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Date
: 24/11/2005
Source: The Presidency
Title: Mbeki: Intelligence Services 10th anniversary
Address of the President of South Africa, Thabo Mbeki, at
the Intelligence Services day 10th anniversary awards ceremony and
inauguration of the Wall and Garden of Remembrance, Tshwane
Honourable Minister of the National Intelligence Services, Ronnie
Kasrils,
Honourable Deputy Ministers,
Chairperson and members of the Parliamentary Joint Standing
Committee on Intelligence,
Secretary of Defence, January Masilela,
Chairperson of the Intelligence Services Council, Sizakele
Sigxashe,
Head of NICOC, Barry Gilder,
Inspector-general of Intelligence, Zola Ngcakani,
Acting Director-general of the National Intelligence Agency, Manala
Manzini,
Director-general of the South African Secret Service, Hamilton
Dennis,
Divisional Commissioner of Police: Crime Intelligence, Ray
Lalla,
Senior Managers and members of the Intelligence Community,
Ladies and gentlemen
Thank you for inviting me to participate in this important
celebration of a most historic occasion — the 10th
anniversary of our civilian Intelligence Services. I am very happy
that we are able to use this occasion to pay tribute to the men and
women who have given loyal and distinguished service to our country
and people.
The gold letters on the Wall of Remembrance and the splendid
calligraphy in the Book of Remembrance are a fitting epitaph to our
unsung heroines and heroes in the civilian Intelligence Services
who have passed on. Only in death could some of them come out of
the shadows to be honoured for their distinguished and honourable
service to our country.
Hopefully, their families will find comfort in the seasonal hues
amidst the lush green meadow, the relaxing waterfall, the dry river
bed and the fine indigenous trees, which have been planted in the
memorial garden. Through the medals that are going to be handed out
today, we also honour present members for their distinguished
service and leadership.
Indeed, the sturdy old peach tree and the newly-planted African
wild olive tree are metaphors for the old and new intelligence
dispensations within which we acknowledged the old and painful past
so as to build a better future.
Clearly, the Intelligence Services of our country have come a long
way, as has done our young democracy. Hard and dedicated work has
resulted in many important breakthroughs which made it possible for
all of us to confront threats to our society and thereby strengthen
our democracy. This could not have happened without dedicated
service by many of you.
However, while we are celebrating a decade of dedicated and
loyal service, we need to be vigilant at all times, and ensure that
none among us take for granted the significant advances that we
have made. We should always remember the long journey that we have
travelled together and be guided by the noble precepts that define
our democracy and the imperative to be loyal servants of the
people.
We will recall that when we created our new intelligence
dispensation we deliberately and consciously positioned the issue
of accountability as an important and critical part of intelligence
work. This was done because we knew that intelligence services by
their very nature and mandates are accorded enormous powers, to
safeguard the national security of the countries they serve. Many
of us have seen how intelligence services throughout time have been
susceptible to the abuse of power. Given our own painful past from
which we had just emerged, when the security institutions were part
of a machinery of oppression and injustice, we had no alternative
but to ensure that we create mechanisms that would help us not to
repeat the unacceptable practices of the past.
Both domestic and international experience informed us that without
the necessary checks and balances, our own intelligence services
could be tempted to use notions of secrecy as a cloak to hide
abuses.
It is of the utmost importance that our intelligence services
should perform their tasks in an impartial and professional manner,
in accordance with the constitutional prescripts and the laws of
our country, always respecting the privacy, dignity and human
rights of all our citizens.
Public accountability of our intelligence services is fundamental
to the manner in which they operate as instruments of the
democratic order. All of us must therefore respect both the
regulatory framework and the institutions established to ensure
good conduct and accountability.
With regard to these institutions, I refer specifically to the
Minister for Intelligence, who represents the Executive, the
Parliamentary Oversight Committee, the Inspector-general of
Intelligence, and the Judge delegated the responsibility to
authorise electronic intercepts.
Like you and the Minister for Intelligence Services, I too have
sworn an oath of allegiance undertaking to serve the Constitution,
the people and the laws of the country. Like you, I cannot treat
the taking of this oath as a meaningless formality, allowing myself
to turn a blind eye to such unlawful acts as may come to my
notice.
Like you, I cannot simply bend the rules to suit myself. I cannot
put my personal interests above those of the nation, because if I
did, I would be subverting and destroying the very democracy for
which so many of our people fought and died. All of us have to take
very seriously the laws and regulations guiding our work. These
laws should always guide our actions. Unlike in the past, the
intelligence services do not stand above the law, nor are they
beyond its reach. Accordingly, all your activities must be
conducted in accordance with the Constitution, the Bill of Rights
and the democratic ethos of our society.
In this regard, and within the wider context relating to these
important matters, you might be interested to hear what the late
leader of the People’s Republic of China, Deng Hsiao-ping,
had to say almost 20 years ago, in 1986, about the rule of law. He
said:
“While we (the Communist Party), are correcting unhealthy
tendencies and cracking down on crime, we must leave matters that
fall within the scope of the law to judicial institutions. It is
not appropriate for the (Communist) Party to concern itself with
such matters. The Party should concern itself with inner-party
discipline, leaving legal problems to the state and the government.
