We have detected that the browser you are using is no longer supported. As a result, some content may not display correctly.
We suggest that you upgrade to the latest version of any of the following browsers:
close notification
Date
: 28/06/2003
Source: The Presidency
Title: Mbeki: Opening of Cape Town International Convention
Centre
ADDRESS BY THE PRESIDENT OF SOUTH AFRICA, THABO MBEKI, AT THE
OFFICIAL OPENING OF THE CAPE TOWN INTERNATIONAL CONVENTION CENTRE,
Cape Town, 28 June 2003
Chairperson of Convenco, Ebrahim Rasool,
Premier of the Western Cape, Marthinus van Schalkwyk,
Your Worship, Mayor Nomaindia Mfeketo,
Distinguished guests,
Ladies and gentlemen:
It is a proud day indeed for Cape Town to join the global community
with a world-class international convention centre. I am delighted
to be part of this auspicious occasion and to open this new centre,
which promises prosperity for all our people of the Western Cape
and South Africa.
This convention centre is one of the many concrete proofs that the
tide has indeed turned for South Africa, and that with every step
that we take, we have indeed entered into a social contract for a
better tomorrow.
In 1822, when Cape Town was already a bustling cosmopolitan port,
Percy Bysshe Shelley said in his poem, Hellas:
"The world's great age begins anew,
The golden years return,
The earth doth like a snake renew
Her winter weeds outworn;
Heaven smiles, and faiths and empires gleam,
Like wrecks of a dissolving dream."
We too, have made bold to say that 'the world great age begins
anew' and accordingly this is the African Century. 'The golden
years return', the years of great African achievements in the arts,
in science and mathematics, in architecture and technology.
For many years, the magnificent splendour of the Western Cape has
drawn visitors from across the globe. As they continue to come they
will also find the Cape Town Convention Centre - another symbol of
hope, a symbol of our glorious past, a symbol of modernity and a
symbol of future prosperity. It draws its essence from the
formidable and mighty Atlantic Ocean from where Convention Square
gained its land.
This centre draws its essence from the granite Table Mountain,
which lies majestically in ancient repose as one of the oldest
mountains in the world.
Obviously, this convention centre is lucky to sit within the
environs of one of the world's six floral kingdoms. Lucky also
because South Africa is blessed to be the only country in the world
to house the entire floral kingdom - the fynbos region - a rich
tapestry that is spread over large varied topography ranging from
magnificent rugged coastline to towering peaks.
The Langebaan footprints have fossilised the memory of a woman
strolling alongside the mighty Atlantic about 117 000 years ago, as
if to remind us that: this is the home, not only of the human
predecessors, but of modern man and woman.
Three hundred and fifty years ago, the Western Cape was the home of
the indigenous Khoikhoi and San who co-existed in harmony with
nature as captured so poignantly by the artists, Tuoi Stefaans
Samcuia and Brett Murray.
Sadly, Tuoi Stefaans Samcuia passed away a fortnight ago in the San
settlement of Schmidtsdrift. I, and I am sure many of us here, are
happy that his legacy and the spirit of an ancient San culture are
fittingly displayed as a prominent centrepiece in the foyer of this
convention centre.
Chairperson;
Today, as we open this convention centre, on a winter's night, Cape
Town continues to thrive in its unique way. The Dutch East India
Company is no more. The British Empire and the apartheid system
that replaced it have disintegrated - like wrecks in a dissolving
dream.
We are now living in a free, multicultural democracy in which we
all have the real possibility of living in a peaceful, united and
prosperous South Africa.
In Hellas Shelley reminds us of freedom and human creativity:
"Let there be light! said Liberty,
And like sunrise from the sea,
Athens arose."
Again, Shelley speaks to us as South Africans, as Africans. 'Let
there be light! Said Liberty, and like sunrise from the sea Africa
arose!'
Shelley also speaks of Cape Town. In the 1930s, Cape Town expanded
and the Foreshore, the land reclaimed from the Atlantic Ocean and
on which the convention centre is now built, rose like Shelley's
Athens. For years, this area was idle, derelict land alongside the
Duncan Docks, one of Africa's largest ports.
We may have reclaimed land from the mighty Atlantic Ocean, but we
must always remember that we are merely the custodians of this
ancient land. In the same way the tide ebbs and flows, Cape Town
will be enhanced by the rich diversity of cultures from far and
wide.
In the new South Africa, there is indeed no restriction on freedom
of movement and land ownership. We have no job reservation. Three
hundred years of white minority domination of the land is being
redressed.
Ladies and gentlemen;
The tide has truly turned! We are building a people's contract for
a better tomorrow. Our liberty and democracy paved the way for the
V&A Waterfront to be built and for the convention centre to
take its natural place within the hub of our premier tourist
destinations.
Convenco has shown us that South Africans can realise their dreams
and aspirations, based on hope and their own abilities as
architects, engineers, artisans, caterers, IT and communication
specialists, exhibition co-ordinators, and so many other skilled
personnel who make up the team which runs the Cape Town
International Convention Centre.
