Address by Deputy President David Mabuza at the Memorial Service of Dr Zola Sidney Themba Skweyiya

Source: Africa Press Organisation – English – Report:

Headline: Address by Deputy President David Mabuza at the Memorial Service of Dr Zola Sidney Themba Skweyiya

Our sister, Mrs Thuthukile Skweyiya and children,
Former President Thabo Mbeki,
Members of the Executive in our midst,
Members of the Judiciary in our midst,
Family and friends of Dr Zola Skweyiya,
Fellow South Africans,
Ladies and Gentlemen,

This past Saturday our country hosted the world in laying to rest one of our revolutionary stalwarts Mama Winnie Madikizela-Mandela. Hardly a week we are gathering to pay our respect to another giant of our struggle Dr Zola Skweyiya.

With his passing, our country has lost a fine revolutionary, an upright human being and a true servant of the people.

As a nation, and the African National Congress in particular, we are cognisant of the reality that this period marks a critical turning point in our political history. It is time when we losing the generation of outstanding leaders that made an immense contribution to our freedom.

In this hour of grief and loss, we find comfort that Dr Skweyiya leaves a rich legacy behind for all of us to emulate.

Throughout his life, he performed extraordinary feats because he was driven by a deep sense of social justice, care and love of his people. It was his deep hatred for racial oppression and injustice that inspired his life-long activism.

Dr Skweyiya was a very loyal cadre of the ANC. He was a deep thinker, and very rational person, and yet disciplined in his own conduct, and in understanding the ANC and its reputation.

As a loyal member, he gave absolute loyalty and obedience to the leadership of the organization. But he was also independent minded, but careful nonetheless as to how he expressed himself.

He was humble yet steadfast in his principles.

In valuing integrity, truth and selflessness, he became an embodiment of servant leadership and a shining light for the destitute and marginalised of our country and the world.

Trained as a lawyer, he understood the power of law as an instrument of effecting political change and of advancing justice and equality. As a Cabinet Minister, his work was truly pioneering.

The many strides that we made as a country especially on the enjoyment, promotion and protection of basic human rights as provided in our Constitution, are partly due to Dr Skweyiya’s contribution and personal drive and conviction.

He succeeded in serving our nation with distinction because his love for the people was authentic. His enthusiasm for their dreams and aspirations was unsurpassed.

As a living personification of fairness and justice, his demeanour exemplified a special sensitivity to the needs of the most vulnerable among us.

Because of his passion for life and deep love for his people, he became a revolutionary cadre par excellence. He epitomised a cadre of unquestionable loyalty and dedication to his people.

In 1985, Oliver Tambo whom he worked with for many years in exile, must have had in mind a good human being of the calibre of Dr Skweyiya when he said,

“The distinctive feature of the revolutionary cadre is a high level of discipline, dedication and courage in carrying out the tasks assigned by the movement. Such cadres are guided by our goal of a united, non-racial and democratic South Africa.”

Dr Skweyiya placed the integrity of the organisation above all else.

In executing his responsibilities, he understood that his very actions would always be mirrored against what the ANC stood for. And for this reason, his revolutionary morality always took a central stage of his life and conduct.

He belongs to the generation of leaders whose very being and preoccupation was nothing but service to the people.

His life of activism and revolutionary struggle for our freedom as well as his life in public service, is peppered with nothing other than conviction, compassion and selflessness.

In all likelihood, these traits and character of Dr Skweyiya were shaped by his early years at Lovedale as a young student activist.

Lovedale was one of the historic mission schools that became an influential centre for education in South Africa. It was the heartbeat of political thought leadership and activism.

As the hotbed of the politics of resistance, it produced prominent names in the political and intellectual history of South Africa.

Among those who came from there and were his contemporaries, was the late Comrade Chris Hani, former President Thabo Mbeki and Comrade Pallo Jordan, to name but a few.

This generation of leaders remains the finest that our movement produced.

Here, students always participated in the campaigns of the Congress Movement, the boycotts and delegations of the Youth League.

Looking at this generation of young activists at the time, it is not suprising that Dr Skweyiya was soon immersed in the politics of the African National Congress, which he joined at the age of 14.

He proceeded to pursue his tertiary education at the University College of Fort Hare, which was another centre of intellectual, academic and political life in South Africa.

The period between 1961 to 1964 was one of intense repression in South Africa. The escalation of the politics of resistance led to the Rivonia Trial. The banning of liberation organisations, led directly to the establishment of the armed struggle and the underground structures of the ANC.

