Eulogy by President Cyril Ramaphosa at the funeral of Winnie Madikizela-Mandela, Orlando S

Source: President of South Africa –

Headline: Eulogy by President Cyril Ramaphosa at the funeral of Winnie Madikizela-Mandela, Orlando S

Programme Directors, Minister Nosiviwe Mapisa-Nqakula and Chairperson of the NCOP Thandi Modise, 
Members of the Mandela and Madikizela families,
HE President Denis Sassou Nguesso,
HE President Hage Geingob,
Deputy President David Mabuza,
Speaker of the National Assembly Ms Baleka Mbete,
Vice Presidents and Prime Ministers,
Visiting Former Presidents and Prime Ministers, 
Ministers and Deputy Ministers,
Heads of Delegations from Sister Countries and Multilateral Organisations,
Your Majesties and all Traditional Leaders,
Distinguished International Leaders,
Leaders of South African Political Parties,
Members of Parliament,
Heads of Delegations from Fraternal Parties,
Friends, Comrades,
Fellow South Africans,

We gather here to bid farewell to Mam’ Winnie Nomzamo Madikizela Mandela – a mother, a grandmother, a great grandmother, a sister, a great leader who we have come to refer to as the Mother of our Nation.

Just as we are burdened by the sorrow of her death, so too are we comforted by the richnessand profound meaning of her life.

The pain we carry in our hearts cannot be extinguished.

Nor should we be denied our joy in recalling the life of so wondrous a person.

We gather here not only to pay our final respects to a great African woman, but to affirm the common humanity that, through her life, she revealed in us.

Her life was dedicated to the unity of the daughters and sons of the African soil.

Her life was dedicated to the unity of the oppressed of all nations.

In death, she has brought us all together, from near and far, across many nations and continents, to mourn, to pay homage, to remember and to fondly reminisce.

In death, she has demonstrated that our many differences along political party and racial linesand the numerous disputes we may have areeclipsed by our shared desire to follow her lead in building a just, equitable and caring society.

Hers was a life of service.

It was a life of compassion.

She chose as her vocation the alleviation of the suffering of others.

She trained and worked as one who provides support and care and comfort to those most deeply affected by poverty, hunger and illness.

Yet, like many of the great leaders of her generation, she understood that the suffering she encountered did not happen on the edges of society.

Such suffering defined society.

She saw for herself the deliberate intent of the apartheid rulers to impoverish the people of this country.

Her conscience, her convictions, left her with no choice but to resist.

She felt compelled to join a struggle that was as noble in its purpose as it was perilous in its execution.

She felt compelled to speak when others were rendered silent.

She felt compelled to organise, to mobilise, to lead when those who led our people had beensent across the bay to the Island, whilst others were forced to flee beyond our borders or were martyred by a state that knew no mercy.

She felt compelled to pick up the spear where ithad fallen.

It was a spear that, throughout the darkest moments of our struggle, she wielded with great courage, unequivocal commitment and incredible skill.

Her formidable will was matched by a keen political sense and a presence that inspired both awe and admiration.

As a potent symbol of resistance, as the steadfast bearer of the name ‘Mandela’, she was seen by the enemy as a threat to the raciststate.

She was an African woman who – in her attitude, her words and her actions – defied the very premise of apartheid ideology and male superiority.

Proud, defiant, articulate, she exposed the lie of apartheid.

She laid bare the edifice of patriarchy.

She challenged the attitudes, norms, practices and social institutions that perpetuated – in ways both brutal and subtle – the inferior status of women.

Loudly and without apology, she spoke truth to power.

And it was those in power who, insecure and fearful, visited upon her the most vindictive and callous retribution.

Yet, through everything, she endured.

They could not break her.

They could not silence her.

After Nelson Mandela was jailed, she said: 

They think, because they have put my husband on an island, that he will be forgotten. They are wrong. The harder they try to silence him, the louder I will become!”. 

And she became evermore so bold and loud.

They thought they could ‘banish’ her toBrandfort.

