Keynote address by President Cyril Ramaphosa at the 40th Anniversary Celebration of the Founding of the United Democratic Front, Johannesburg City Hall, Gauteng

Source: President of South Africa –

Programme Directors, Murphy Morobe and Cheryl Carolus,
Former President Thabo Mbeki
Former President Kgalema Motlanthe, 
Seaparankoe Mama Sophie De Bruyn, 
Former leaders and activists of the United Democratic Front,
Representatives of civil society,
Comrades,
Friends, 

It is my distinct pleasure to be here today to commemorate the founding of the United Democratic Front, a mighty demonstration of people’s power that was so vital to the achievement of our freedom. 

We are honoured to have many of the founding members of the UDF with us here today. 

You were torch-bearers in the onward march towards a free country, and we salute you all. It is heartening that you remain committed to playing an active role in the political life of our country. 

Forty years ago at the Rocklands Community Hall in Mitchell’s Plain, the UDF was launched as a popular front ‘to bolster the tide of the struggle’ against the great injustice of apartheid. 

The delegates came from the length and breadth of South Africa. They came representing some 575 civic organisations, trade unions, student formations, the women’s movement, faith-based groups, anti-apartheid coalitions and community organisations. 

As we know, the launch date of the 20th of August was deliberately chosen. 

This was the date the regime planned to introduce a constitutional amendment to set up the Tricameral Parliament, a hated structure with its separate Houses for whites, coloureds and Indians. The African majority was left out in the cold. 

It was an attempt to lend legitimacy to an illegitimate system. The very purpose was to divide the ranks of the oppressed. 

In a massive show of defiance, the UDF was introduced to South Africa and the world at a public rally in Mitchell’s Plain attended by 10,000 people. 

The new organisation had the potent slogan ‘UDF Unites, Apartheid Divides’. 

The UDF would go on to mobilise communities across South Africa against so-called grand apartheid, a system of brute force and petty laws. 

The UDF organised protests, rent, consumer and bus boycotts, and strikes and stay-aways. Affiliates assisted the families of detainees, campaigned for their release, organised political funerals and conducted political education. 

What made the UDF unique was its distinct political culture. 

It was able to forge alliances with organisations that identified with its aims. 

It had no rigid structures, hierarchies and red tape. This enabled it to grow rapidly and expand its influence. 

At its height, there were three million community  members and more than 400 organisations under the banner of the UDF. 

It is clear that the UDF transformed the political landscape. What is remarkable is that it achieved so much when it was in existence for just eight short years. 

We remember the many UDF leaders who are no longer with us who kept our people’s hopes alive: Griffiths Mxenge, Victoria Mxenge, Sister Bernard Ncube, Rev Beyers Naude, Archie Gumede, Billy Nair, Albertina Sisulu, Winnie Madikizela-Mandela and the many leading lights of the movement. 

We also remember the many UDF activists who were detained without trial, tortured and killed by the regime, and the many, many men and women from across South Africa who made up the rank and file of the UDF. 

History will record your great contribution. 

Comrades, Friends 

Many in our country today have been vocal about their unease at the gulf between the values that guided the liberation struggle and the country we live in today. 

Many in this country, including some gathered here today, are disappointed that the non-racialism and unity embodied by the UDF has been lost.

To many, it has been supplanted by ethnic chauvinism and factionalism, even within our the liberation movement. 

That is why, as the UDF@40 Call to Action puts it, we have to recover the best traditions, ethos and values of our democratic struggle. 

The UDF was defined as much as what it was fighting for as by what it was fighting against. 

The UDF used people’s power to break the power of an illegitimate regime. 

Its generational mission was clear. It was a grassroots movement of building up, of empowering people, of promoting personal agency and of encouraging citizens to play an active role in their communities. 

For this and many reasons, characterising the UDF solely as a mass protest movement would be a half- story, and the lessons we can learn from the UDF experience cannot be confined to people taking to the streets. 

Of the many proud legacies of the UDF, a stronger civil society is one of the most important. 

It is undeniable that civil society has flourished since 1994. 

This is a barometer of good health for democracy. 

We have a free press, people enjoy freedom of association and the right to protest. 

People’s power is alive and well. We have seen it being harnessed to drive change. 

In the late nineties, the activism of the Treatment Action Campaign and others campaigned for access to HIV/Aids treatment, and won. 

In 2015, the #FeesMustFall student movement laid the basis for dramatic changes to access to higher education. 

In 2018, the #TotalShutdown against gender-based violence brought government and civil society together to develop a clear, united plan to tackle the scourge. 

Now a number of new laws have come into effect that give greater protection to survivors of gender-based violence and harsher sentences for perpetrators.

The mass mobilisation under the UDF umbrella in the 1980s was to realise the aspirations of the Freedom Charter. 

Since the advent of democracy we have worked actively to fulfil these aspirations, and those of the Constitution that was inspired by the Freedom Charter. 

Equality before the law and human rights for all, expanded access to education and health care, land reform and restitution, an extensive social protection system and workers’ rights are just some of the measurable gains we have registered. 

Even as we know that we still have much farther to go, we should not diminish what has been achieved. 

As government, we have expressed our determination to ‘leave no-one behind’, which is in keeping with the spirit of the great UDF. 

The reality is that despite our gains, millions of our citizens feel left behind. 

Many coloured and Indian compatriots who were the backbone of the UDF feel excluded from our nation’s political life, and point to their under-representation in decision-making structures as evidence of this. 

Many white South Africans wrongly believe there is no place for them in South Africa today, and some have drifted towards laager-style politics and a siege mentality. 