Together with his generation of young activists, Comrade Zola was among those pioneering cadres who left the country and established the external mission of the ANC and Umkhonto WeSizwe.

In 1978, Dr Skweyiya obtained a doctorate in law in the then German Democratic Republic. He became the Chief Representative of the ANC to the Organisation of African Unity (OAU) in Addis Ababa, which is where he honed his diplomatic skills.

After many years in Addis Ababa, the ANC appointed him to head the Legal and Constitutional Department of the ANC based in Lusaka. This was during a very sensitive time in the life of the ANC in exile. It was the time when large numbers of young South Africans post 1976 swelled the ranks of the ANC.

By so doing the armed wing of the ANC, Umkhonto weSizwe got a new lease of life. It was also the decade of fierce internal resistance, and the ANC President’s call to make South Africa ungovernable was receiving enthusiastic support in South Africa.

It was the time when the struggle, both internally and externally, combined to exert pressure on the apartheid regime. Inevitably, it was also the time when apartheid agents infiltrated the ANC, at the camps and elsewhere. Responses to this, and the need for discipline were increased within ANC.

Reports about life in the ANC camps, detention without trial and other forms of counter surveillance led to suspicion that there were human rights violations within ANC.

Oliver Tambo entrusted Dr Skweyiya to lead the ANC efforts at establishing a culture of human rights, maintenance of the rule of law even within the ANC camps, and ultimately an investigation was undertaken in order to root out any violations within the ANC.

This very sensitive task was handled by Comrade Zola Skweyiya with dignity and understanding.

He was known to be the one who investigated all complaints. Later he was entrusted with the duty to establish the ANC’s own Commission on the Constitution and prepare the ANC to participate in the negotiations that were then looming.

Upon his return to South Africa in 1990, he played a pivotal role in the negotiations for a democratic South Africa.

When the ANC got into power in 1994, we had inherited a fragmented and unaccountable governance system that consisted of separate administrations for different racial groups.

As our first democratic Public Service and Administration Minister, he championed the course for a developmental state.

It was under his sterling leadership that our government began restructuring that fragmented public service into an instrument of transformation. It should be lost in our memory that we had inherited a public service that was skewed in favour of white minority.

It was under Dr Skweyiya that we began reshaping public service and administration into a single one that serves all South Africans with dignity.

Our archives show that by the time we came into power, there was only one female chief director in the whole of the public service. It was under him that we began to actively recruit black women in Senior and Top Management positions.

That early transformation period also means Dr Skweyiya had to build a united, non-racial, efficient, ethical public service to replace a public service whose composition and content had characterised the corruption of the apartheid state.

He remained motivated by the ideals of inclusion and tolerance. That is why, there were no witch-hunts and purging of skilled, experienced personnel.

Later, as Minister of Social Development, his concern for the poor and the downtrodden was evident. He worked tirelessly to ensure that the dignity of recipients of social support from the state was respected and honoured.

When he championed an expanded social protection programme, he understood that this intervention was not an end in itself.

To him, it was one whose importance lay in bringing hope to the destitute. He understood that even though the road to the total emancipation of his people was long, they needed to have faith that their government would not forsake the vulnerable.

Consistently humble, yet straightforwardly fearless to defend the rights of the elderly and children. He understood the plight of the poor and could easily relate to its nature and form.

Dr Skweyiya understood that the arrogance of leadership serves no purpose in the advancement of peoples’ hopes and aspirations, but a source of social distance and an evil seed for trust deficit.

To best honour the legacy of this gentle giant of our struggle for freedom, we must agree that the arrogance of leadership must give way to humility.

Fellow mourners,

The loss of our stalwart is as painful as the loss of one’s piece of the body and we are poorer without his presence and wisdom. He leaves a rich legacy of intellectual rigour, of social activism, and as a man of honour.

For our part, we must acknowledge where we veered off the road and did not do things right.

Dr Skweyiya detested cliques and factions and was known always to stand above all such formations in the ANC. He expressed his unease with the developments in the South African Government.

So concerned was he, that he lent his support to the community of Stalwarts and Veterans of the ANC and was a signatory to their document, For the Sake of Our Future.

At the sunset of his life, with such a stand, he lamented that we the leaders of his beloved movement had become hostile. He despised the purging of comrades by dominant factions. And he bemoaned gate keeping, disunity, and corruption.

Together with other veterans, a door was shut for him to openly engage on issues of concern at the time. As the leadership, our preoccupation with our own sense of security, rendered him and other veterans invisible.

