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Date
: 17/02/05
Source: The Presidency
Title: Mbeki: Response to Debate on State of the Nation
address
The Presidency response of the President of South Africa,
Thabo Mbeki, to the Debate of the State of the Nation Address,
National Assembly, Cape Town
17 February 2005
Madame Speaker,
Honourable Members:
I would like to thank the leaders of all the political parties and
other Honourable Members for their contributions to the debate of
last week’s State of the Nation Address. Altogether these
added up to a formidable number of 55 speeches, covering a wide
variety of subjects.
To avoid being shouted down, I will say nothing about their
quality. Perhaps we should heed the words of the Honourable Bantu
Holomisa when he says that: “We spend a lot of time answering
each other in debates such as these, but often we do not answer the
pertinent questions. I refer to the major questions facing the
nation, the questions that directly influence the quality of life
of all South Africans.”
Nevertheless there is no doubt that the contributions raised
questions that require attention, to varying degrees.
Obviously it is not possible for me to respond to the majority of
these during this Reply. However the Presidency will attempt
something it has not done in the past. We will do our best to
respond to the individual Honourable Members to the extent that
they have raised matters we can respond to without having to author
whole books in reply.
In my response this afternoon I would like to address a few matters
that I believe are of strategic importance in terms of the future
of our country. Within this context, I will refer to one extent or
another to some of the issues raised by the Honourable
Members.
There are certain outcomes in terms of the development of our
country that are fundamental to the very being of the ANC and
therefore our government. I will mention only a few of these, all
of which are consistent with the provisions both of the Freedom
Charter and the Constitution.
One of these is the building of a non-racial society, consistent
with the goal stated in both the Freedom Charter and the
Constitution that South Africa belongs to all who live in it,
united in their diversity.
This means that we must realise the goal of the transformation of
our country away from its racist past, while simultaneously
pursuing the corollary objectives of national reconciliation and
cohesion.
Our government is convinced that our very long and difficult
struggle for liberation and its outcome, a democratic South Africa,
would have absolutely no meaning if we did not work in the most
determined and sustained manner to achieve this objective. We will
therefore not waiver in our pursuit of this goal.
We will therefore not accept the advice given by the DA against
what the Hon Tony Leon described as “the ANC’s use of
racial profiling for nearly every other purpose under the
sun”, having stated that “we cannot promote
non-racialism if the government tries to classify land and property
by race”. We will therefore deliberately, regularly and
consistently seek answers to a whole variety of questions to
understand whether our policies and programmes are succeeding to
achieve the objectives contained in our Constitution.
Among others, we will ask:
How many black people have moved above the poverty line?
How many black people are employed and unemployed?
How many young black people are matriculating with exemptions in
mathematics and the sciences? How many black people are skilled and
have attained professional qualifications? How many black people
occupy managerial positions in the public and private
sectors?
How many black people have gained access to land?
Taking these and other matters into account, how far have we moved
towards the creation of a non-racial society?
Among other things, we will make a deliberate effort to study the
ways in which the UK measures its progress towards non-racism,
especially as provided in law and in the programmes of the
statutory Commission for Racial Equality.
In this regard, we will seek to determine the practical effect of
the statement made by the Commission that “the innovative
legislation that came fully into force in England and Wales in May
2002 was about shifting the race equality agenda in the public
sector so that it embraced a proactive, positive duty to deliver on
race equality outcomes and good race relations.”
Like the British people we will assess on a continuous basis
whether our policies and programmes truly reflect “a
proactive, positive duty to deliver on race equality outcomes and
good race relations.”
We will also draw on the experience of such U.S. statutory
institutions as the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, which
is legally mandated to fight against discrimination in the
workplace, carried out on the grounds of national origin and race,
among others. We will also study the work of the EU watchdog, the
European Monitoring Centre on Racism and Xenophobia, whose central
task is “to help the EU and its Member States to establish
measures or formulate courses of action against racism and
xenophobia”.
In the light of all this, the DA may argue that the UK, the US and
the EU are, like us, trying to “re-racialise” their
societies. Obviously we would reach the opposite conclusion that
these three are at least trying to address the serious problem of
racism in the UK, the US and the EU.
I am afraid that in this regard, perhaps the best we can hope to
achieve by way of a national consensus is agreement to
disagree.
Unlike the UK, the US and the EU, our government has an absolute
responsibility to ask yet another set of questions and get specific
answers to these questions.
