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Date
:25/07/2006
Source: North West Provincial Government
Title: Molewa: Commonwealth Countries Postal Administrators
Conference
Welcome address by North West Premier, honourable Ms Edna
Molewa, at the Commonwealth Countries Postal Administrators
Conference, Sun City
Programme Director,
MEC for Economic Development and Tourism,
honourable Darkie Africa,
Executive Mayor of the Bojanala Platinum District, Cllr R
Motsepe,
Chairperson of the Commonwealth Countries Postal Administrators, Mr
Twiggs Xiphu,
General Manager of Government and International Relations of the
South Africa Post Office, Mr Shadrack Ganda,
Representatives and delegations from all CCPA member nations,
Our partners in business and organised labour,
Distinguished guests and delegates,
Ladies and gentlemen:
It is an immense pleasure and privilege for me to welcome visitors
to the province, a cross section of postal administrators present
here as well as all delegates to this historical Commonwealth
Countries Postal Administrators (CCPA) Conference today.
We must register our gratitude and pride from the outset then that
in the entire 17-year history of the CCPA, the South African Post
Office (SAPO) today becomes the first African postal administration
to host this mammoth imbizo of Commonwealth postal nations.
I am especially delighted that the history being made today happens
here at Sun City in the platinum province, hence my pleasant task
of welcoming all delegates, visitors and postal administrators from
across the Commonwealth into the North West province and in South
Africa. Writing about the African people’s disdain for
uncertainty and their desire to defeat a chaotic world, 35-year old
contemporary Kenyan writer and winner of the Caine Prize in
Literature, Binyavanga Wainaina offers this prose:
“If there is a miracle in the idea of life it is this; that
we are able to exist for a time in defiance of chaos. We live the
rest of our lives with the utter knowledge that there is something
deliberate, a vein in us that transports everything into place if
we follow the stepping stones of certainty.”
I believe that the post office forms an essential component of the
social and economic fabric of our country and of our developing
continent of Africa.
Who among the delegates here cannot remember the glee and zeal with
which we fetched and dispatched letters from the post office,
ensuring continued communication with our distant relatives and
loved ones?
For us as Africans the post office has been an indispensable means
of communication and a critical source of essential services like
pensions, grants, identity documents as well as other important
transactions that are instrumental in the lives of citizens.
However, that we meet today in the 21st century, Africa’s
century, means that the role of the post office has evolved
considerably to take into cognisance the advances in technological
development generally and the ever dynamic nature of our societies
and their challenges in particular.
Among other things this means that more than ever before the post
office stands a bigger chance to provide our rapidly growing
economy with integrated solutions in the crucial postal areas of
mail, logistics, communications and government services.
So it is that in South Africa of today the post office is
government’s preferred partner in service delivery and it
forms the biggest service network with more than 2 000 outlets
nationwide, spanning all nine provinces. This unparalleled network
allows our post office to reach the urban and rural citizen located
in the most remote parts of our country, enabling them to access
such government services as grants, pensions and various critical
documents like identity documents (IDs) and driver’s
licences.
In addition to this our post office like the rest of the
Commonwealth, faces the ever increasing challenges of technological
substitution of globalisation, increasing pressures of
de-regulation, growing customer expectations as well as general
competition.
As this year’s theme of “Showcasing Africa”
suggests, this Conference of Commonwealth Postal Administrators
(CCPA) must pay particular attention to issues affecting African
postal administration while looking to establish further joint
venture partnerships with the major trading partners of the
Commonwealth of Nations.
Over the next few days, we will particularly be interested in
interacting in full with the close to hundred member nations of
CCPA including Great Britain, Canada, New Zealand, Australia,
Singapore, Malaysia and our brothers and sisters from the
Caribbean, the continent of Africa and the Diaspora.
In these interactions we will be looking to engage each other
robustly around challenges of enhancing postal technology,
critically examining the current landscape of postal operators,
postal development and future challenges.
I am certain that all of us are eager to exploit this historical
CCPA conference as a forum to discuss matters of mutual interest
and facilitate the much-needed exchange of ideas and best practices
among member nations.
While you are busy deliberating on all these important matters, I
must also urge you not to ignore the ambience, the beauty and the
hospitality of the North West province.
For how can any of you go home without imbibing yourself with the
culture and heritage of the platinum province as manifested in its
people, its rivers and valleys, its incredible wildlife and wealth
of mineral resources?
You have all come to the province and the country in which as
President Thabo Mbeki so eloquently put it, “we have conceded
equal citizenship of our country to the leopard and the lion, the
elephant and the springbok, the hyena, the black mamba and the
pestilential mosquito.”
I have no doubt that when you leave this province at the end of the
conference you will go on to become very important and trusted
ambassadors of our province and our beloved country South
Africa.
The ties that will be forged in this 14th CCPA conference will no
doubt be cemented further as we prepare to host another first in
Africa, the 24th Universal Postal Union Congress in Nairobi, Kenya
in 2008.
Finally, let me once again welcome you to this our platinum
province and our beloved country South Africa. May you have a
resoundingly successful conference that will take all the existing
member nations’ postal services to a higher pedestal of
growth, efficiency and prosperity.
Through our post offices, let us defy chaos and create order and
certainty as Binyavanga Wainaina says we are prone to do. Let us
allow that vein in us that transports everything into place to
reign supreme. Let us together build better societies, strong
communities and prosperous economies through the services our post
offices provide.
I wish you a fruitful Commonwealth Countries Postal Administrators
Conference.
I thank you!
Issued by: Office of the Premier, North West Provincial
Government
25 July 2006