Women feel marginalised and unprotected as they are preyed upon in their homes, at schools, at places of higher learning, and even in church. 

Young people, a third of our population, are feeling the cold winds of exclusion from opportunity. They see politics as the preserve of old people and aren’t voting. 

By far those who feel most excluded and neglected are the urban and rural poor, the unemployed and society’s most vulnerable. 

Comrades, friends, 

We are alive to the reality that in a number of respects the democratically-elected government has fallen short of meeting the needs of  the South African people. 

Corruption, wasteful expenditure and general malfeasance are rot that must be excised before they completely reverse our democratic gains. 

However this important occasion should not come be remembered for having been a drawn-out history lesson, or another opportunity to dissect the shortcomings of the government of the day. 

Let us remember what we are all fighting for. 

The biggest enemy of the people is poverty. 

This is the tide that must turn. This is the war we have to wage. Against exclusion, marginalisation and inequality in all its forms. 

And so when we make a call for a stronger civil society, for transformation, for accountability, we must be as committed as the UDF was to leaving no-one behind. 

The resurgence of people’s power as a force for positive change, with its calls for an active citizenry, has come at the right time. 

We remember Amilcar Cabral’s words that ‘the people are not fighting for ideas, but to win material benefits.’ 

What matters most to the South African people is that they want a better life for themselves and their children. They want to lead lives of dignity, in security, and to have decent work. 

Affording one’s rent, putting food on the table, having running water and decent sanitation, sending ones children to school – these are the bread-and-butter issues the UDF was seized with helping people secure. It was part of its political activism. 

When the UDF was at its most powerful, South Africa was a different place. The enemy was clear. 

Today the threats to the wellbeing of the South African people come in many guizes. 

These threats are corruption, malfeasance and abuse of public office for personal gain. 

These threats are also greedy corporates that exploit workers, evade paying tax and hoard their profits instead of employing more people or ploughing them back into communities. 

These threats include the gangsters and criminal syndicates that are making life a living hell for our citizens, including on the Cape Flats where the UDF was formed 40 years ago. 

They are the patriarchal attitudes, sexism and misogyny that are fuelling violence against women and children. 

They are immoral business practices that hurt the poor the most – practices like price gouging, the exploitation of tenants by landlords, illegal evictions, selling unsafe food and predatory lending. 

They are xenophobia, homophobia, tribalism and all forms of chauvinism that are breeding fear, mistrust and even stoking violence within and amongst communities. 

And so when calls are made to reclaim our democracy we cannot but be categorical about how we plan to go about doing so. 

It is encouraging to note the very practical proposals made by UDF@40 on how to catalyse an active citizenry. 

These include encouraging citizens to join community policing forums and school governing bodies; for youth to volunteer in communities; reviving sports, arts and culture clubs for young people in communities; and stronger ward committees. 

This shows an understanding that the social ills in our country are complex, and that people’s power must be directed to bring about change across society, and not just in our politics. 

History does not demand of us another manifesto, steering committee or political super-structure. The UDF’s place in history is assured, as is that of its leaders. 

What is demanded of us is that we go back to communities, to listen to them, to encourage them, and to unite them, as the UDF did. 

If we are looking to recapture the momentum that made the UDF such a formidable force, we first need to understand the conditions under which citizens are living, and what matters to them most. 

Comrades, Friends, 

In March 1966 Dr Martin Luther King Jr gave a lecture at the campus of Southern Methodist University in Dallas, Texas. 

Reflecting on the progress of the civil rights movement he said: 

“Somewhere we must come to see that human progress never rolls in on the wheels of inevitability. It comes through the time and persistent work of dedicated individuals.” 

Gathered here today, and listening from their homes or places of work are many such dedicated men and women. 

The task before those who were fortunate enough to witness the birth of the UDF and be part of the movement is not to cling to the baton, or put it in a museum somewhere so we can marvel over it and tell stories about it. 

Our task, our duty, is to pass it on. 

On this 40th anniversary of the UDF let us set our sights high, on what must be done to overcome the most immediate challenges facing the South African people. 

This, our democracy, is strong, despite a number of attempts to weaken it. 

But democracy cannot build itself, it is up to us to do so. 

So let us build it up. Let us take forward our gains. 

Let us define and drive a new generational mission that in the spirit of the mighty UDF unites, inspires and leaves no-one behind. 

I thank you.

President Ramaphosa to host President Xi Jinping of the People’s Republic of China on a State Visit

Source: President of South Africa –

President Cyril Ramaphosa will on Tuesday, 22 August 2023, host His Excellency President Xi Jinping of the People’s Republic of China on a State Visit to South Africa.  

The welcome ceremony will take place on Tuesday morning at the Union Buildings in Pretoria ahead of the 15th BRICS Summit set to take place on 22 – 24 August 2023. 

The State Visit takes place within the context of celebrating 25 years of diplomatic relations between the two countries, while historic ties date back to the Bandung conference of 1955. 

Relations between South Africa and the People’s Republic of China are governed by a Comprehensive Strategic Partnership (CSP), whose programme of action is set out in a Ten-Year Strategic Programme of Cooperation (2020–2029).

The State Visit by President Xi on 22 August will give the leaders and their delegations an opportunity to reflect on developments under the Comprehensive Strategic Partnership and to consider further deepening of cooperation.

The visit crowns deliberations in which the two governments have been engaging on implementing structures such as the Bi-National Commission, Joint Working Group, People-to-People Exchange Mechanism and Strategic Dialogue.

South Africa and China enjoy vibrant economic relations and China is South Africa’s largest global trading partner by volume.