The formation of the Convenco operating company and the
construction of this state-of-the-art convention centre, epitomise
what is at the heart of our government's policy, namely to create
conditions for prosperity and development. Indeed, the convention
centre represents an optimal partnership bringing together all
South Africans regardless of race, gender, creed or disability. I
congratulate Ebrahim Rasool and his board for an excellent
job.
As government, we have stressed the need for partnerships:
partnerships between government and the private sector as well as
partnerships with civil society formations and foreign investors
with the necessary financial, business and technical ability such
as the RAI Group.
Today, in the 21st century, we welcome RAI, a Dutch company, to
Cape Town with open arms and in an equal partnership as we trade in
a fiercely competitive global economy. It is very encouraging to
learn that with Cape Town's charm and with RAI as a formidable
player in the convention industry, the Cape Town ICC has already
secured bookings way into 2014.
I am very pleased too that Convenco has played a pivotal role in
forging strong and enduring partnerships to promote integration of
our diverse communities so that all our people feel a sense of
ownership in this new and exciting venture.
At the same time, Convenco has taken the lead by empowering
previously disadvantaged individuals in respect of the creation of
jobs as well as economic opportunities. I am told that there was a
40% quota of empowerment contractors and that the electrical
contract for the convention centre was worth about R23
million.
The convention centre itself has 82 positions of which 79.3% has
been staffed by those previously disadvantaged. Yet, it is an
inclusive, fair and empowering affirmative action policy, which
recruits staff on merit and embraces the expertise of all South
African citizens.
One study, conducted by the University of Cape Town's Graduate
School of Business, projects that the convention centre will create
about 47 000 new jobs and bring in R25 billion to the GDP over a
period of ten years.
Ladies and gentlemen;
Today, Convenco has organised a splendid night of celebrations.
Once opened, the convention centre will begin work in earnest. It
will host trade expos and many conferences and conventions. The
Cape Town ICC will be a place of entertainment and business for
locals.
For our economic growth, it is encouraging to note the number of
conferences already scheduled for the convention centre. I am told
that in the next few years, the centre will host important
conferences on subjects as diverse as the South African Heart
Congress, the World Wind Energy Conference, the Digital Film
Festival, the 9th Annual Investing in African Mining Conference
Indaba and the International Conference on Harmful Algae.
When those delegates come to Cape Town, may they also remember the
pioneer doctors, scientists, technologists, and researchers who,
through their pioneering work, have made it possible for thousands
of heart transplants to be performed routinely around the world
today.
When the wine farmers and fruit growers gather here for their
conference this year, may they too pay homage to some now-forgotten
black farmers. I think of the Evert family, among the first slaves
to be brought to the Cape in 1658 on the Dutch East India Company
ship, the Hasselt.
Evert and Anna of Guinea were privately owned slaves of Commander
Jan van Riebeeck and Commander Zacharias Wagenaar. We do not know
what their destiny may have been if the Portuguese slave ship which
left Grand Popo on the West African Gulf of Guinea (now Benin) had
succeeded in bearing its human cargo to South America.
We do know what happened to them after the Portuguese ship was
intercepted by the Dutch and they were captured by the Dutch East
India Company ship, the Hasselt, and Evert and Anna of Guinea were
sold into slavery at the Cape in 1658. They were private domestic
slaves to the Commanders at the Fort de Goede Hoop.
But they were later freed from slavery. As a freed slave, Evert was
granted a garden not far away from here (near Roeland Street and
Tuynhuys) where he grew fruit and vegetables. Later, Evert moved to
Stellenbosch as one of its pioneer freed slave farmers but he died
soon afterwards.
Evert and Anna's daughter, Maria, was born into slavery at the Fort
de Goede Hoop and later became one of the pioneering women farmers
of the early 18th century. She is truly one of our most significant
heroines who has graced our shores and is the ultimate symbol of
triumph over adversity.
In her own right, the slave-born, Maria Everts, was the owner of
several farms in Cape Town and along the West Coast. In the early
1700s, Maria tilled the soil and planted vines, fruit trees, corn
and raised cattle and sheep just across Table Mountain. In 1713,
Maria received the first title deed from the Dutch East India
Company to the same farm, later known as the renowned and
prestigious Camps Bay, not far away from this convention
centre.
It was through the enterprise and endurance of Maria Everts's son,
Johannes Colijn, which established his family as premier winemakers
and exporters in Simon van der Stel's Constantia Valley for nearly
150 years during the 18th and 19th centuries.
This is surely a triumph for descendants of slaves who came in
chains and yet epitomise the very role models, which we now seek in
re-shaping and renewing our African continent. It is in this spirit
that I am confident that this centre will grow from strength to
strength.
I am very happy and honoured to open the Cape Town International
Convention Centre.
I thank you.
Issued by: The Presidency, 28 June 2003
Source: SAPA