Among others, we have to ask:
Are our policies resulting in the impoverishment of our white
compatriots?
How many white people are employed and unemployed, especially in
the context of our policies?
How many young white people are matriculating with exemptions in
mathematics and the sciences, especially in the context of our
policies?
How many white people are skilled and have attained professional
qualifications, especially in the context of our policies?
How many white people occupy managerial positions in the public and
private sectors, especially in the context of our policies?
How many white people are landless, especially in the context of
our policies?
We have to ask these and other questions because whatever we do to
respond to the Constitutional imperative to build a non-racial
society, to eradicate the legacy of colonialism and apartheid, we
must, at the same time, achieve the vitally important objectives of
national reconciliation, national unity and cohesion.
Yesterday, the Hon Pieter Mulder appealed to all of us to speak
frankly. Perhaps to my peril, I will do exactly as he
advised.
It is clear to me that some Honourable Members believe that our
pursuit of the goal of the transformation of our country to become
truly non-racial, and therefore the property of all of us, is a
scarcely disguised attempt at so-called reverse racism.
What this says is that it is not possible deliberately to uplift
the overwhelming black majority, disadvantaged by three-and-half
centuries of racial domination, without disadvantaging the white
minority whose exclusive welfare had been the central preoccupation
of three-and-half centuries of white rule, whatever its form, its
changing historical expression, and its impact on various sections
of white South Africa.
In this context, I have read arguments that those of us who are
products of the struggle for the national emancipation of the black
people are guilty of gross distortions of the history of the
Afrikaner people. I have no doubt that in the presentation of the
whole, we may very well have misrepresented some of the
parts.
In the last two days, I heard this point argued in this House from
two diametrically opposed positions, the one by the Hon Pieter
Mulder and the other by the Hon Marthinus van Schalkwyk. Perhaps
the time has come that we challenge our intelligentsia to engage
this discussion, in the frank manner suggested by the Hon Pieter
Mulder.
Perhaps the Ministers of Education, the Presidential Working Group
of Leaders of our Institutions of Higher Education, and the
Commission for Linguistic, Cultural and Religious Rights should
take the initiative to answer the question – what stories
about our past shall we tell the young and the generations to
come!
Whatever else may come out of these processes, the point however is
that they must empower all our people, black and white and united
in their diversity, to act together to achieve the inseparable
objectives of non-racism, national reconciliation and national
cohesion.
Regardless of its detail, the history that would be told, would
communicate the unequivocal message that whatever the effort to
make peace, as Zulu and Afrikaner built a simple monument of stone
pebbles at Ncome River, as the Hon Pieter Mulder recounted, there
could never be permanent peace while the peacemakers, with smiling
faces, searched for an opportunity each to secure superiority over
the other, rather than equality and a shared destiny within a
common motherland.
Let me therefore return to the question – is it possible to
build a non-racial society, to eradicate the consequences of white
racism, without substituting this with black racism!
Expressed in more practical terms – is it possible to
implement an affirmative action, catch-up policy, in favour of the
black section of our population, without simultaneously
implementing a discriminatory policy focused specifically at white
exclusion!
I heard some Members of this House give the categorical answer to
this question – no! The Hon Pieter Mulder argued that such
affirmative action is a necessary evil.
He argued that necessary as it may be, it is nevertheless evil and
should be terminated within a specific time frame that we must set,
in the same way that we had agreed that the historical moment of
the passage of the 1913 Land Act should be the cut-off point with
regard to land claims.
Naturally, the Hon Motsoko Pheko argued quite correctly that the
1913 Land Act only served to entrench the process of violent land
dispossession that had taken place earlier. Accordingly, to use
this date as the cut-off point, was merely to endorse the process
of dispossession that led to the constitution of the native
reserves, the so-called homelands, the Bantustans, and the system
of group areas, specifically on the basis of the 1913 Land
Act.
Correct as he may be from the point of view of historical fact,
what the Hon Pheko seems to ignore is the fact that in 1993, 80
years after the adoption of the Land Act, we entered into an
historic compromise. According to that covenant, we entered into an
exchange that we would abandon all our claims to the land the
African majority had lost before 1913, as a result of violent
colonial dispossession.
In return we expected two things. One of these was that such
dispossession as took place after 1913 would be addressed without
resistance on the part of those who benefited from land
dispossession after that date.