China is an important investor in South Africa and provides support on infrastructure development projects including the Small Harbour Development Project, the TVET Refurbishment Project and the Mzimvubu Water Project, all of which are instrumental in job creation.

Discussions during the State Visit will explore further collaboration and partnerships the two nations can leverage on to solidify existing diplomatic, economic and people-to-people relations.

EXPECTED OUTCOMES 

a.    To reaffirm the close and historic political ties underpinned by solidarity, win-win partnership and people-to-people cooperation – within the framework of the Comprehensive Strategic Partnership and in celebration of 25 years of diplomatic relations.
b.    To underscore the urgent need to address trade balance and diversify South African exports to China by identifying broad market access for value-added products.
c.    To highlight the importance of sustainable foreign direct investment through supporting manufacturing, infrastructure, and beneficiation and encourage close private sector engagement from both countries.
d.    To acknowledge the support of China on bilateral technical cooperation under the Forum for China-Africa Cooperation (FOCAC) in addressing South Africa’s domestic imperatives.
e.    To exchange views on regional issues in support for development, peace, and security.
f.    To enhance multilateral cooperation, specifically within the context of BRICS, the G77 plus China, and the G20 and to seek Chinese support for South Africa and Africa’s call for the reform of global governance institutions, notably the United Nations Security Council.

It is anticipated that several Agreements and Memoranda of Understanding will be signed during the State Visit, focusing on socio-economic cooperation which both sides will ensure implementation that yield results for both our peoples. 

South Africa and China will also co-host China-Africa Leader’s Roundtable scheduled on 24 August, and also engage on cooperation at multilateral level, particularly at the FOCAC.

Media enquiries: Vincent Magwenya, Spokesperson to the President – 082 835 6315

Issued by: The Presidency
Pretoria

President Ramaphsa to host President Xi Jinping of the People’s Republic of China on a State Visit

Source: President of South Africa –

President Cyril Ramaphosa will on Tuesday, 22 August 2023, host His Excellency President Xi Jinping of the People’s Repu

President Cyril Ramaphosa will on Sunday, 20 August 2023, participate in a national celebration of the launch – 40 years

President Cyril Ramaphosa has expressed his sadness at the passing of Mr Johaar Mosaval, the retired, pioneering dancer

President Cyril Ramaphosa has arrived in Luanda, in the Republic of Angola, to participate in a summit of Southern Afric

Opening remarks by Deputy President Paul Mashatile during the Human Resource Development Council (HRDC) meeting, at Sol Plaatje University South Campus, Kimberley

Source: President of South Africa –

Dr. Zamani Saul, Premier of the Northern Cape Province,
Professor Andrew Crouch, Vice-Chancellor and Principal of Sol Plaatje University,
Mr. Percy Sago, Principal of the Northern Cape Rural TVET College,
Dr CF Barnes, Principal of the Northern Cape Urban TVET College,
Dr. Blade Nzimande, Minister of Higher Education, Science and Innovation,
Ministers and Deputy Ministers,
MECs,
Deputy Chairpersons,
Members of the Human Resource Development Council,
Directors General and other senior government officials,
Ladies and gentlemen.
 
We extend a warm welcome to all of you as we gather here today for this Human Resource Development Council meeting. It is an honour to be in the presence of such distinguished individuals who are dedicated to the development and advancement of our nation’s human resources.
 
It is also a privilege to be here at this university, Sol Plaatje, one of only two built after 1994. This is the culmination of our long-term commitment to investing in skills revolution with the building to build a productive and globally competitive society. As well as the idea which are discussing that of building academic cities or precincts around the country.
 
We further congratulate the province on the successful relaunch of the provincial Human Resource Council earlier this week and extend a cordial welcome to the provincial Human Resource Council executive members present here today.
 
It is encouraging that Sol Plaatje University, the Northern Cape Rural TVET College, and the Northern Cape Urban TVET College offer programmes and innovations in construction and bricklaying, solar energy, data science, and water solutions to meet the needs of current and future communities.
 
We look forward to viewing some of these and interacting with students and lecturers during the walk-about in the exhibition area later today.
 
This meeting is a continuation of and represents progress from the May 19 meeting which took place in Umgugundlovu, KwaZulu Natal Province. On that occasion, we signed two social compacts, the first to strengthen efforts towards the transformation of our economy and society. The second aims to focus our energies on creating the skills necessary to get the country to this important goal.
 
These compacts are important because they represent our collective commitment to addressing the skills challenge in our country, to grow the economy and to construct an inclusive society. Having established consensus, we must move with the necessary speed to improve on the discipline of execution with the aim to strengthen existing programmes or, as the case may be, to develop appropriate action plans.
 
As all of us are aware, the Human Resource Development Strategy Towards 2030 has identified five priority areas that remain relevant and in need of accelerated implementation. These are:
 
• Foundation education with science, technology, engineering, mathematics, language and life orientation skills;
• TVET and the rest of the college system;
• Higher education and training, research, innovation and development;
• Skills for a transformed society and the economy using the workplace as a platform, and;
• Developmental/capable state.
 
I do not mean to belabour a rather obvious point, but all of these priorities are interrelated and must be relentlessly pursued. Consider the link between foundation education, higher education and training, research and innovation. We cannot have economic development without higher education and training, research, innovation and development.
 
Most crucially, you cannot achieve any of these outcomes without quality primary education with a strong emphasis on mathematics and science education. This obliges us to pose questions about how we are faring with respect to the implementation or otherwise of the many decisions we have taken as a government and country to improve the lives of the people. These include the implementation or otherwise of critical policies such as the National Development Plan and the Human Resource Development Strategy.
 