They miscalculated greatly because in truth,they sent her to live among her people – to share in their trials, tribulations and hardships, to share their hopes and aspirations, and to draw courage from their daily struggle againstthe tyranny of racial subjugation.

The enemy expected her to return from Brandfort diminished, broken and defeated.

They expected her to succumb to the excruciating pressure of years of solitary confinement, harassment and vilification.

Instead, she emerged from these tormentsemboldened, driven by a burning desire to give voice to the aspirations of her people.

To give them hope. To give them courage.

To lead them to freedom.

It was not long ago that we celebrated with Mama Winnie her 80th birthday.

On that occasion, we recited the poem by Maya Angelou, “And still I rise”.

It is only fitting that we should do so again today,for Maya Angelou could easily have written this poem to describe Nomzamo Winnie Madikizela-Mandela’s life.

You may write me down in history
With your bitter, twisted lies,
You may tread me in the very dirt
But still, like dust, I’ll rise.

Does my sassiness upset you? 
Why are you beset with gloom? 
‘Cause I walk like I’ve got oil wells
Pumping in my living room.

Just like moons and like suns,
With the certainty of tides,
Just like hopes springing high,
Still I’ll rise.

Did you want to see me broken? 
Bowed head and lowered eyes? 
Shoulders falling down like teardrops.
Weakened by my soulful cries.

Does my haughtiness offend you? 
Don’t you take it awful hard?
‘Cause I laugh like I’ve got gold mines
Diggin’ in my own back yard.

You may shoot me with your words,
You may cut me with your eyes,
You may kill me with your hatefulness,
But still, like air, I’ll rise.

Does my sexiness upset you? 
Does it come as a surprise
That I dance like I’ve got diamonds
At the meeting of my thighs? 

Out of the huts of history’s shame
I rise
Up from a past that’s rooted in pain
I rise
I’m a black ocean, leaping and wide,
Welling and swelling I bear in the tide.
Leaving behind nights of terror and fear
I rise
Into a daybreak that’s wondrously clear
I rise
Bringing the gifts that my ancestors gave,
I am the dream and the hope of the slave.
I rise
I rise
I rise”.

Like so many of our people she has lived with fear, pain, loss and disappointment.

And yet each day she rose with the nobleness of the human spirit.

They sought to denigrate her with bitter and twisted lies, but still she rose.

They wanted to see her broken, with bowed head and lowered eyes, and weakened by soulful cries, but still she rose.

As we bid her farewell, we are forced to admit that too often as she rose, she rose alone.

Too often, we were not there for her. 

The day after she died, the ANC’s top six leaders went to her home to pay our condolences to her family. 

Zenani Mandela, reflecting on her mother’s life and overcome by emotion, said: “My mother suffered. She had a very difficult life.” 

Then she burst into tears. 

That statement and those tears have stayed with me since that day.

Zenani’s tears revealed Mam’ Winnie’s wounds. 

It brought to mind the moment when Jesus said to the apostle Thomas as recorded in the book of John 20:27:

Put your finger here; see my hands. Reach out your hand and put it into my side.

In essence, Jesus was saying to the apostle: “Touch my wounds.”

During this period of mourning many South Africans have been touching Mam’ Winnie’s wounds. 

It ought to have been done long ago. For she wore the gaping wounds of her people.

She had been left to tend her wounds on her own for most of her life. 

Left alone to fend for herself only caused her more pain.

But she touched our wounds all the time. 

When we lost our loved ones, when people were in pain, overcome with anger, prone to violence, she came to touch our wounds. 

She bore witness to our suffering.

She bandaged our wounds.

We did not do the same for her. 

In her book ‘Part of My Soul Went with Him’, she wrote:

I have ceased a long time ago to exist as an individual. The ideals, the political goals that I stand for, those are the ideals and goals of the people in this country. They cannot just forget their own ideas. My private self doesn’t exist. Whatever they do to me, they do to the people in the country. I am and will always be only a political barometer. 

