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Date
: 14/02/2004
Source: The Presidency
Title: J Zuma: 23rd Anniversary of Matola raid, Mozambique
ADDRESS BY THE DEPUTY PRESIDENT OF THE REPUBLIC OF SOUTH AFRICA, HE
JACOB ZUMA, AT THE 23RD ANNIVERSARY OF THE MATOLA RAID, MAPUTO,
MOZAMBIQUE, 14 February 2004
The Prime Minister of the People's Republic of Mozambique, Cde
Pascoal Mocumbi
The families of South Africans and Mozambicans, who lost their
lives in the South African struggle for liberation
The Governor of the Maputo Province
Mayors of Maputo and Matola
Members of the diplomatic corps
Distinguished guests
Comrades and Friends.
We are gathered here today, as one united people of Mozambique and
South Africa, to commemorate a painful moment that will never be
forgotten in the history of our two countries.
We are also gathered to recommit ourselves to ensuring that such an
incident never happens again.
I must begin by thanking our Mozambican hosts, the South African
High Commission in Maputo and the Freedom Park Trust, for making it
possible for us to mark this important occasion.
It is significant that we commemorate the Matola Raid on the
occasion of the celebration of South Africa's first decade of
liberation and democracy, for which we are hugely indebted to the
Mozambican people for their support and sacrifices.
Coincidentally, Mozambique is moving towards celebrating its third
decade of freedom and the formation of the People's Republic of
Mozambique in June 1975.
Such an occasion of celebrating our liberation demands that we take
stock and remember those who laid down their lives and made it
possible, through their supreme sacrifices, for us to be
free.
In a brutal and callous act, on 30 January 1981, a unit of the
South African Defence Force, accompanied by enemy agents who had
infiltrated the ANC as well as askaris, invaded Mozambique and
attacked homes used by the ANC at Matola, and murdered 16 South
Africans and one Portuguese national, who was killed when he drove
into an SADF roadblock.
We also pay our respects to the families of Mozambicans who died
during two subsequent SADF raids, in Namahasha in November 1982,
and an air raid on a jam factory in May 1983.
Addressing a Frelimo Rally in Maputo on 14 February 1982,
commemorating the first anniversary of the Matola raid, the late
ANC President, Cde Oliver Tambo, eloquently described the Matola
invasion as a raid which insulted the sovereignty of the Mozambican
people, defiled their national dignity, violated their territorial
integrity and challenged the very concept of African independent
statehood.
Amongst those who were ruthlessly murdered at Matola in 1981, were
Mduduzi Guma, Lancelot Hadebe, Mandla Daka, Daniel Molokisi, Steven
Ngcobo, Vusumzi Ngwema, Thabang Bookolane, Krishna Rabilal, Themba
Dimba, William Khanyile, Motso "Obadi" Mokgabudi, Collin Khumalo,
Levinson Mankankaza, Albert Mahutso and others. We also remember
the brave people's soldier, Vuyani Mavuso, who was kidnapped during
the raid, and was later executed when he refused to co-operate with
apartheid security agencies to betray his comrades.
Comrades and Friends, we must also spare a thought for the SADF
soldiers who were killed or injured during the Matola raid, having
crossed the border to attack their exiled fellow South Africans. A
body was found after the attack and there were strong indications
that some had fled with injuries or that there could have been
other casualties.
We must acknowledge that they were victims of an evil system that
had brainwashed them into believing that the ANC had to be
eliminated at all costs.
We must also salute the memory of other patriots who were murdered
in other incidents in Mozambique such as Ruth First who died in a
parcel bomb attack in 1982, Philemon Mahlako in November 1979,
Enoch Reginald Mhlongo in July 1989 and Themba Ngesi and Samuel
Phinda who were poisoned.
There are also those who were seriously injured, such as Judge
Albie Sachs who survived a bomb attack when his car exploded in
Maputo, near the corner of Eduardo Mondlane and Julius Nyerere
Avenues.
As we solemnly pay tribute to our heroes and heroines, we also
recall Cde President Tambo's directive at the first commemorative
event in 1982, that 14th of February should be observed as the Day
of Friendship between Peoples of Mozambique and South Africa. We
are fulfilling his wish as we meet here today.
It is in this spirit that we must emphasise the sacrifices of the
Mozambican people and the price they paid for our freedom. A
vicious war was waged against the Mozambican people after
independence, by Rhodesia and apartheid South Africa, fought on
many fronts, including military and economic.
The 1981 Matola raid falls within that context, having been part of
a systematic programme by South Africa, aimed at undermining
Mozambique as a country, but also to delay or stop our liberation
struggle.