The World Intellectual Property Organisation (WIPO) reports that 3.4 million patents, trademarks and industrial designs were registered throughout the world in 2021. Of these, China accounted for 1,585,663 applications, followed by the United States at 591,473, Japan with 289,200, the Republic of Korea at 237,998, European Patent Organisation member states at 188,778, India at 61,573 and Germany at 58,569. A year before, in 2020, South Africa had registered 542 patent applications.
 
These statistics tell you an intricate and complex story, which cannot be done justice today. Suffice it to say that:
 
• there is a relationship between patents, trademarks and industrial designs and the quality of a country’s education system, particularly its mathematics and science teaching, and;
• there is a relationship between the number of patents trademarks and industrial designs and a country’s economic prospects.
Furthermore, the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) report on South Africa for the year 2022 further identifies five strategic areas in need of attention and focus. These are:
 
• public sector investment in education, skills development, and youth participation in the economy;
• the need to develop one-stop job services to consolidate existing tools and services;
• youth entrepreneurship in technology-based and green industries;
• building on shifting gender norms to empower women economically, and;
• strengthening and expanding the National Youth Service to bridge the school-to-work gap.
 
The five areas identified by the UNDP also require the urgent attention of the Human Resource Development Council of South Africa (HRDC).
 
Our skills development efforts are and must be national in outlook and in every other material respect. We must train for the country – not a municipality, province, or specific sector of the economy. In some and significant respects, we should endeavour to train our people for service to humanity as a whole.
 
That said, specific localities will have particular potential which should facilitate the training of particular skill sets. For example, this province is endowed with minerals such as diamonds, manganese, iron ore, lithium, zinc, copper, lead, and molybdenum ore, among others. It also boasts unique attributes that position it as a potential leader in solar energy and important work is happily being undertaken in this regard.
 
It should therefore be possible for the Northern Cape to become a leader in careers such as chemistry, heavy equipment operating, environmental consulting, mine surveying, geology as well as mining, geological, electrocortical and project engineers, to mention just a few.
 
Working together with the rest of the country, the Southern African Development Community region and the continent, such skills, especially at the leadership level, could be pooled together for the good of all in a concerted effort to lift more than one billion Africans out of poverty.
 
There is therefore a need to re-examine the SADC Education and Skills Development Programme to ensure that we pool the region’s human, financial and other resources to address common skills capacity challenges on a sustained and sustainable basis.
 
In as much as we seek to improve our skills’ capacity in order to build an inclusive economy and society, so too do the region and continent need to do so. And so shall put behind us the South Africa which Solomon Tshekiso Plaatje described in Native Life in South Africa, his 1916 text about life after the passage of the 1913 Native Land Act: “South Africa has by law ceased to be the home of any of her native children whose skins are dyed with a hue that does not conform to the regulation hue.”
 
Mintiro ya bulabula — deeds speak for themselves! So, let’s do it!
 
Thank you.

President Ramaphosa to participate in UDF40 national celebration

Source: President of South Africa –

President Cyril Ramaphosa will on Sunday, 20 August 2023, participate in a national celebration of the launch – 40 years ago to the day – of the anti-apartheid United Democratic Front (UDF) in the Rocklands Civic Centre in Mitchells Plain, Cape Town.

Sunday’s national celebration has been organised by UDF40, a formation headed by founding UDF leaders to celebrate and commemorate the UDF’s legacy and rekindle, through community-led action, the movement’s core principles of non-racialism, non-sexism and democracy in present-day South Africa. This reignition is framed by the theme “Building Active Citizenry for Accountability and Transformation”.

The occasion in the Old Johannesburg City Hall from 13h00 to 17h00 on Sunday is part of an extensive programme of celebratory and commemorative events around the country to recall the establishment of the UDF, reflect on its contribution to the liberation struggle under its 1983 “UDF Unites. Apartheid Divides” banner, and to deliberate the application of its values to South Africa today.

Sunday’s event will feature reflections by different sectoral representatives on the relevance today of the UDF; recollections of the diverse campaigns and organisations which formed part of the UDF’s mobilisation, and a high-level discussion on the legacy of and lessons from the UDF.

President Ramaphosa will participate in this high-level discussion alongside Archbishop Thabo Makgoba and Popo Molefe, who was part of the formation of the UDF and was elected as Secretary of the Transvaal region before becoming National Secretary.

Sunday’s event will also commemorate the sacrifices made and struggles faced by activists and community members associated with the UDF.

A cultural programme will run throughout the proceedings.

Media enquiries: Vincent Magwenya, Spokesperson to the President – 082 835 6315

Issued by: The Presidency
Pretoria

President mourns passing of dance pioneer Johaar Mosaval

Source: President of South Africa –

President Cyril Ramaphosa has expressed his sadness at the passing of Mr Johaar Mosaval, the retired, pioneering dancer and Esteemed Member of the National Order of Ikhamanga. President Ramaphosa offers his deep condolences to the family and associates nationally and internationally of Mr Mosaval who has passed away at the age of 95.

In 2019, President Ramaphosa bestowed the National Order of Ikhamanga (Gold) on Mr Mosaval for his exceptional contribution to the performing arts, particularly ballet dancing. His exceptional talent led him to be the first black South African to become a senior principal dancer at the Royal Ballet in the United Kingdom.

A resident of District Six, Mr Mosaval was the first black South African to become a senior principal dancer at the Royal Ballet, which is the highest rank in the profession at one of the world’s most prestigious classical ballet companies. His journey to the Royal Ballet at the height of apartheid saw him dancing for Queen Elizabeth II and being the first black performer on the ‘whites-only’ Nico Malan stage in the 1970s.