If the Party intervenes in everything, it will not help the people
to understand the importance of the rule of law. This is a question
of the relations between the Party and the government, of the
political structure of the country... Our country has no tradition
of observing or enforcing laws... One reason for the high crime
rate among young people who are simply lawless and have no scruples
about committing crimes is that their level of general education is
low. To strengthen the rule of law, therefore, the most important
thing is to educate the people.”
I dare say that these precepts apply as much to us as they apply to
China and other countries. If the rule of law in China could apply
to the Chinese Communist Party, it must stand to reason that in our
country and other constitutional states, the rule of law must also
apply both to our own ruling party and our intelligence agencies.
Drawing on the Chinese experience, we too must take it as our
responsibility to educate our people, our state organs, including
the intelligence agencies, and the ruling party, to understand and
respect the importance of the rule of law.
As you are aware, the Minister for Intelligence and the
Inspector-General of Intelligence are dealing with various
disturbing matters that have emerged concerning the National
Intelligence Agency. It is critically important that both the
Minister and the Inspector-General should pursue their inquiries
with all necessary vigour and a sense of urgency, to enable us to
correct whatever might have gone wrong and draw the relevant
lessons for the future
All concerned must also understand that these inquiries will leave
no stone unturned in their search for the truth, and that
regardless of the obstacles deliberately put in their way, the
state organs involved in the inquiry will indeed unearth the truth
they seek to discover. In this regard, I would like to take this
opportunity to urge all members of our intelligence services
voluntarily to assist the Minister and the Inspector-General in
their inquiries.
I would also like to assure the nation that our intelligence
services will continue to work for the greater good, loyally
serving the people of South Africa. Elected to protect and advance
the interests of all our people, our government will ensure that at
all times and at all costs, this objective is achieved.
Our constitution-makers took the issue of the loyalty of our
security services to the people, the Constitution and the law so
seriously that they enshrined in our Constitution the requirement
that members of the services should disobey all manifestly illegal
orders. Thus no longer can those who engage in illegal actions and
fall foul of our law claim that they ‘were only following
orders’.
Our intelligence services are a national asset, mandated to help
ensure the security and well-being of all our people. They must
therefore be politically non-partisan and may not carry out
operations that are intended to undermine, promote or influence any
political party, faction or organisation at the expense of
another.
How our citizens, including intelligence officers, exercise their
right to cast their secret vote at the ballot box is their
individual and untrammelled democratic choice. However they vote,
nobody within the intelligence services should entertain the false
belief that he or she will be allowed to play politics in the
workplace to support whoever they might have voted for.
I would like to make it clear to all of us that any action taken by
the intelligence services designed deliberately to interfere with
the normal political processes of parties or organisations that are
engaged in lawful activities are expressly forbidden.
Similarly, no member of the intelligence services is allowed to
pass on information to any unauthorised person, be they friends or
relatives, or to use their positions to gather and disseminate
information to help settle personal, business or political
disputes.
In pursuance of their activities, the intelligence services are
expected to uphold the important values of integrity, objectivity
and credibility. Members must therefore put aside their own
personal views in the interests of the country as a whole. In doing
so, no officer is allowed to owe loyalty to networks outside the
intelligence organisations in which they are employed.
All of us will agree that the intelligence services must ensure the
effective management of their activities. In this regard,
management must promote a strong organisational culture that
celebrates high work standards, placing a premium on objective and
balanced quality intelligence products.
I must say that for many years now I have been concerned about the
quality of a significant proportion of the intelligence information
I have been provided. I am certain that we have to continue to pay
particular attention to this matter.
Our intelligence family must understand that the only way in which
its members will continue to retain their jobs is by producing
reliable and timely quality intelligence products that help our
government continuously to improve the safety and security of our
country and people.
Members of our intelligence services:
I would like to appeal to you to continue to respond to the
challenge of professionalism, which is embodied in the medals which
are being awarded today. I call on you to keep your focus on the
tasks at hand and to ensure that all of you understand with great
clarity what is required of you, as defined, for instance, in the
National Intelligence Estimate. I urge you to remember that you are
here to carry out an important national task, and not because of
your party political affiliation or because you have friends in the
intelligence community.
You are here by virtue of your chosen vocation, which is to serve
our people as the professional, effective and accountable
intelligence officers that they expect you to be. Anyone who thinks
differently is clearly in the wrong place.
The need for professional, accountable and effective intelligence
services is all the more important in today’s context, given
the difficult security challenges that are associated with an
ever-changing and unpredictable global environment, the growth of
trans-national organised crime, international terrorism, and so on.
This global environment constantly challenges us to improve the
competence and quality of our services and operatives.
As we strive to enhance the capacity of the services, the
structures that make up South Africa’s intelligence community
cannot afford to operate in isolation from one another.
Co-ordination and information-sharing must be at the centre of our
efforts, given the complex nature of the threats we face. Conflict,
duplication and turf battles between and within different
structures of the intelligence community cannot and should not be
tolerated.
Our enhanced capacity will go a long way to improve the
effectiveness of our services to meet the challenges of a changing
world. However, in whatever we do, we must always remember where
our intelligence services have come from and why the very
foundations of a professional and accountable intelligence
community, which were laid 10 years ago, must remain your guiding
beacon both for today and the future.
On the occasion of the celebration of the 10th anniversary of the
civilian intelligence services, I am honoured to wish you success
during the challenging period ahead.