As part of this campaign, civilians in buses and trains and in the
villages were indiscriminately massacred. Development projects were
systematically sabotaged and destroyed, and much of the countryside
was turned into a wasteland. The country faced the prospect of mass
starvation.
All this happened because Mozambique stood firm in its resolve to
support the liberation struggle of the people of Southern Africa,
especially South Africa and Zimbabwe. Today we extend our deep and
heartfelt gratitude to Mozambicans for that comradeship, commitment
and sacrifices.
We also today honour that gallant fighter for freedom, Cde
President Samora Machel, a man of outstanding revolutionary
principles and a true liberator, who made an impact not only in
Mozambique but in the entire Southern African region. His
leadership of the revolution in this country inspired the oppressed
masses of South Africa and shortened the distance towards our
freedom.
The masses in South Africa heard him loud and clear as he
repeatedly shouted "Aluta Continua!" a cry that reverberated
throughout Southern Africa and instilled fear in all enemies of
peace, freedom and justice.
The truth regarding the death of this great leader on South African
soil is yet to be uncovered. At the air crash in Mbuzini, in what
is now Mpumalanga Province, Mozambique sacrificed its Head of
State, members of Cabinet and many senior officials for the
liberation of South Africa.
Cde President Machel paid the ultimate price for seeking the
liberation of his brothers and sisters in Southern Africa,
especially South Africa and Zimbabwe. There are no words in the
human language, which can accurately express our gratitude to the
Mozambican government, Mozambican people and Frelimo for such a
sacrifice. We can only say Kanimambo, Obrigado.
We must also use this opportunity to pay homage to Moses Mabhida,
that revolutionary hero of our struggle who had served at one point
as a leader of our trade union movement SACTU, as national
commissar of our army, and later, by the time he passed on, as the
general secretary of the South African Communist Party.
He was laid to rest in Maputo in March 1986, and at his funeral,
both Cde President Machel and Cde President Tambo agreed that the
final resting place for Cde Mabhida would have to be in South
Africa after freedom was attained. We have an obligation to fulfil
that command.
To the families of the soldiers who fell here, may you find solace
in the knowledge that the freedom that your loved ones believed in,
and fought for, was ultimately achieved.
May your hearts be comforted by the fact that we shall forever
remember their contribution, their selflessness and their
dedication to the freedom of their country and their people.
The blood that was shed in Matola and other parts of Mozambique,
and the blood of Cde President Machel and those who were travelling
with him when the plane crashed at Mbuzini, did not flow in
vain.
It is that blood that changed the political landscape completely,
and brought the liberation of South Africa closer. It is that blood
which has watered the tree of freedom, and created a democratic and
stable South Africa that now lives in peace and harmony with its
neighbours.
The pain and suffering that we shared, created a unity that is
everlasting, arising out of the resolve by the Mozambican people,
that they would only be truly free, when South Africa was
free.
As we commemorate the 23rd Anniversary of the Matola Raid, we must
rededicate ourselves to confront the new challenges that face our
two countries. The struggle cannot be over until we decisively
address the challenges of underdevelopment, disease and
poverty.
As current and past chairpersons of the African Union, and as part
of the AU Troika, we must continue to work together to ensure the
realisation of the goals of a better Southern Africa, and better
Africa, within the framework of the African Union and the New
Partnership for Africa's Development.
Our joint participation in peacemaking and peacekeeping in the
continent, within the auspices of the AU, is an example of the
quest for lasting peace by our two countries, to ensure that the
era of cross-border raids and regional aggression is gone
forever.
In this regard, South Africa is proud of the fact that the new
South African National Defence Force works for peace in the
continent, as seen in our involvement in the Democratic Republic of
Congo and in Burundi where our troops work side by side with their
Mozambican counterparts and the Ethiopians.
As Cde President Machel and Cde President Tambo said in 1981 and
1982 respectively, we are one people. Cde President Machel put it
pertinently in 1981 that the oppressed Mozambicans and South
Africans were a united 35 million strong force, and that together
they would defeat apartheid. Indeed, we did.
We are still one united force, as united today as we were in 1982
when Cde President Tambo said:
"We are one people today. This means we are recapturing our
glorious past. We were one people. History put us together on this
continent from time immemorial. We evolved together, shared a
common African culture, traded with one another and dealt each with
the other as human beings, whether in times of war or in times of
peace, whether in circumstances of hunger or in conditions of
plenty".
Let us continue working together, to ensure that the ideals and
memory of Cde President Tambo, Cde President Machel, and indeed all
those who sacrificed their lives for freedom in Matola and
elsewhere, live forever.