He performed, mostly as a soloist, all over the globe, and has shared the stage with the likes of prima ballerina’s Margot Fonteyn, Elaine Fifield and Doreen Wells. He became revered for his wide-ranging styles and flawless technique and was chosen to dance in Benjamin Britten’s Opera Gloriana, the first performance presented at the Royal Opera House, London, in 1953, during the celebrations of the coronation of Queen Elizabeth II.

After two years in London, Mr Mosaval excelled at his studies and returned home in 1976. He started teaching in Mitchells Plain and Paarl in the Western Cape. While dancing in Michel Fokine’s Petruskha, Mosaval’s contract stated that he was not allowed to touch a white ballet dancer with his bare hands. By 1975, the theatre allowed all races onto its premises, but black people required a permit to enter. As a result, the boycott of the theatre lasted until the end of apartheid.

Mr Mosaval opened his own ballet school in 1977 and was employed as the first black Inspector of Schools of Ballet under the then Administration of Coloured Affairs. He resigned from this position when he discovered that he could share his expertise only with a certain segment of the population. Subsequently, the apartheid regime closed his school because it was multiracial.

Following the principles of his mentor, Dulcie Howes, Mosaval wanted to share his knowledge and love of ballet with students of all races, so he continued to find ways to dance and to teach.

President Ramaphosa said: “The passing of Johaar Mosaval is a great loss to our nation’s cultural treasury. “Johaar Mosaval was an outstanding human being and creative who complimented his personal achievements with a deep interest in developing the communities in which he lived and performed.

“His life story is one that fills us at one level with pride and inspiration but which also reopens for us the inhumanity and hurt that apartheid inflicted on individuals and entire sectors of our society, including our cultural life and the performing arts. “Under difficult conditions, Johaar Mosaval enjoyed and leveraged his life of celebrity to create a legacy of service to the people of Cape Town and our nation more broadly. May he rest in peace.”

Media enquiries: Vincent Magwenya, Spokesperson to the President – 082 835 6315

Issued by: The Presidency
Pretoria

President Ramaphosa to attend 43rd Ordinary SADC Summit in Angola

Source: President of South Africa –

President Cyril Ramaphosa will undertake a working visit to Luanda, in the Republic of Angola, on 16 and 17 August 2023, to participate in a summit of Southern African leaders who will focus on sustainable industrialisation of the region.

The 43rd Ordinary Summit of the Head of State and Government of the Southern African Development Community is themed “Human and financial capital: The key drivers for sustainable industrialisation of the SADC Region”.

The Summit will be preceded by the Troika Summit of the SADC Organ on Politics, Defence and Security Cooperation on 16 August 2023. 

President Ramaphosa, as the outgoing Chairperson of the SADC Organ, will also attend the Troika Summit.
 
The Organ Troika Summit, will discuss the political and security situation in the region with particular focus on the Kingdom of Lesotho, Kingdom of Eswatini, Mozambique (SADC Mission in Mozambique) and the Democratic Republic of Congo. 

The Organ Troika Summit will also reflect on consolidation of democracy in SADC and deliberate the socio-economic outlook for the Community.

Other activities of the Summit include the announcement of the 2022 SADC Secondary School Essay Competition, the Media Awards and the presentation of the Medal of Honour to one of the SADC Founders – the late and first President of the Republic of Botswana, His Excellency, Sir Seretse Khama.

The two Summits will be preceded by the SADC Council of Ministers meeting on 13 – 14 August 2023, and a Ministerial Committee of the Organ on 16 August 2023.

President Ramaphosa will be accompanied by the Minister of International Relations and Cooperation, Dr Naledi Pandor, the Minister of Defence and Military Veterans, Ms Thandi Modise, and the Minister in Presidency responsible for State Security, Ms Khumbudzo Ntshavheni.

Media enquiries: Vincent Magwenya, Spokesperson to the President – 082 835 6315

Issued by: The Presidency
Pretoria

President to lead government-community interaction in Chris Hani District Municipality, Eastern Cape

Source: President of South Africa –

President Cyril Ramaphosa will tomorrow, Friday, 11 August 2023, interact with the community of Tsomo Town in the Intsika Yethu local municipality in the Eastern Cape, in the latest District Development Model (DDM) Presidential Imbizo themed “Leave No One Behind.” 

This Imbizo is the 9th since government commenced with this programme in March of 2022 in Mahikeng in the North West province.

The DDM is an integrated planning model for Cooperative Governance that seeks to ensure an integrated, district-based service delivery approach aimed at fast-tracking service delivery. 

The Presidential Imbizo serves as a platform for face-to-face engagement between citizens and senior government leaders, holding the administration accountable and allowing government to consult and update communities on development and service delivery in the relevant area. 

Tomorrow’s event in the broader Chris Hani District Municipality aims to foster collaboration between government, residents, businesses, community-based organisations, and traditional leadership, working towards transforming all districts in South Africa.

President Ramaphosa will engage with residents and stakeholders in the Chris Hani District, with a view to ensuring that citizens and all spheres of government work together to address concerns and overcome challenges that hinder integrated service delivery. 

The participation of leadership from the national, provincial and local is directed at maintaining accountability by public office bearers and the administration, and promoting collaboration.

