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Date
: 25/03/2004
Source: Inkatha Freedom Party
Title: L.P.H.M Mtshali: Campaign meeting with business sector
Programme Director, Mr B V Mthetwa, Uthungulu District Chairman of
the IFP, Mr S V Naicker MPP, men and women of goodwill from the
business sector, my brothers and sisters from the Indian community
and comrades from the National Teachers Union.
I am delighted that at long last Mr S V Naicker's dream has been
realized. It took a lot of patience and perseverance for this
meeting to be realized. Mr S V Naicker is endowed with the
attributes which have contributed to the success of this meeting. I
accordingly commend him for a job well done. I do not for a moment
imply that Mr S V Naicker has been working single-handed. Fellow
comrade B V Mthetwa and the Uthungulu District leadership have
played their part. We accordingly thank them.
This meeting is held twenty days before the eventful day i.e. the
election day on 14 April 2004. I need not remind you that this will
be an epoch making election. The fate of democracy in this province
and in our country will be finally decided at the polls in KwaZulu
Natal. Put differently KwaZulu Natal is the battlefield for
democracy in this country. Thus every man and woman of goodwill has
a moral obligation to play a significant role which will ensure a
resounding electoral victory for the IFP. We pride ourselves that
we are the champions of democracy. It will thus be a fitting
tribute that we be empowered by voters to entrench democracy in
this country. Whoever intends abstaining from voting shall
contribute to the entrenchment of the ANC hegemony which we regard
as a threat to democracy. I earnestly appeal to all men and women
of goodwill to go to the polls on April 14. Every man and women of
goodwill should have a stake in the transport arrangements to be
put in place by this district to up the voter turn out.
I am not convinced that all of us within the City of Umhlathuze are
aggressively marketing the IFP as the party to be voted into power.
I am looking forward to the setting up of IFP tables displaying our
election material including our manifestos at all shopping malls
within our city. There is no reason why walk-abouts should not be
conducted. One would expect that house- to - house campaigns will
be conducted.
The IFP is committed to a peaceful election. We are champions of
peace and tolerance. We declare that every party is free to
campaign without any impediments placed on its way, without any
acts of intimidation and violence being displayed. We remain
committed to the Electoral Code of Conduct. We accordingly reject
with all contempt any statements which associate us with violence
during the election campaign. It is a gross insult for any editor
of a credible paper to accuse the IFP of benefiting from political
violence.
All citizens of our beloved country are proud of our 1996
Constitution. It is this basic law of our country which provides
for the Bill of Rights. All our fundamental rights are protected by
law. Any infringement thereof is contestable in any of our courts
of law. May I remind those who have conveniently forgotten that
every citizen enjoys the following rights : the right to social
grants, the right to housing and the right to development. No sane
person can ever place these rights in jeopardy. Public funds voted
by parliament should be expended equitably to uphold these
rights.
The issues of this election campaign have not been chosen by
political parties. In fact, it might be the first time in our
recent history that the issues of this election have been chosen by
the South African people. This is reflected in the fact that all
political parties are effectively running on the same issues and
attempts to shift discussions away from them have failed.
The election campaign is about the issues of HIV/AIDS, crime,
unemployment, corruption and poverty in rural areas. These issues
are very well known to all South Africans and need no explanation.
In one way or the other, all our families are suffering because of
them. These issues represent the areas in which the ANC government
has failed to deliver during the past ten years in general, and
during the past five years in particular.
We are all directly or indirectly affected or infected by HIV/AIDS.
We are facing an holocaust of unprecedented dimension, while our
ruling class is dealing with it by means of public relation
campaigns while delaying the roll out of a medical and social
emergency plan. Crime has been out of control for years but the
ruling class has first denied the existence of this problem and has
then tried to trivialize it. I know of no South African who has not
been a victim of crime, or does not live in fear of becoming one.
The situation in rural areas has deteriorated in many respects in
the past ten years, because of the collapse of subsistence
agriculture and food security. Conversely, corruption has increased
and with it the perception of impunity. Corruption has developed at
the highest level of government and is permeating many levels of
our administration. It has also infiltrated itself in many sectors
of our civil society and is becoming a cancer, gradually eating
away at our social and economic life.
Unemployment has grown from 29% to 40% and there is no credible
plan to generate employment, other than those put forward by the
IFP and the DA. Our country still does not have a plan to
accelerate its rate of economic growth. We need to develop a new
industrial basis for South Africa, which can explain to all of us
how we as a country are going to earn a living in the age of
globalization. The world does not owe us a living and we need to
identify now what type of products our country will bring into the
global markets in twenty years. We believe that South Africa has
the opportunity of becoming an excellent country while, as it
stands, it seems to be destined to remain a mediocre one because
government has failed to formulate a long-term vision for its
growth and development.