We also expected that those who had something to lose as a result
of the dismantling of the colonial legacy would accept that a
democratic system of government would be put in place. Naturally,
this government would ensure that at least the post 1913 land
claims would be settled without undue delay.
Our experience with regard to the latter speaks for itself. To all
intents and purposes, the vigorous defence of property rights even
over land forcibly acquired since 1913, which rights are protected
in terms of our Constitution and laws, to buy all our people peace
and democracy, has served to nullify the historic compromise of
1993 with regard to the land question.
For ten years our government has accepted this outcome, and will
continue to do so. It will continue to prevail over the people to
agree to live with this reality. Perhaps perversely in the eyes of
some, including the Hon Motsoko Pheko, we will continue to insist
that the land question must be dealt with in a manner that is
consistent with our Constitution.
Everything I have said with regard to the land question should
communicate the message that all of us, as South Africans, need to
understand that as the struggle for freedom from white minority
domination had its price, so will our efforts to achieve non-racism
and national reconciliation have their price. That price will have
to be paid by both black and white South Africans.
But for the experiment to succeed, to achieve non-racism and
national reconciliation a mere ten years after the end of
three-and-half centuries of racism, racial conflict and racial
domination, requires an extraordinary visionary imagination from
all our people, black and white, united in their diversity.
It calls for what may perhaps be called a miracle of true national
reconciliation, and the miraculous discovery that after all, South
Africa belongs to all who live in it, black and white, united in
the diversity.
The practical consequence of that discovery would be that all of us
take this truly on board, and into the depths of our consciousness,
that South Africa cannot but be as black and white as it is.
All of us would have to internalise the reality that our very
collective future depends on the ability of all our people to
understand that the success of black South Africa is conditional on
the success of white South Africa, and that the success of white
South Africa is conditional on the success of black South
Africa.
If indeed we all came to understand this, together we would have to
answer the question as to what white South Africa should do to
ensure that black South Africa succeeds, and what black South
Africa should do to ensure that white South Africa succeeds!
In answering this question, we would have to make a determination
about the price each one of us is ready to pay to contribute to the
greater good, without which our better future cannot be
guaranteed.
Madame Speaker;
We also agree with the argument advanced by the honourable Holomisa
in favour of a developmental state that plays an important role
with regard to the growth and development of the economy. It is in
this context that we have always rejected attempts to make us
reduce the role of the state in the transformation of our country
as articulated by Honourable Tony Leon when he said that “we
must choose smaller government and bigger individuals”. What
government has done in the last decade, to change the living
conditions of the poor and marginalised for the better would not
have been realised if we had a “smaller government and bigger
individuals”.
And indeed the honourable professor Ben Turok is right when he says
that: “The market favours the strong, so the disadvantaged
need supporting institutions. This is where there is a role for the
state, and this is why we have broad based economic empowerment,
policies on labour intensive methods, new institutions for
micro-credit, cooperatives and the rest of our new legislation. If
we do not use these mechanisms we shall have white economic
domination forever.”
It is because as government, we do not want to see the legacy of
apartheid becoming a permanent feature of our lives that we will
continue to strengthen the democratic state so as to make it a
powerful tool that would forever help the poor to realise the dream
of a life free of poverty, free of hunger, free of unemployment and
free of underdevelopment. Madam Speaker; I would also like to
address the matter raised by a number of speakers in this house.
This is the allegation that the government’s empowerment
programme benefits the few.
I would like to say that as we work for a South Africa whose
prosperity should benefit all who live in it, I agree that this
programme of opening up economic opportunities to black people
should not benefit only the few.
In the last four years, the Department of Public Works has
consistently awarded between 57 - 62% of its contracts to BEE
companies with last year’s contracts valued at more than R1,5
billion. I am confident that if the honourable members checked the
names of those who got these contracts, they would not find the
names of those that are always given as examples of BEE benefiting
the few politically-connected individuals.
From 1997 to last year, Telkom spent nearly R24 billion on BEE.
During the 2004 the company procured 57,8% of its services from BEE
suppliers. Similarly between 1998 and 2004, Eskom spent R26,6
billion on BEE in the areas of procurement, community development
and rural development. Transnet has since 2003 achieved the
objective of spending 50% of its discretionary funds on BEE. Again,
none of those who benefited from these transactions, and others in
other state enterprises, are the few politically connected
individuals. This pattern repeats itself in all government’s
departments and state enterprises and is a response to the
directive of government that economic empowerment must be broad
based.