Details of the DDM Presidential Imbizo are as follows:
Date: Friday, 11 August 2023
Time: 09h00
Venue: Intsika Yethu local municipality (ward 8), Tsomo Town, Chris Hani District, Eastern Cape

Media enquiries: Vincent Magwenya, Spokesperson to the President – 082 835 6315

Issued by: The Presidency
Pretoria

Address by President Cyril Ramaphosa on the occasion of Women’s Day, Union Buildings, Tshwane

Source: President of South Africa –

Programme Director, Minister of Sport, Arts and Culture, Mr Zizi Kodwa,
Minister of Women, Youth and Persons with Disabilities, Dr Nkosazana Dlamini Zuma,
Veteran of the women’s movement, Ms Sophia Williams-De Bruyn,
Ministers and Deputy Ministers,
Premier of Gauteng, Mr Panyaza Lesufi,
Executive Mayor of Tshwane, Cllr Cilliers Brink,
Members of Parliament,
Representatives of political parties,
Religious, traditional and community leaders,
Guests,

Fellow South Africans,

Molweni. Sanibonani. Dumelang. Goeie môre. Lotjhani. Avuxeni. Ndi Matsheloni. Good Morning.

I greet all the women of South Africa on this Women’s Day.

Today, as men and women, we celebrate the beautiful mothers of our nation, our sisters, our grandmothers, our aunts, our daughters. Together, we thank the women of South Africa for the role they play in the life of our nation.

Today, we celebrate how far we have come in building a non-sexist society where women are free and equal and enjoy the rights guaranteed to them by the Constitution.

We recall the suffering that women have endured for no reason other than that they are women.

We remember the courageous struggles waged by women against oppression; from those who stood up against colonialism and slavery to those who risked jail rather than carry the hated dompas.

We remember those women who took up arms against a violent regime, who organised workers to fight exploitation, who led political movements and civic organisations, and who were involved in the drafting of our new democratic Constitution.

Today of all days, we salute imbokodo, amaqhawekazi, the brave pioneers who marched to the Union Buildings on this day in 1956.

There are few moments more compelling in our history than the day when tens of thousands of women gathered in the amphitheatre of these Union Buildings.

We are still moved by the images of women like Lilian Ngoyi, Rahima Moosa, Sophie De Bruyn and Helen Joseph carrying armfuls of petitions from the women of South Africa.

We are honoured and privileged to have among us today one of those remarkable women, Aunt Sophie De Bruyn. We are grateful for your lifetime of service and continued contribution to the cause of women’s emancipation.

The women marched here to the Union Buildings, to the seat of apartheid power, to demand an end to laws that were intended to deprive them of their rights and dignity as black women.

Today, all the women of South Africa, whether they are black, white, Indian or coloured, have freedom and equal rights thanks to the bravery, activism and sacrifices of the generation of 1956.

Thanks to the struggles of women over the generations, all South African women have the right to vote, the right to work, the right to have control over their bodies, the right to property, to equality.

On this Women’s Day we pay tribute to imbokodo from across South Africa for their resilience.

Despite hardship, deprivation and many difficulties, South African women continue to stand strong. They bring up children, many of them as single parents. They run businesses, earn a living, learn skills, raise families, lead organisations and hold public office.

Even when opportunities are difficult to come by, South African women do not give up, running informal business, looking for work, providing care and being active in communities.

In every part of this country, women are taking charge of their destinies, inspiring others and driving change. They are excelling in areas once closed to women; as engineers, scientists, managers, pilots, farmers, judges, magistrates, athletes, marine pilots, and soldiers.

Women are the strength of our nation. Women carry our nation. Women prepare the next generation for a better future.

As a country we have come a long way in advancing the rights and freedoms of women.

As Government we are irrevocably committed to continuing the process of advancing and improving the lives of the women and girls of South Africa. We call upon other key role players who control resources and can open opportunities for women to do so. Business is well placed to play a key role in this process of helping to improve the lives of the women of South Africa.

There are a number of things we should do and continue doing together. Some of them are:

1. Increase the representation of women in all structures that affect our lives as South African.

The women of our country said there should be is nothing about them without them. They demanded representation in every endeavour that affects the lives of South Africans.

Women must be well represented in key positions in government, in management, in the judiciary.

The representation of women in decision-making structures continues to improve.

In Cabinet, half of the Ministers are women.

In Parliament, in the judiciary, in the public service, in the armed forces, in the police and in many local councils, we are getting closer to gender parity.

Despite these gains, we need to do much more to achieve a society of true gender equality.

2. There must be policies and laws that focus and advance the lives of women. Our laws and policies must have a bias towards improving the lives of women.

Since the advent of democracy in 1994, we have put policies and laws in place to empower women, improve their lives and advance gender equality.

3. Our education must prioritise the advancement of women. We see some of these achievements in education.

South Africa has one of the highest female literacy rates in our region.

There is parity between girls and boys in primary school enrolment.

More female learners sit for matric than males. Female learners are achieving more bachelors passes.

Young women make up the majority of students enrolled in higher education institutions.

We still have the problem of girls dropping out of school, often due to domestic responsibilities. As a society and as families and as a nation we must ensure that our girls stay at school and finish school.

4. The health of women must be a key priority.

We should remember that it was President Nelson Mandela who decided, right at the dawn of our democracy, that pregnant women and children under six should get free health care.

Women’s health outcomes continue to improve as a result of progressive policies around reproductive health, antenatal care, HIV/Aids and other communicable diseases.

Even though women’s health outcomes have improved by a number of indicators, women still carry the largest share of the burden of HIV and are more vulnerable to sexually transmitted diseases.

Despite our laws, women and girls in many parts of the country still struggle to access reproductive health services.

5. The participation of women in our economy must be improved.

Our economy remains dominated by men. More women are unemployed than men.

Women are more likely to work part-time, unskilled and semi-skilled jobs and for lower pay. Women are disproportionately responsible for unpaid care work.