These are the real problems of South Africa, both as they are and
as people perceive them. It is significant that there is a great
degree of accuracy on how people are perceiving our problems. These
are the five areas in respect of which the ANC government has been
particularly negligent. The next elections are going to be about
how these problems are to be solved. If the South African people
wish to have five more years of the same neglect, they can continue
to empower the ANC. The IFP and the DA have come together to give
the South African people the hope of a democratic alternative. They
are a government in waiting. It is for the South African people to
have the courage to elect it.
If one reviews our proposals, it is obvious that by working
together, the IFP and the DA can produce a million real job
opportunities. We have a long-term vision on how to get the country
to work. Our solutions are not easy and we will ask the South
African people to walk the uphill road towards prosperity, which
will call for sacrifice, social discipline, productivity and
long-term commitments. The old South Africa was built with the
blood and sweat of all, but for the benefit of a few privileged
members of the white community. We feel that a prosperous new South
Africa will need to be built with the sacrifice and contribution of
all, but this time for the equitable benefit of all. This is more
than a cliche. It is an actual plan of action which calls for a new
social contract amongst all South Africans. The IFP-DA coalition
are the seeds of this contract.
If we look at KwaZulu Natal, it is obvious that the IFP-DA
coalition has already produced tangible results, in terms of better
governance and increased delivery in the short time span of two
years. If the same parties were to become the next government of
South Africa, the whole of the country could become a really
extraordinary place. We firmly believe that Prince Mangosuthu
Buthelezi would be an extraordinary President and under his
presidency, South Africa would be an extraordinary country. We must
have the courage to conceive a dream which is larger than our
present horizons, because on election day the South African people
have indeed the power to make miracles happen. We believe that the
miracle of a democratic alternative is necessary for the whole of
South Africa.
Our democracy is in great jeopardy. The signs are there for
everyone to see, even though many prefer ignoring them. We are
witnessing the rapid consolidation of an embryonic one-party state.
Among the issues of this election is indeed whether our democracy
is to move forward or backward. KwaZulu Natal has become the
battlefield on which the survival of our democracy will be tested.
The ANC changed the Constitution to allow elected representatives
to cross the floor, in spite of the fact that they were elected on
a different type of mandate. Crossing of the floor is allowed in
many countries but it is unheard of that political representatives
elected on the basis of one system could change the terms of their
mandate in midstream. It is obvious that the ANC is willing to
change the Constitution, not only at will but even at whim to
accommodate its desire to control all centres of power in the
country.
If this happens the dialectics of democracy will suffer and it
might take twenty years before there could be again a variety of
centres of power at work in our country. Today KwaZulu Natal is the
only government left which has the autonomy to create different
policies and think differently from the centre. We gave proof of
the importance of such an autonomy in respect of our policy to
distribute anti-retroviral drugs to prevent mother-to-child
transmission of HIV/AIDS. In so doing we corrected what was a
tragic policy of the central government, which dealt with our
country's greatest tragedy with almost criminal neglect. Democracy
is exactly about different provinces and levels of government being
able to correct one another's mistakes through competition of
efforts and ideas. Our democracy stands to become stifled if the
ANC is not cut down to size. It would be important for our country
that no political party had the power to unilaterally change our
Constitution.
These are all challenges before the South African people. At the
next elections the South African people must choose whether they
really wish the issues of HIV/AIDS, unemployment, crime, corruption
and poverty to be solved. Whether they want more or less democracy.
Whether they want people in power who rule through ideology and
empty promises or people who act and deliver.
The ANC is moved by ideology, not pragmatism. For instance, their
proposal to open up the country to any foreigner coming from the
whole of Africa, China, Russia and India, in addition to another
host of countries, is nothing short of irresponsible. South Africa
needs to be thankful to Minister Buthelezi who stopped such a
proposal and enabled a process to take place which will put it up
for public scrutiny, rather than being adopted through by means of
a Cabinet decision and in violation of a process of public
participation. There is no doubt that if the country were open, up
to 2.9 billion people from some of the poorest and most volatile
regions in the world, every community would be overrun by unneeded
immigrants who are not beneficial to our country. We are in favour
of beneficial immigration, but we know that no other country has
waived visa requirements the way the Minister of Foreign Affairs
and the President wanted to.
The South African people must reflect on these matters as they are
very concerning. South Africa needs the pragmatist and visionary
leadership of Prince Mangosuthu Buthelezi.
The next elections should be about what type of leadership South
Africa needs. We strongly feel that the solution to many South
African problems lies in the measure and quality of leadership that
Minister Buthelezi and his partners can provide to our
country.
On the day of election each political party is entitled to appeal
to the South African people to ensure that its leader may become
the next President.