Still, he placed his hopes in the general membership of his organisation. He kept the faith that in the branches, brave and courageous men and women would be awakened to renew and unite his organisation and country.

Like many members of the ANC, Dr Skweyiya would have been relieved by the outcomes of the 54th Elective Conference of the ANC in December 2017.

As we mourn his passing, we wish to assure his spirit and the entirety of the veterans of the ANC that we regret some of the omissions we have committed in the service of our people.

We want to assure his spirit that the organisation he so loved and dedicated his entire adult life to, is on an irreversible path of renewal as the true and honest servant of the people.

As our journey to the healing of wounds take us to other departed stalwarts of our movement like Oliver Tambo, Walter Sisulu, Nelson Mandela, Lilian Ngoyi, Govan Mbeki, Alfred Nzo, Chris Hani and Winnie Madikizela-Mandela, we surrender to their grace and care the hand of their comrade-in-arms, Dr Zola Skweyiya.

We trust they will give him the comradely embrace he might have missed from us his friends.

We hope they find a way of telling him that we heard his cry. We have felt the pain of a distinguished veteran who dedicated his life to his organisation, the African National Congress.

We finally felt the pain of a towering patriot whose disappointed stare, spoke volumes about how as leaders had forsaken our sincerity, how we had forgotten our mission and in the process had gone astray.

We heard and saw his frustration about a leadership that had become blind to the suffering of the people, and became deaf to the cries of society.

And till the end of time, he maintained his faith in the unity of the working class and its ability to organise itself to reclaim its movement to advance a pro-poor programme of fundamental social change.

Yet in his tone and gestures, we still found a measured human being embodying revolutionary discipline, humility and respect for those he disagreed with.

Even late in his life, he remained stern in appearance and tone but caring and compassionate in attitude. He might have been disappointed, but he was not bitter or paralysed.

Perhaps losing hope sometimes, but certainly never despairing.

In honour of his memory, the veterans and stalwarts of the ANC should never again feel they are treated with disdain and disrespect.

We will jealously guard our cohesion as a democratic state and at all times the unity of our movement. We will protect the gains we have made in promoting the interests of the poor. We will continue to improve the quality of service delivery to our people.

We have no doubt that as Dr Skweyiya departed this world, he was satisfied of the progress we have made in the provision of houses, water, sanitation and electricity to the poor given what we had inherited.

We will not cease to work to place the people first in the workings of our government. We will always care for the destitute and ensure that no one is left behind and no child goes to bed hungry. 

We shall continue to pursue the vision of attaining a united, non-racial, non-sexist, just and prosperous society. This is what the African National Congress stands for.

Fellow mourners,

On the death of Dr Skweyiya must rise a unique monument, the kind that Amilcar Cabral, termed constructive emulation. As he explained, Cabral meant competition, “but for well-being, not for our stomach, for us to serve our Party, our people.”

Our country needs new cadres with this constructive emulation, who will seek to outdo one another in the service of our people.

We need to outdo one another in compassion, love and support for one another, just as Dr Skweyiya and various others selflessly did, paying a huge sacrifice on our behalf.

In his memory, our young people must always live in hope that in this giant, they have inherited a country that is filled with possibilities. Their access to free higher education, opens doors for all to pursue their dreams in the fields of their choices.

In his name and in the name of our hard-won democracy, we must condemn violence against women and children, and the ill-treatment of our older persons.

As the champion of social development, this is the vision that this icon of our struggle and servant of the people, held so dear in his heart.

Mrs Skweyiya and family, please receive again our heartfelt condolences. May the good Lord save you from unending sorrow and keep you in the palm of his hand. May you gain strength even in this difficult hour of pain.

We thank you as a family for sharing this gentle giant with all of us, and for allowing him to serve humanity in the best way that he could.

To Oliver Tambo, as you hold Dr Skweyiya’s hand tightly, may you whisper to his caring ear the Irish Blessing:

May the road rise up to meet you.
May the wind be always at your back. 
May the sun shine warm upon your face; 
the rains fall soft upon your fields 
and until we meet again, 
may God hold you in the palm of His hand.

We salute you gentle giant of our struggle for freedom. May your revolutionary soul rest in enduring peace!

I thank you

Distributed by APO Group on behalf of Republic of South Africa: The Presidency.

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South Africa to Celebrate World Intellectual Property Day in Limpopo

Source: Africa Press Organisation – English – Report:

Headline: South Africa to Celebrate World Intellectual Property Day in Limpopo

The Department of Trade and Industry (the dti), in partnership with the Companies and Intellectual Property Commission (CIPC), National Intellectual Property Management Office (NIPMO), Limpopo Economic Development Agency, Technology Innovation Agency, Africa Bio, University of Limpopo, University of Venda and the Limpopo Premier’s Office will celebrate the World Intellectual Property Day in Bolivia Lodge, Polokwane, Limpopo from 24-26 April 2018.