As a result of all these factors, women are more vulnerable to poverty, food insecurity and hunger.

Even today, nearly three decades after the dawn of democracy, the face of poverty is a black women.

The emancipation of women therefore cannot be achieved without economic empowerment.

Women must also be breadwinners. They must have equal job opportunities and equal pay. They must be able to start, own and manage businesses.

Women need to have the financial security and independence to have control over their lives.

That is why we have prioritised investment in women’s economic empowerment.

We are determined to make the most of available resources to make a difference in the lives of young women, women with disabilities, rural women and LGBTQI+ women.

We are making a difference in the lives of women in SMMEs, in cooperatives and in the informal sector.

Among other things, government is supporting women’s economic empowerment through public procurement. We have made a commitment to allocate at least 40 per cent of public procurement to women-owned businesses.

While government departments are working in earnest to award more contracts to women-owned businesses, we need to do much more. As things stand, less than a third of the companies listed on the government’s central supplier database are women-owned.

We have trained more than 6,000 women entrepreneurs to take part in public procurement opportunities. The success of this programme has convinced us of the need to train many more entrepreneurs in their thousands.

The African Continental Free Trade Area will give women-owned businesses in South Africa and across the continent access to new markets and opportunities.

We are working with partners on opportunities for women’s employment and entrepreneurship in agriculture, manufacturing, technology, the oceans economy and others.

The green economy presents immense potential for women’s entrepreneurship and empowerment, especially in renewable energy.

In a number of cities and towns there are many women who are established as green entrepreneurs working in recycling, in greening, in climate-smart agriculture and a number of other avenues.

We call on the business community to support women’s economic empowerment by partnering with small businesses as part of their green economy plans.

There is also immense opportunity for young women in public employment initiatives.

Since it was established in 2020, the Presidential Employment Stimulus has provided work and livelihood opportunities to more than 1.2 million people. Of the participants in the programme, more than 60 per cent are women.

We will ensure that our just transition to a low-carbon, climate resilient society protects the interests of women, as it does for all those affected, and that it offers opportunities for women workers and women-owned businesses.

Government is supporting women-owned businesses to expand and diversify.

We are specifically increasing our support for women-owned SMMEs through the National Empowerment Fund, the Small Enterprise Finance Agency and others.

Working with the financial services sector, we are looking to close the gender gap so that women can access banking services and credit for their businesses.

As a country, we have the right policies and programmes in place. Led by the women of our country, we continue to develop policies that will advance their interests.

What we need now is to intensify the collective efforts of all social partners, including business, to do more to financially empower women.

Business, in particular, must follow government’s lead to set aside at least 40 per cent of their spending for the empowerment of women.

On Equal employment opportunities: Promoting gender equality in the labour market is essential for women’s economic empowerment. This includes eliminating discriminatory practices and policies, promoting equal pay for equal work, and providing opportunities for women to access higher-paying and leadership positions.

Equal opportunities

Women must be given opportunities to lead – in Government, in management

6. Gender Based Violence and Fermicide must end

The violence perpetrated by men against women and girls is an assault on our common humanity. Women do not feel safe in their homes, on the street, in places of work and study and worship.
It was in response to this crisis that the first Presidential Summit on Gender-Based Violence and Femicide in 2018 made a firm commitment to undertake a comprehensive, effective and united response.

Through an extensive consultative process, the National Strategic Plan to Combat Gender-Based Violence and Femicide was launched three years ago. Since then, it has made important progress.

Women complained that whenever women who had been abused or violated reported their abuse to police they re often met by insensitive police officers at police stations who do treat their cases with he seriousness and urgency they deserve.

We have listened to this and government has ensured that this injustice is addressed.

More than 12,000 police members have received training to respond effectively to gender-based violence and to focus on the needs of victims.

More than one million DNA collection kits have been delivered to police stations around the country since 2019 and there are now just over 1,000 victim friendly rooms at police stations countrywide.

Over the last year, we opened three new Thuthuzela Care Centres for victims of gender-based violence, bringing the national total to 62.

We are improving access to shelters and associated services for survivors of gender-based violence.

In January last year, I signed into law three key pieces of legislation, namely the Criminal Law (Sexual Offences and Related Matters) Amendment Act, the Criminal and Related Matters Amendment Act, and the Domestic Violence Amendment Act.

These new laws provide greater protection to survivors of gender-based violence, to ensure that perpetrators are no longer able to evade prosecution, and to strengthen measures to prevent gender-based violence.

We have responded to the call for tougher bail conditions for perpetrators.

Effective from earlier this month, no police bail may be granted to persons charged with rape or if the victim was in a domestic relationship with the perpetrator. Such bail applications must be formally applied for in court. If the accused was in a domestic relationship with the alleged victim, the court has to issue a protection order against them before releasing them on bail.

Also effective from earlier this month, gang or serial rapists face life imprisonment, as do perpetrators of date rape, marital rape, child rape and incest.

We are also piloting a system in a number of provinces that will enable victims of domestic violence to apply for protection orders online.

We congratulate all who have been part of ensuring that these progressive laws are rolled out as soon as possible.

Awareness raising and social behaviour change programmes are taking place in schools, at places of higher learning, in communities and through door-to-door campaigns.

And yet, despite progress on many fronts, women and children are still being abused, raped, assaulted and murdered by men.

This tells us that it is not enough for our laws to change, for our policing to improve, for survivors to receive better care and support.