“From every situation I have found myself in, you can read the political heat in the country at a particular time. When they send me into exile, it’s not me as an individual they are sending. They think that with me they can also ban the political ideas. But that is a historical impossibility. They will never succeed in doing that. I am of no importance to them as an individual. What I stand for is what they want to banish. I couldn’t think of a greater honour.”

Her healing from the deep wounds inflicted on her was incomplete.  

We must continue to touch Mama’s wounds, acknowledge her immense pain and torment, and pass on the stories of her suffering to future generations so that it may always be known that Winnie Madikizela-Mandela was a giant, a pathfinder, a soldier, a healer, a champion of people’s struggles and forever the Mother of the Nation.

We must also recognise our own wounds as a nation. 

We must acknowledge that we are a society that is hurting, damaged by our past, numbed by our present and hesitant about our future. 

This may explain why we are easily prone to anger and violence.

Many people saw Mam’ Winnie as their mother because her own wounds made her real and easy to relate to. 

It is only when you experience real pain yourself that you can recognise it in others and offer comfort. 

That is what Mam’ Winnie did for decades, particularly when she stood alone as a bulwark against the apartheid regime, when she wiped away people’s tears, carried their coffins and inspired violence-fatigued communities to carryon.

Mam’ Winnie was a witness to the truths andhorrors of our nation, not only because of her own hardships but because of her courage. 

Like the women who went to Jesus’s tomb after the men ran away, she was perpetually in the trenches, never afraid that it would be too much for her to bear. 

When it was safe to do so, the men took over again and the women were relegated to a supporting role. 

Mam’ Winnie provided leadership at the most difficult periods and sought no reward. 

Like women throughout our society do every day, she toiled and never claimed glory. 

Mam’ Winnie was universal and timeless. 

As we continue to touch her wounds, we must be brave enough to share her life and legacy across our society and with the people she loved. 

Shortly before her death, we had a conversation about her concerns, her worries and her wishes.

She spoke of her deep desire for unity and the renewal not only of the movement that she loved dearly, but of the nation.

She wanted a South African nation that wouldheal the divisions of the past and eradicate the inequality and injustice of the present.

She wanted us to honour the commitment in the Freedom Charter that the people should share in the country’s wealth and that the land should be shared amongst those who work it and be returned.

She spoke of many thoughts she had about how the revolutionary ideals and morality of her movement should be restored and not be undermined by corruption and self-enrichment. 

Just as Mam’ Winnie has united us in sorrow, let us honour her memory by uniting in common purpose.

Let us honour her memory by pledging here that we will dedicate all our resources, all our efforts, all our energy to the empowerment of the poor and vulnerable.

Let us honour her memory by pledging here that we will not betray the trust of her people, we will not squander or steal their resources, and that we will serve them diligently and selflessly.

The Mother of the Nation has died, but she is not gone.

She lives on in the young girl who today still walks the dusty streets of Mbongweni, resolutethat her life will not be defined by the poverty into which she was born, nor constrained by the attitudes to women that seek to demean her existence.

She lives on in the domestic worker who is determined that the suffering and sacrifice of her many years of servitude will not be visited on her children.

She lives on in the prisoner who regrets his choices as much as he bemoans his circumstances, who dearly seeks another chance to make a better life for his family.

She lives on in the engineer, who has defied discrimination and prejudice to build a career for herself in a field so long reserved for a privileged few.

She lives on in the social worker who tends to those in society who are neglected and abused, asking nothing for himself but the opportunity to serve.

She lives on in the Palestinian teenager who refuses to stand by as he is stripped of hishome, his heritage and his prospects for a peaceful, content and dignified life.

She lives on in the African-American woman, who though she lives in a country of great prosperity and progress, is still weighed down by the accumulated prejudice of generations.

She lives on even in the conscience of the apartheid security policeman who has yet to atone for his murderous ways, but whose humanity she sought to salvage and whose dignity she fought to restore.

She lives on in the movement to which she dedicated her life, as it seeks its way back to the path along which she led it.

She lives on in the nation that called her ‘Mama’, as it strives each day to fulfil its destiny as a united, peaceful, prosperous and just society.

Nomzamo Winnie Madikizela-Mandela has died, but she is not gone.