The Intellectual Property (IP) Day will be celebrated under the theme Powering Change: Women in Innovation and Creativity. The Commissioner of CIPC, Advocate Rory Voller will give an opening address at the celebration.

According to the Minister of Trade and Industry, Dr Rob Davies, the objective of the World Intellectual Property Day (WIPD) celebration, is to recognise human creativity and acknowledge the socio-economic importance of intellectual property.

“Intellectual Property has been fundamental to South Africa’s economic growth, and even more so, as we build a future economy that is driven by knowledge and innovation. We have spent the past decade building a robust ecosystem in which businesses can use IP to create value from their technology, brands and content. The celebration is also aimed at promoting the protection of intellectual property and creating awareness about intellectual property rights,” says Davies

The celebration is targeted at the general public, youth, women, small and medium businesses, government departments involved in the field of IP and the creative industry. It offers us an opportunity to highlight the work that is done by government with regards to IP.

The celebration will include exhibitions by the dti, National Intellectual Property Management Office, Technology Innovation Agency, Limpopo Economic Development Agency, Africabio, the Limpopo Premier’s Office, the University of Venda, the University of Limpopo as well as creators and innovators in Limpopo.

The Intellectual Property Day is an annual event that is celebrated worldwide and this year will mark the 18th celebration of the day.

Distributed by APO Group on behalf of The Department of Trade and Industry, South Africa.

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South Africa: Statement by the Minister in the Presidency, Planning Monitoring and Evaluation, Dr Nkosazana Dlamini Zuma on behalf of the Inter Ministerial Committee on State Funerals on the arrangements for the Memorial and Funeral Service of Dr Zola Skweyiya

Source: Africa Press Organisation – English – Report:

Headline: South Africa: Statement by the Minister in the Presidency, Planning Monitoring and Evaluation, Dr Nkosazana Dlamini Zuma on behalf of the Inter Ministerial Committee on State Funerals on the arrangements for the Memorial and Funeral Service of Dr Zola Skweyiya

It is profoundly sad that in a short space of time of losing Mama Winnie, the country has lost another outstanding revolutionary. Dr Skweyiya passed away on 11 April 2018 at the age of 75.

Dr Zola Skweyiya, a  courageous fighters who fought for social justice in South Africa, played a pivotal role, in strengthening the foundational process and crafting the cornerstone of our democracy, the Constitution.

He served as Minister of Public Service and Administration (1994 – 1999) under President Nelson Mandela and then as Minister of Social Development (1999 – 2009) during President Thabo Mbeki’s administration. In 2009, Skweyiya was appointed as high commissioner of South Africa to the UK and Ireland.

President Cyril Ramaphosa has declared a special official funeral, Category 1 for Dr Zola Skweyiya.  The Official Memorial Service will take place on the 18 April 2018. The venue and time of the Memorial Service will be announced shortly.  The funeral service will take place on the 21 April 2018 at CRC Church, Corner Lynnwood road and Solomon Mahlangu Drive, Pretoria.

The chairperson of the Inter ministerial committee Minister Nkosazana Dlamini Zuma said “our nation owes a great debt to the many selfless champions such as Zola Skweyiya for their contribution in the struggle for a just and equitable society.”

Further logistical details on the Memorial Service and funeral arrangements will be communicated soon.

Distributed by APO Group on behalf of Republic of South Africa: Department of Government Communication and Information.

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Pretoria: Deputy Secretary-General’s remarks to Memorial for Winnie Mandela 

Source: Africa Press Organisation – English – Report:

Headline: Pretoria: Deputy Secretary-General’s remarks to Memorial for Winnie Mandela 

Deputy Secretary-General’s remarks to Memorial for Winnie Mandela:

Thank you for inviting me to share in this special evening.  What an honour to be with so many sisters and daughters of Winnie. 
Tonight, we celebrate the remarkable journey of a truly remarkable woman. 
It is right to do so here in Harlem – because Winnie Mandela came here again and again.   
Whenever she travelled here, it was more than just a visit.  It was a homecoming.  
She knew that the people of Harlem so deeply understood the struggle for freedom, justice and equality.   
She drew strength from your strength — your hope, your energy, your experiences, your actions.  
So in remembering Winnie – we recognize the critical role you played in her life and one of the great struggles of humanity. 
Winnie’s connection with Harlem showed that community mobilization was not just about what happened in Soweto — it was about every community, everywhere. 
And it was not just a struggle to wage in the corridors of power – but through people power at the grassroots. 
Tonight, I am with the millions of people who never had the good fortune to meet Winnie Mandela. 
She loomed larger than life for all of us.   
Winnie was the mother of the struggle.   
Winnie was the sister who kept the movement going while so many men were imprisoned or exiled.   
Winnie was the daughter of Africa who embodied the proverb “When you strike a woman, you strike a rock”.   
The women of South Africa kept the struggle firmly on the international agenda. And Winnie Mandela was the glue.   
Sadly, that came at great cost.  
Perhaps no one made such a personal sacrifice over such a prolonged period – all the while bringing up her family. 
She was personally targeted.   
She was internally exiled – isolated, tortured, sent off to remote, desolate spaces.    
She endured hardships we will never know.   
But Winnie Mandela refused to break.   
On the contrary, she became even more determined — showing great strength even in moments of weakness.  
To my mind, Winnie Mandela personified courage and perseverance.       
There is a term we use in our work on peace and security – that term is “force multiplier”. 
It is a special something that allows you to do many times more than what you could have ever done on your own. 
Sisters and brothers,  
Winnie Mandela was and will forever remain a force multiplier. 
She created and expanded spaces for all of us to make our voices heard.  For economic rights.  For political freedom.  For social justice. 
She would be the first to say she did not do it alone.   
She did it with you – and continues to do it with us, smiling down from on high. 
I think it is especially meaningful that she left us in this special year as we mark the centennial of the birth of Nelson Mandela.   
In death, there is unity.  
And in remembering, there is common purpose. 
Let us take strength in all the good she stood for standing side by side with you. 
And let us multiply those efforts.  For justice.  For dignity.  For all and all-time. 
Thank you Harlem. 
Thank you Winnie Mandela. 

Distributed by APO Group on behalf of UN Information Centre in Pretoria (UNIC).

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Speaker Baleka Mbete to deliver a eulogy at Mama Winnie Madikizela’s memorial service

Source: Africa Press Organisation – English – Report:

Headline: Speaker Baleka Mbete to deliver a eulogy at Mama Winnie Madikizela’s memorial service

Speaker of the National Assembly, Ms Baleka Mbete will deliver a eulogy at Mama Winnie Madikizela – Mandela ‘s memorial service which will be held at Freedom Park, Pretoria. 

Mama Winnie Madikizela Mandela was an embodiment of the struggle for freedom and humanity. It is befitting that institutions like The Charlotte Mannya- Maxeke and Freedom Park, pay tribute and commemorate the selfless life of Mama Madikizela Mandela, an exceptional heroine and an icon for equality and justice.

Professor Hlengiwe Mkhize, the Chairperson of the Progressive Women’s Movement, will be one of the speakers at the memorial. The ceremony is expected to be attended by representatives from various embassies, organizations, government officials and members of the public.

Members of the media are invited as follows:

Date: Today, Thursday 12 April 2018
Time: 17h00-19h00
Venue: Freedom Park, Pretoria

Distributed by APO Group on behalf of Republic of South Africa: The Parliament.

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South Africa: Parliament expresses condolences to the family of Dr Zola Skweyiya

Source: Africa Press Organisation – English – Report:

Headline: South Africa: Parliament expresses condolences to the family of Dr Zola Skweyiya

Parliament expresses condolences to the family of Dr Zola Skweyiya:

The Presiding Officers of Parliament, Speaker Baleka Mbete of the National Assembly and Chairperson Thandi Modise of the National Council of Provinces, have expressed shock at the passing-on of Dr Zola Skweyiya today 11 April 2018 in Pretoria. 

The nation is gripped by a difficult and painful period of loss of beloved struggle stalwarts, pioneers of a new South Africa, champions of human rights, and lifelong activists for development. Dr Skweyiya made an indelible mark in the struggle for freedom, contributed immensely in bringing down apartheid and colonialism, went on to help in setting up a people’s Parliament, and spearheaded the development a modern public service and the current social security system that caters for 18 million needy South Africans.

At this moment of loss, pain and reflections on a life well lived, Parliament urges South African to take solace from the fact that Dr Skweyiya surrendered his life to the service of the people as a true champion of human rights, social justice and equality. “We should celebrate his outstanding life and the legacy he leaves behind for the current and future generations to enjoy a better life,” said the Presiding Officers.

