Date: 18/03/2010 Source: African National Congress Title: ANC: Ramathlodi: Speech by ANC MP, in the debate on the vote of no confidence in President Jacob Zuma, Parliament
Mr Speaker
I stand here, in front of the country and the world to speak to the suitability of the President of the Republic of South Africa to continue hold the high office of the President. As the house is aware, this sad episode is occasioned by the unfortunate and adventurous tabling of the so-called motion of no confidence in the President.
This being a party based system of government; a motion of no confidence in the President becomes a motion of no confidence in the African National Congress. Those who seek to displace an elephant must be prepared to climb a mountain and be good mountaineers at that. We reserve the right of self defence and we are now called upon to exercise that right. We are exercising that right in defence of our revolution and in defence of our future as a people.
Accordingly, we are tabling a motion of confidence in the President of the Republic. In doing so I wish to remind the country as to whom Jacob Gedliyihlekisa Zuma is. In the President we a have peasant boy who joined the army of the working people at a tender age. This background shaped and formed his political consciousness. That is why he continues to be biased in favour of the rural and urban poor and the working class. This biasness is reflected in the structure and programmes of the government he leads with distinction.
He is the son of the black people of South Africa. He is a warrior prince born of the proud Zulu people who distinguish themselves as true patriots throughout the torturous period of wars of resistance which ended with the defeat of Chief Bambhata in the Inkandhla forests in 1902. His participation in the national liberation struggle is born of the direct experience being an African under apartheid South Africa. As a freedom fighter he is generally acknowledged as one of the most dedicated, fearless and exemplary soldiers and leaders of the people's army Umkhonto We Sizwe. In the regard, he worked in the underground, was captured and served ten years on Robben Island. On his release he went into exile and there rose through the ranks to be head of the ANC Mkhoko and member of the NEC. It was in this capacity that he became the first member of the NEC to legally enter South Africa in order to prepare for formal negotiations.
He is a proud Zulu man who fiercely defends his culture and way of life. His elevation to high office has not alienated him from his way of life and the people of Inkandhla have him as an active participant in the affairs of the village whenever time permits. He observes and practice traditional rituals together with his people, and he is not ashamed of who he is. He refuses to be judged according to standards of non-Africans, who continue to insist that theirs is the only acceptable culture, fifteen years after our liberation.
History will remember our President as a dedicated and highly successful peacemaker. In exile he was part of the team that initiated contact between the ANC in exile and the apartheid regime. In the 1990s as chairperson of ANC KZN, working together with Prince Mangosuthu Buthelezi, they established peace in KZN and gave South Africa a rare gift of peace. We are most grateful for this. As the Deputy President of the Republic he led negotiations that gave Burundi its own peace. He continues with the mission to restore and consolidate peace on the continent and in the world in general. President Zuma is a great reconciler. He has introduced a new style of governance which does not criminalise opposition but rather s eek to find common national interests that bind us together as a nation. In this regard, he has opened dialogue with leaders of South Africa in all spheres, political, economic, cultural and everywhere else. He is not grievance driven and that makes him a great forgiver. Safter those who persecuted him in recent times, using state organs to fight political fights. He has not done so.
All these attributes and many more are found in abundance in our great movement the African national Congress. The movement that seeks to build a humane and caring society that recognises and accords human dignity to all, without regard to race, class, colour and gender. A movement that has been at the forefront of the struggles to create a better life for all. A movement that continue to promote reconciliation based on political and social justice, sometimes even in the face of insolent provocation by the defenders of the grave of apartheid and their lackeys.
As this movement we unashamedly champion the interests of victims of apartheid, that is black people in general and Africans in particular. We are not apologetic, in this regard, and we are ready to fall by our sword in defence of this principle. We are determined to build a new South Africa that is founded on a solid foundation of social justice, political, economic and cultural equality. We have forgiven those who have enslaved us over centuries, we now insist on being equals. On this, we shall give no quarter, there shall be no retreat.
We expect no mercy or favours as we never did over all these years. There is no easy walk to freedom, mdala said. Many gave up and many betrayed us, as we unflinchingly and relentlessly pursued the struggle. We are not about to give up now. There has been moments when anti people deviants have found themselves at the helm of our great movement. Whenever they got caught, we either expelled them or they walked out. Many of those who walked away soon discovered the grim truth of the loneliness of the wilderness. It is bitterly cold out there as they endure a solitary existence akin to that of the prodigal son.
In recent years we confronted this phenomenon which sought to own the ANC as a personal property of a tiny clique, failing which it was determined to destroy the ANC from within. Happily the people recaptured their movement in Polokwane. The tendency conducted public affairs and political discourse with unprecedented arrogance. There were no boundaries of restrain. Those who tried to offer wise counsel would be rebuffed with the might of Samson. Not only would their advice be rejected, they would be subjected mob lynching. Our own icon, President Mandela was not spared the wrath of a tendency running amok.
It was this tendency that embarked on a determined struggle to stop the then Deputy President Zuma from becoming the next leader of the ANC and the country. Elaborate plans were put in place, to retain the ANC as a personal fiefdom of the tendency. They wanted to impose their chosen leader upon us in order to consolidate their anti people agenda. Zuma became an obstacle that stood firm between the greed driven insanity and the restoration of our movement to its members. He had to be stopped at all costs. His persecution was unrelenting, even in the face of it provoking a possible civil war. In those bleak and dark days, I was one of those who defiantly sang the song, ‘ Ba sithatha phe, isibindi e singaga, sa guthathi ANC be enze yabo so ku thathi Ianc be enze yabo.'.
We went to Polokwane and the people spoke and elected President Zuma. The tendency was shell shocked and confused. As the reality of defeat began to sink in, shock turned into fierce fury against itself and against the ANC. At last but finally, the tendency had fallen from the high horse of folly and the house of cards began to collapse into a heap of broken illusions and shuttered ambitions. The boasting came to an abrupt halt. Some of the leaders of the tendency walked out with the sole aim of defeating the ANC, regardless of the political cost to the majority of our people whose hopes and dreams remain firm behind the movement. They formed an organisation and arrogantly called it the Congress of the People, in a way to spite the real Congress.
We went to elections uwith overwhelming majority and the world did not collapse. In fact, the sun still rose and it continues to do so today. Prophets of doom have been silenced. But they are bitter and are consumed by incomprehensible hatred of the person of the President of the Republic. They suffer the curse of obsession of a stalker who pursues his prey with the single mindedness of a zealot. Hatred has become the defining feature of this tendency and the sole reason for existence.
All above explains the genesis of the so called motion of no confidence in the President. It is contrived, it is spiteful and has nothing to do with good governance. It has everything to do with diverting us from working together for a better life. As a result, it will stand out in history as a tragic error founded on the shifting sands of illusion, by those driven by personal agenda to derail a historic mission of liberation and nation building.
I now call upon this house to protect our future and the future of our children and grand children by expressing full confidence in our President. Those who play delinquent games with our future should be taught a bitter lesson by you the people's representatives. You have a mandate to do so, invoke it, deploy it.
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