7. Women in Sport

The women of our country are excelling in sport. Banyana Banyana and the Protea Netball Team did our country proud recently. Banyana Banyana won the African Women’s Cup and reached the top 16 in the Women’s FIFA World Cup and our Netball Team played very well and are now ranked 6th in the world.

As a country we are very proud of our women as they fly South Africa’s flag high. We need to pay them well and their pay must be equal to that of men and even exceed what we pay men.

8. We must mobilise all of society to support the women of our country on their road to empowerment and the improvement of their lives.

Society needs to change. Men need to change.

We need a movement as powerful as the women who marched on the Union Buildings to end violence against women and children.

We need a movement that includes every woman and man in this country, that brings together every church, mosque, temple and synagogue, that involves every workplace, school, college and university.

We need a movement that extends to every town and village, every farm and homestead, every home and hostel.

No-one can be left out and no-one can be left behind.

My fellow South Africans,

As we celebrate Women’s Day here at the Union Buildings, we are disturbed by the troubling events in the city of Cape Town.

This year, we were supposed to hold the national Women’s Day celebration in Khayelitsha in Cape Town. However, we had to move that event here to the Union Buildings because of violence associated with the taxi strike in the city.

While our democracy protects peaceful protest and lawful strike action, we strongly condemn the violence and destruction caused by this dispute.

We are appalled by the killings and assaults that have taken place.

Blocked roads lead to blocked business, blocked education and blocked health services, which will have long-lasting effects on life in the city.

We must uphold the law and we must solve problems through meaningful dialogue.

Today, we think of the women of Khayelitsha and the rest of Cape Town. We think about the men and the children and the families that are trying to go about their lives in peace and in safety.

We all have a responsibility to protect lives and livelihoods.

We all have a responsibility to build a safe and peaceful society.

We all have a responsibility to build a society in which every girl can realise her dreams and every women can live the life she wants.

We have come far. We have much further to go.

But working together as the women and men of South Africa, we will achieve the free and equal society for which generations of women have fought and strived.

I wish every South African a peaceful and blessed Women’s Day.

I thank you.

Presidency invites nominations for National Orders

Source: President of South Africa –

The Presidency invites all South Africans to use August, as the final month for nominations for National Orders, to identify persons nationally and globally who have served the nation or attained personal achievement in exceptional ways.
 
National Orders are the highest awards that a country, through its President, bestows on its citizens and eminent foreign nationals.
 
The President as the fount (holder, cradle, main source) of honour in the country bestows these Orders and Decorations and is assisted by the Director-General in The Presidency, who is the Chancellor of National Orders and an Advisory Council on National Orders, in the execution of this responsibility.
 
The Chancellor of National Orders, Ms Phindile Baleni, calls on citizens to make nominations for National Orders as part of sustaining the integrity, inclusiveness and diversity of this institution of social cohesion and nation-building.
 
Ms Baleni said: “The National Orders are a platform for the recognition of fellow South Africans and persons globally who, in exceptional ways, have historically made or are currently making important or interesting contributions to all aspects of our national life.
 
“From politics to popular culture, as well as the recognition of bravery, the National Orders give us an opportunity annually to be inspired by and grateful for people who have done outstanding things to shape our past and our future.
 
“We therefore invite people from all walks of life and backgrounds – including the youth of our country – to identify from their communities and sectors persons who, on the basis of exceptional achievements or contributions, deserve the honour of a National Order.”
 
The birth of a non-racial and non-sexist democracy in South Africa in 1994 necessitated a review of the system of National Orders.
 
A review was conducted from May 1998 by the newly-instituted President’s Advisory Council on National Orders and the Orders were progressively instituted in 2002 and 2003.
 
The Order of Mapungubwe is awarded to South African citizens for excellence and exceptional achievement.
 
The Order of the Baobab is awarded to South African citizens for distinguished service. The service awarded is well above and beyond the ordinary call of duty. It is an award for exceptional and distinguished contributions in the following categories: business and the economy: science, medicine and technological innovation, and community service.
 
The Order of the Companions of OR Tambo is awarded to foreign nationals (Heads of State and Government) and other foreign dignitaries. It is awarded for friendship shown to South Africa. It is therefore an order of peace, co-operation and active expression of solidarity and support. The Order constitutes an essential pillar of international and multilateral relations.
 
The Order of Luthuli is awarded to South Africans who have made a meaningful contribution to the struggle for democracy, human rights, nation-building, justice and peace, and conflict resolution.
 
The Order of Ikhamanga is awarded to South African citizens who have excelled in the fields of arts, culture, literature, music, journalism and sport.
 
The Mendi Decoration for Bravery is awarded to South African citizens who have performed an extraordinary act of bravery that placed their lives in great danger, or who lost their own lives including in trying to save the life of another person, or by saving property, in or outside the Republic of South Africa.
 
Nomination forms that outline simple guidelines to proposers of nominees can be downloaded at https://www.thepresidency.gov.za/download/file/fid/2785
 
Submissions must include:
• an introductory paragraph with a summary of the nominee’s achievements
• a  list of exceptional milestones reached by the nominee in his/her career and/or international arena, and
• a description of the exceptional, outstanding, dedicated service or act of bravery rendered by the nominee.
 
The closing date for nominations: 31 August 2023.
 
Details of the annual National Orders Ceremony will be provided at a later date.
 
Email: nominations@presidency.gov.za
Fax: 086 646 5373
 
Postal address: The Chancery of Orders, Private Bag X1000, Pretoria, 0001 Delivery address: Chancery of Orders, The Presidency, Room 225, East Wing.
 
 
Media enquiries: Vincent Magwenya, Spokesperson to the President – 082 835 6315
 
Issued by: The Presidency
Pretoria