Distributed by APO Group on behalf of Republic of South Africa: The Parliament.

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Deputy President Mabuza Briefs Leaders of Political Parties on the State of Readiness for the Official Services for the Late Mama Winnie Madikizela-Mandela

Source: Africa Press Organisation – English – Report:

Headline: Deputy President Mabuza Briefs Leaders of Political Parties on the State of Readiness for the Official Services for the Late Mama Winnie Madikizela-Mandela

Deputy President David Mabuza and Leader of Government Business has today, 10 Tuesday 2018, held a briefing session with leaders of political parties represented in Parliament for an update on the state of readiness for the Memorial and Funeral services of the late struggle stalwart Mama Winnie Madikizela Mandela at the Union Buildings in Pretoria.

Following the sad news of the passing of Mama Winnie Madikizela-Mandela, President Cyril Ramaphosa declared a Special Official Funeral Category 1 in line with Official and Provincial Official Funeral Policy.

In this regard, Mama Madikizela-Mandela’s funeral will have elements of both military and ceremonial honours. 

Furthermore, government has since established an Inter-Ministerial Committee led by the Minister in The Presidency, Dr Nkosazana Dlamini Zuma to oversee all the necessary logistical arrangements for both the Memorial and Funeral services of Mama Winnie Madikizela-Mandela. The IMC comprises of all relevant stakeholders including the bereaved family of Mama Madikizela-Mandela.

In his meeting today, Deputy President Mabuza thanked leaders of political parties for their unwavering support and commitment to honour Mama Madikizela-Mandela and the conduct of various members of the public displayed at various memorial events taking place throughout the country. 

Minister Dlamini Zuma reported that government has since declared days of mourning from 03 April 2018 leading up to the funeral on Saturday, 14 April 2018.  Mama Madikizela-Mandela will be laid to rest at the Fourways Memorial Park Cemetery.

Deputy President Mabuza will deliver the official address at the Official Memorial Service on Wednesday, 11 April 2018 at the Orlando Stadium in Soweto while President Ramaphosa will deliver the eulogy at the official funeral.

Political parties were represented today by Prince Mangosuthu Buthelezi leader of the IFP, UDM leader, Ret. Gen. Bantu Holomisa, Leader of the NFP Prof. Nhlanhla Khubisa, leader of the DA, Mr Musi Maimane, and the Secretary General of the ACDP, Mr Raymond Tlaeli.

Deputy President Mabuza has extended an invitation to all the leaders of the political parties to join hands in ensuring a pleasant and befitting send off for Mama Winnie Madikizela-Mandela. 

Distributed by APO Group on behalf of Republic of South Africa: The Presidency.

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South Africa : Details of memorial service and funeral for Ambassador Nene

Source: Africa Press Organisation – English – Report:

Headline: South Africa : Details of memorial service and funeral for Ambassador Nene

Details of memorial service and funeral for Ambassador Nene

Members of the media are advised of the following details in relation to the memorial service and funeral of the late Ambassador George Nene:

1. Memorial Service
Date: Thursday, 12 April 2018
Time: 10:00
Venue: Conference Centre, Department of International Relations and Cooperation (Dirco), OR Tambo Building, 460 Soutpansberg Road, Rietondale, Pretoria

2. Funeral
Date: Friday, 13 April 2018
Time: 09:00
Venue:  Morris Isaacson High School Hall.

The procession will go to Avalon Cemetery at 11:00.

Distributed by APO Group on behalf of Republic of South Africa: Department of Government Communication and Information.

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Remarks by Deputy President David Mabuza on the Occasion to Mark the 39th Anniversary of the Execution of Solomon Mahlangu Kgoshi Mampuru Correctional Centre, Pretoria

Source: Africa Press Organisation – English – Report:

Headline: Remarks by Deputy President David Mabuza on the Occasion to Mark the 39th Anniversary of the Execution of Solomon Mahlangu Kgoshi Mampuru Correctional Centre, Pretoria

BY DEPUTY PRESIDENT DAVID MABUZA ON THE OCCASION TO MARK THE 39th ANNIVERSARY OF THE EXECUTION OF SOLOMON MAHLANGU KGOSHI MAMPURU CORRECTIONAL CENTRE, PRETORIA:

The Minister of Justice and Correctional Services, Mr Michael Masutha,
Deputy Minister Thabang Makwetla,
The family of Solomon Kalushi Mahlangu,
Ministers and Deputy Ministers in our midst,
The Leadership of the Province of Gauteng and City of Tshwane,
The Leadership of the Solomon Mahlangu Freedom Trust,
The Leadership of the Progressive Youth Alliance,
Representatives of various political formations,
Distinguished guests,
Fellow South Africans.

