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
: 10/06/2006
Source: Department of Foreign Affairs
Title: S van der Merwe: Ambassador's night
Address by Ms Sue van der Merwe, Deputy Minister of Foreign
Affairs, on the occasion of the Ambassador's night, Sandton
Inter-Continental Hotel
Mrs Saedah Yahaya, President of IDSA
Members of the Diplomatic Corps
Deputy Minister Pahad
Queen Mother of the Royal Bafokeng
Distinguished guests
Ladies and gentlemen
I am honoured to deliver this address on behalf of Minister Dlamini
Zuma, who due to unforeseen circumstances, cannot be here tonight.
She had wanted so much to be at this function to personally
demonstrate her appreciation of the critical role the International
Diplomatic Spouses Association (IDSA) plays in the South African
community and at the same time have a good time in your midst in
this swinging celebration that the organisers have put
together.
Let me also take this opportunity to thank the organisers for their
splendid arrangements to make this event a success. I also wish to
thank all the guests for coming out on such a cold night and
opening up your hearts and wallets. Judging by tonight's programme,
I am certain we will set the night on fire. During the course of
last week, while I was in Cape Town I had the opportunity to visit
Day Hospital in Khayelitsha in Cape Town and meet with the people
who work there, supported by one of the grants provided by your
organisation. I was deeply impressed by what they able to achieve
under very difficult circumstances.
The grant provides for an interpreter to assist medical students
and community service doctors to take a full and comprehensive case
history of the patients.
While a simple interpretation service may not seem important in
itself, if is truly remarkable what leverage this simple task
provides to the doctors. It enables them to get a full and detailed
medical history from the patient, greatly facilitating a
diagnosis.
The interpreters also assist the patient with careful explanation
of the doctors’ comments which has lead to a huge improvement
in the patients’ compliance with taking their medication and
return visits to the hospital for follow up treatment.
With the huge volumes of patients (one doctor will see 50 patients
a day) this service significantly improves the efficiency of the
hospital service, it assists the doctors, it also provides an
essential training basis for the young doctors and medics.
I might add that many of the young doctors I met are not South
African but come from other countries in Africa, particularly from
the Southern African Development Community (SADC) region. I have to
say that I was most impressed with the general way in which the
hospital was run. Literally hundreds of people come there every day
and are treated in an orderly way, all the nurses and staff were
cheerful and polite and the two young interpreters, Khanyisa Mtwana
and Ezzy Zozi, were extraordinary.
Congratulations then on your contribution to this very important
project with both health and training spin-offs. We live in a
world, where if the truth be told, for most of the world's people,
life is still, in the words of Hobbes, "nasty, brutish and
short”. It is the reality of this world that we address in
our daily work, so as to nurture a global reality characterised by
sustainable development, a culture of human rights and a better
quality of life for all the world's people, wherever they may
be.
While multilateral organisations, continental and national
governments play their role in ensuring that the desired world
becomes a reality, the truth is that every effort counts, every
initiative that is genuinely intended to help the poor can make a
difference and can save a life. The idea that “I am my
brother's keeper” is what motivates so many individuals and
organisations who are trying to work for the good of the world as a
whole.
These are the groups and organisations like IDSA that we must
salute, for their work is often conducted in silence far from the
eyes of the world's press. Yet they too are the unsung heroes of a
quiet social revolution, a way of changing the world.
Yes, indeed, they may well be taking small steps, but it does take
small steps to create a giant wave of energy that can be unleashed
to fight poverty, to make a case for global equality in all spheres
of governance, to open the road to dialogue, negotiations and
inculcate a culture of permanent peace. This is not unfamiliar
ground for us South Africans. We have been along this path; and it
was the only route that could take us to a common destination. This
is the road we are still building day by day working towards the
desired destiny of real equality and people-centred
development.
We live in a world where almost everything we do is inextricably
linked to everything else. We can choose to make waves, in this way
helping others to help themselves. Or we can choose to be inactive,
selfish and not lift a helping land. For the latter, there are
consequences in choosing to look the other way and to ignore
suffering. Let us continue to work together for a more harmonious
world reality where people are placed at the centre, where human
life is precious, where the world's problems are solved not through
the barrel of a gun, but through talks, laughter, love, common
understanding, bringing an end to hunger and hardship, asserting
the right to live in friendship and in peace.
I think that, as South Africa, it is this ethos that we embrace
this is what we mean when we say we are adopting a multilateral
approach to world affairs it comes through the realisation that for
there to be world peace and progress, we can only do our work and
fulfil our tasks together with others. Nations can choose to
conquer others but they do so at the peril of all humanity. Not to
draw weapons is harder. To understand the humanity of those who
appear to oppose us is harder. But ultimately, for the sake of the
existence of humankind, what must surely prevail is the indomitable
spirit of humanity.
Speaking at his Nobel Peace Lecture in 1961, Chief Albert Luthuli
succinctly captured this ethos, when he argued thus:
It may well be that South Africa's social system is a monument to
racialism and race oppression, but its people are the living
testimony to the unconquerable spirit of humankind. I think it is
this refusal to break, to give in to oppression, a belief in a
future, that we ought to take seriously even in present times. Over
the years, civil society movements around the world have been,
among those, at the forefront of fighting against poverty and
inequality and injustices that have crippled the lives of the most
vulnerable people in our societies. As governments we need to
acknowledge the role that civil society movement’s play in
supporting our work and in helping to safeguard the well being all
our people.
I therefore wish to express our warm appreciation for the
contribution that you continue to make in the fields of education,
health and support for child and women victims of abuse. This goes
a long way towards advancing the ideals of building a better life
for all our people for Africa and the world. Thirty years ago this
year in the month of June, this country was one whose children were
dying on the streets of Soweto, a country in which the youth had
decided they could take no more and they took on the apartheid
government.
Their uprising ended in tragedy with many young people having lost
their lives and with so many having to flee the country. But this
was only the start of a renewed struggle that would ensure that the
indomitable human spirit would prevail and that humanity would be
the victor. A new generation had opened the way for a greater
freedom that would only be fully realised in 1994, but that already
in 1976 had begun in the minds of young people to take shape and to
flower.
Today, South African society celebrates the triumph of the human
spirit and we thank you for your part in this.
Have a great evening!
Issued by: Department of Foreign Affairs
10 June 2006