Madam Speaker;
For us, as a nation, to realise the dream of a united, non-racial
and non-sexist society we have to succeed with the programme of the
empowerment of women. In this regard, for instance, although
government has made some good progress since 1994, the percentage
of women in management positions in the public sector is still
below the 30% target set for 2000, with current figure standing at
27,75%.
According to the Catalyst census into South African Women as
Corporate Leaders, of the total 3 125 directorship positions, only
221 are held by women. Only 11 women chair the boards out of 364
chairpersons and there are only seven female CEOs and managing
directors in comparison to 357 males.
Clearly, the government, parliament and the private sector need to
look at how we can accelerate the process of ensuring that we move
forward faster towards the goal of gender equality.
Madam Speaker;
The honourable Dr Pieter Mulder also mentioned some disturbing
criminal cases involving a doctor and an elderly farmer, one
threatened with death because he is white and Afrikaans and the
other beaten to death. The police must follow-up these cases and
apprehend those responsible for these crimes, so that they face the
full force of the law. As we said on Friday we will continue to
improve the capacity of the police services so that criminals such
as those cited by the Dr. Mulder are dealt with accordingly.
Dr Mulder made a threat that if I “want to make people
angry” I have “to insult their history, their heroes
and their ancestors”. This was with reference to place-name
changes. Dr. Mulder proceeds from an historical distortion
perpetuated for centuries by the colonial and apartheid rulers that
when white people of our country arrived in South Africa they found
no blacks. Accordingly, when these whites arrived in the different
areas of South Africa these places had no names because they were
empty forlorn pieces of land and the current black citizens, who
are presumably aliens, have no heroes and no ancestors who belong
to these areas. I would like to urge Dr Mulder that if we are to
build a South Africa that belongs to all who live in it, we should
be prepared to learn the true history of this country without
distortions, without propaganda and without threats.
In this regard, I believe that the approach taken by Honourable
Marthinus Van Schalkwyk points us in the right direction. He said:
“…The point is that acceptance and respect for history
cannot come from one side. We cannot say that we insist on the
inclusion of the previous National Anthem in the present one, or
that we insist Afrikaans must get proper or even special
recognition but then, when we ourselves are called upon to respect
and understand deserving symbols of the struggle, we suddenly
intellectualise about why this is not possible. A common history
presupposes a broader view and the greatness of spirit which has
become the hallmark of South Africa – but which must still
permeate to all corners of our country.”
Madam Speaker;
Another important matter raised during the debate is the question
of the protection of the Afrikaans language. We have dealt with
this matter on many occasions in this chamber as well as with
meetings with many other leading Afrikaans speaking people of our
country.
As the honourable members know, we have always responded positively
to the need to protect Afrikaans because we are motivated by our
commitment to the Constitution which enjoins us to protect and
promote all cultures, languages and religions as part of achieving
the objective of building a united, non-racial and non-sexist
society.
And as Minister Mdladlana said during the debate, Afrikaans is a
South African language and this government will at all times defend
this language as we will do with all other languages. I am quite
confident that many South Africans, because they fully understand
that we are united in our diversity, would also be prepared to
defend all our languages, including Afrikaans.
At the same time, government has also been receiving numerous
complaints about Afrikaans being used, especially in some schools,
to exclude black learners from government schools. In some
instances, black children have no choice but to learn Afrikaans
because this would ensure that they are admitted at these schools.
Clearly, nobody, including the honourable members who have raised
concerns about this matter, would agree that language should be
used to deny fellow South Africans access to schools or other
facilities.
The Minister of Education has already agreed to meet some Afrikaans
speaking people to seek an equitable accommodation with regard to
these matters.
But clearly, the more we understand one another’s languages
and cultures, the better would we overcome prejudices and
misunderstandings and accordingly make a contribution to building
the solid foundation that is so critical for a non-racial and
non-sexist South Africa.
Honourable Members;
Let me again thank all the members who participated in this debate.
I hope that even where there are disagreements, given the different
philosophical and ideological views we hold, members will still
find a way of engaging the programme we have placed before
Parliament and the nation to help accelerate the important process
of creating a developed and prosperous South Africa whose citizens
will, through their collective efforts, defeat poverty and
underdevelopment as well as create a non-racial non-sexist
society.
I thank you.
Issued by: The Presidency
17 February 2005