We have gathered here at the Kgoshi Mampuru Correctional Centre this morning to commemorate the life of an esteemed member of the Order of Mendi for Bravery, Solomon Kalushi Mahlangu, he who sacrificed his life so that we could be alive.

Our profound sadness over his violent murder at this very place on the dawn of April 6 thirty nine years ago is amplified by the sad passing of yet another who risked everything so that we could live under conditions of freedom.

I refer here to Nomzamo Winifred Madikizela-Mandela who departed last Sunday. Let us rise and observe a moment of silence in honour of this great heroine of our people.

For many decades, this place earned itself and our country the infamy of being known as “South Africa’s Death Factory.”

The execution of political prisoners had become part of the National Party’s strategy to defend and keep the evil system of apartheid alive.

For this reason, today’s commemoration is in honour not only of Solomom Mahlangu but all those who perished in apartheid gallows as part of the vast army of combatants in the struggle for freedom, the midwives who delivered the democratic dispensation our country enjoys today.

We also pay tribute to Monty Johannes Motloung who was arrested together with Mahlangu and brutally tortured so much so that he was declared unfit to stand trial.

By 1992 when he was released together with other political prisoners, he was still suffering from wounds sustained 15 years earlier in 1977 while in police detention. He would die after a long illness in October 2006.

This commemorative event is a response to the Constitutional injunction to “recognise the injustices of our past,” and to “establish a society based on democratic values, social justice and fundamental human rights.”

In this regard, a January 7, 1990 article in the then Sunday Star provides some clues about the dehumanisation of the death penalty even to those that may have identified themselves as part of and beneficiaries of the system of oppression.

Chris Barnard, a former employee of the Department of Correctional Services whose job description it was to hang his fellow citizens said of the death penalty that “It’s filthy, cruel work.” But he went on to add that “if you can make a better living, do so by all means.”

Needless to say that on his retirement, Mr. Barnard had hanged 1250 people.

Today’s commemoration is testimony to our consciousness that government has a moral responsibility to provide physical and material security to the citizenry and an affirmation that it shall never again appropriate to itself the right to determine who will live and who shall die.

It is also our firm resolve that never again will a civil servant have to earn their keep by putting the lives of their fellow citizens to a cruel and violent end.

Today’s occasion also serves to affairm our commitment to the progressive humanist values of Ubuntu, social justice, human rights, non-racialism and gender equality which Mahlangu and his comrades in arms came to internalise at an early stage of their formative years.

It should also serve as a launching pad for a society-wide reflection and discussion on these values and the practical measures we must all take to realise the Constitutional imperative to create a non-racial, non-sexist, just and prosperous society.

Such a process of discussion is particularly important in the context of the centenary of President Nelson Mandela’s birthday.

This event points to a particularly crucial meeting point between the Mandela generation whose vision and life’s work was the creation of a free, democratic, non-racial and just South Africa and the Mahlangu generation which became a valued part of the process for liberation.

Whereas Nelson Mandela unequivocally made known his preparedness to die to the regime during the Rivonia Trial, Solomon Mahlangu would boldly assert, 15 years later, as he went to the gallows:

“My blood will nourish the tree that will bear the fruits of freedom. Tell my people that I love them. They must continue the fight.”

And so, days after the crime of April 6 1979, the late Dennis Brutus would lament, in a poem in honour of Mahlangu:

“Singing
he went to war
and singing
he went to his death…”

As part of the necessary process of recording our history, the Department of Correctional Services must endeavour properly to record everything relating to all prisoners of conscience who perished in apartheid jails either by torture or execution and make these available to our institutions of learning, the media and the general public.

Apart from the importance of posterity, this record will serve as a permanent flickering light.

It will be a pointer to any blind spot the likely straying into which might take us back to a period of our history we must never again revisit.

As Solomon’s uncle, Gideon Mahlangu, said on this day last year: “The young people of this country must know that this democracy was born out of a great sacrifice by young and brave freedom fighters like Solomon”.

Thank you very much.

Distributed by APO Group on behalf of Republic of South Africa: The Presidency.