She lives on in all of us. 

She inspires our actions.

She guides our struggles. 

She remains our conscience.

May her soul rest in eternal peace. 

May her spirit live forever.

Lala ngoxolo Nobantu, Ngutyana. Phapha. Makhalendlovu Msuthu. Msengetwa. Qhawe lama qhawe.

I thank you.

President Ramaphosa to participate in the 12km Ghandi Walk

Source: President of South Africa –

Headline: President Ramaphosa to participate in the 12km Ghandi Walk

President Cyril Ramaphosa will on Sunday, 15 April 2018, participate in the12km fun walk during the 33rd Annual Gandhi Walk to take place in Lenasia, Gauteng Province.
 
The walk is organised annually as a fundraiser by the Gandhi Walk Committee (GWC) to create a fun social platform for nation building, good health and promote community awareness.
 
The central theme for Gandhi Walk 2018 is “Going Green” aimed to champion social change and promote community awareness to change attitudes and behaviours towards climate change and greener-living.
 
Details of the event are as follows:
 
Date: Sunday, 15 April 2018
Time: 09h00 (Media to arrive at 08h00)
Venue: Gandhi Hall, Extension 5, Lenasia
 
Members of the media should send their names and ID/Passport numbers to Mahendra Modi on 083 288 4178 or mlmodi@telkomsa.net and Shadi Baloyi on 072 571 6415 or shadi@presidency.gov.za. Members of the media are also requested to present their valid press cards at the point of entry to access the venue.

Media enquiries: Khusela Diko, Spokesperson on 072 854 5707
 
Issued by: The Presidency
Pretoria

Address by Deputy President David Mabuza during the memorial service of struggle icon, Win

Source: President of South Africa –

Headline: Address by Deputy President David Mabuza during the memorial service of struggle icon, Win

The Madikizela and Mandela Families,
Mrs Graca Machel and children,
Friends and relatives of Mama Winnie Madikizela-Mandela,
Fellow mourners,

The Mother of Nation is gone. When she passed on, we heard the skies weeping as if to mirror the emotions felt by the nation and the world.

Though gone from the human eye, the black fortress of human dignity cannot be erasedfrom the grieving heart of Africa.

Because you were the tender heart of poets and sweet melody of musicians, in a thousand years our children will return here and say, we love you without reservation Winnie Madikizela Mandela.

Nomzamo wethu. Nomzamo wabantu…You are the ancient gift of our ancestors and the undying promise of our children.

The raised fist of power and battle cry ofAmandla has returned quietly to your chest. Now the palm of your tender hand must shield yourdelicate heart that has ceased to beat.

In letting go, we surrender to the call of the universe that it is time our ancestors wiped thetears etched in your soul which in life you refused to shed.

Nomzamo wethu, only new born babies will open our eyes to the true wonder and fortune ofour generation. 

They will say blessed are we who in our lifetime had a fine-looking African goddess living in our midst.

Unborn babies will envy us for our blessing of having seen, touched, and felt the love of youNomzamo wesizwe.

Bone of our bones, flesh of our flesh, spirit of our ancestors, you strode like a gentle titanallowing us to state that the children of Africa are also sons and daughters of a Mighty God.

In life you reminded our daughters and mothers that it is them who are powerful beyond measure.

You taught young women across the nation that they are just as capable, if not more capable, of standing shoulder to shoulder with men and being totally unapologetic about it.

Till death, you knew who your enemy was. Racial domination, class exploitation, gender oppression.

Mbokodo, malibongwe igama lamakhosikazi. Proud descendant of Ngutyana and  Msuthu,you fought a good fight.

Leading the despised masses from the front, you grinded and crushed the tyranny of racial oppression.

Despite their cruelty, humiliation, and torture, you return with no broken back to our Kings Mpondo and Faku.

Your courage in the face of death, imprisonment  and banishment opened our eyes and inspired generations of freedom fighters. You are an embodiment of our struggle, a torch-bearer of our liberation.

