAAN to take a bow.
Madame Speaker, Honourable Members, we will intensify efforts aimed
at building a spirit of community, good citizenship, social
activism, moral regeneration and solidarity in all
localities.
We will do this while improving interaction between government and
the people through accountable public representatives, one-stop
government centres, Izimbizo and the use of electronic government
services.
Let all of us gathered here take back the message that tomorrow
will be better than today if we all put shoulder to the wheel in
building a prosperous province where all shall enjoy peace,
security and comfort.
I thank you.
Issued by: Office of the Premier, Mpumalanga Provincial
Government
4 June 2004