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South Africa: Statement of the Inter-Ministerial Committee on the Special Official Funeral of the Late Mrs Winnie Madikizela-Mandela, 05 April 2018

Source: Africa Press Organisation – English – Report:

Headline: South Africa: Statement of the Inter-Ministerial Committee on the Special Official Funeral of the Late Mrs Winnie Madikizela-Mandela, 05 April 2018

Statement of the Inter-Ministerial Committee on the Special Official Funeral of the Late Mrs Winnie Madikizela-Mandela, 05 April 2018:

Director of the programme, Acting Director-General of GCIS
Members of the IMC present here today
Members of the media
Ladies and gentlemen

The Inter-Ministerial Committee on State and Official Funerals wishes to take this opportunity to echo the voice of the President in expressing condolences to the Mandela and Madikizela families, all South Africans and the world at large. 

On behalf of our government we want to thank everyone across the globe for their overwhelming show of support to the family. We have witnessed how people from all walks of life, including the media, are coming together to celebrate and reflect on the selfless sacrifices made by Mama Winnie, as she was affectionately known. This bears testimony that her legacy and fight for equality and justice will continue as a hallmark of our common endeavour for justice.

We acknowledge the messages of condolences that have been received from various Heads of States and eminent persons across the globe.  Mama Winnie touched the lives of many people in our country and beyond by the tenacity she displayed during the fight for freedom and the subsequent suffering she endured as a result.  It is with a sense of sorrow to accept her demise from this world but also a sense of pride that she lived to ultimately see freedom for the people of our country. Her struggle was not in vain.

Since her passing on Monday, 2nd April 2018, many South Africans and the international community have expressed their condolences by sharing their love for Mama Winnie, their experiences, directly and indirectly with her.  Our government has befittingly declared a Special Official Funeral Category 1 which entails elements of military ceremonial honours and is declared in line with the Presidency’s State, Official and Provincial Official Funeral Policy, for persons of extraordinary credentials specifically designated by the President of the Republic of South Africa.

National days of mourning have been declared from 3rd April up to the 14th April 2018.  In line with this declaration, the National Flag have with immediate effect, been flown as half-mast at all flag stations countrywide and at South African diplomatic missions abroad.  This will be observed until the evening of 14 April 2018.

In consultation with Mrs Madikizela-Mandela’s family, government will host a memorial service at the Orlando Stadium, Soweto on the 11th April 2018 followed by a funeral service on the 14th April 2018 at the same venue.  This changes the earlier announcement of the venue of the memorial service which was to be at the Regina Mundi Catholic Church.  The change was made  after  the consideration of the size of the venue and the expected people to attend the memorial service.

Condolence books for the late Mama Winnie Madikizela–Mandela will be available at the following venues:

1. International Ports of Entry (airports)
2. DIRCO Head Office at the OR Tambo Building in Pretoria
3. Parliament 
4. Tuynhuys
5. The Union Buildings 
6. Department of Arts and Culture
7. Department of Communication (GCIS Head office)
8. All Provincial Legislatures
9. All Premier’s Offices

We will also be placing the Condolences Books at Brandfort , Mbizana and Mthatha.  The exact venue in these places will be communicated as soon as they have been finalised. 

Mama Winnie Madikizela-Mandela dedicated her life to fight for the, reduction of poverty, the abolishment of racial injustices as well as the struggle for gender equality. As we pay tribute and celebrate her life, let us reflect on what we do to ensure we continue her legacy of fighting for social justice.

We call on all political parties, faith based organisation and civil society to work in cohesion during the mourning period including the memorial and funeral services.  All activities should be conducted with respect and dignity, as Mama Winnie displayed love to all people from all walks of life. All members of the public are invited to come out in their numbers to celebrate the life and legacy of Winnie Madikizela-Mandela.  Should provinces and municipalities wish to organise memorial events in honor of Mama Winnie, they should do so after duly adopted resolutions of their Executive Councils and Municipal Councils, respectively.  In this regard, the Minister of COGTA will issue a guiding letter to provinces and municipalities later today (Thursday, 05 April).

Members of the media are requested to apply for accreditation for the official memorial service and official funeral of the Mama Winnie. The link for the online registration is on the GCIS website.  The deadline for the submission of the details is 12h00 on Friday 6 April 2018. The venue for the collection of the media accreditation cards will be communicated in due course. 

Lastly, as the Inter-Ministerial Committee we are satisfied with the preparatory work for both the memorial service and the funeral.  We also appreciate the outpouring of the support and the manner in which the public is celebrating the life of Mama Winnie.  We also would like to thank the  members of the media who have made it possible for those who are unable to be in Gauteng to still be able to be part of these events especially at the family house in Orlando.

The Inter Ministerial Committee will communicate further details about the Funeral services and logistics accordingly.

Distributed by APO Group on behalf of Republic of South Africa: Department of Government Communication and Information.

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