Women could say they are worthy descendants of the brave Queen Nzinga who went to war with the Portuguese to put an end to the enslaving of the children of Africa and the plunder of her resources.

Beyond the shores, when you meet your sister Maya Angelou, she will honour and crown you. She will attest that in life and in death, Mama Winnie Madikizela-Mandela is the “dream and hope of the slave.”

She will say in life and in death you are the black ocean connecting us to the everlastingstrength of Africans in the diaspora.

In life and in death you remain the unbreakable knot tying us to the bravery and heroism of the Jamaican warrior Queen Nanny and Harriet Tubman in America who took it as their honour to go to battle to free the slaves.

In your warm eyes and giggle, we will always encounter the revolutionary love and peace of  Mutabaruka, of Tupac Shakur, of  Agostinho Neto, of  Samora Machel, of Onkgopotse Tiro, and of Solomon Mahlangu.

In you, we learn to forgive because of your abounding love and respect for Helen Joseph, Braam Fisher, Lilian Ngoyi, Fatimah Meer, and Sophie de Bruin-Williams.

Yours was a revolution of love seeking to usher  a more humane world for all the children of our land, black and white.

To usher a new dawn in human relations, you  struck terror right at the heart of racial discrimination and injustice.

At the end, you set the bar high and left a legacy that will live on well into the ages. Brave, tenacious, unrelenting, bold, gracious, loving and kind. 

Phakama Nomzamo wethu.

In your undiminished love for Madiba, in your uncompromising love for Zenani and Zindzi, we find the grace and peace.

To stay on course now that you are gone, we  must sing in unison with Thandiswa Mazwai. We must rise in humility and wisdom to assert that “the ghetto is our first love”. We must sing from dawn till sunset that you Madikizela uyiqhawe lamaqhawe. Asoze mama wethusilibale ukuthi sizalwa ngobani.

You married the struggle and gave everything to it. But you never asked for anything in returnfrom anyone. Because of that, we are now enjoying fundamental rights to choose who our leaders are, we are enjoying the access to basic services like clean water, electricity and decent shelter over our heads.

Fellow mourners,

It takes someone special to sacrifice their lives the way she has for a whole nation, who despite her contribution to the struggle was often met with contempt. But she remained unrelenting even until the last years of her life.

At the wise old age of 80, she was still fighting for those whose voices had ceased with the passing of time. Away from the gaze of journalists, she was working quietly with herfamily in Bizana to raise funds to help the family of five year old Lumka Mketwa who fell in a pit latrine and lost her life.

Compatriots,

Mama Winnie was a soldier of God, a devoted member of umanyano. She wore her church blouse with pride at the Wesley Methodist Church in Meadowlands. Long after the dawn of freedom, she was always ready to lend a hand to help bury relatives of her congregants.

A fellow church member, uMama Vivi Hlatshwayo said of her recently, “She did not hold back from giving. She sacrificed herself for all of us – the nation and the church. She put others ahead of herself.

Look, it is written in the stars that when the shining Princess of the Madikizelas enter the gates of heaven, she will hear angels belting her favourite hymn – “Nzulu Yemfihlakalo” – to welcome her. Our soldier of peace will sing with the angels:

“Hayi! Obobunzulu
Bolu thando lwaKho;
Nalomsebenzi waKho
Ongenakuqondwa.”

So, the angels will rejoice that in life, sheremained an epitome of black excellence, pride and dignity. They will rejoice because her community never had to bend on their knees to beg her for help.

They did not have to explain to her why long after uhuru they could not afford the cost associated with burying loved ones or puttingfood on the table.

A true friend of the workers of our land, she would never dare humiliate the poor or treat them with contempt when they sought herhelp.

The most vulnerable could always trust her with their pain and suffering. They knew that only in her heart would they composeheadlines about her kindness.

And we thank all her neigbhours in Soweto who upon hearing that Mama Winnie,  thequeen of queens, was no more, decided to suspend their daily activities  in Vilakazi Street to mourn her passing.

Mama Winnie must have been proud to see her neighbours observe the rituals and traditions of our people because in all her fameand glory, she remained that innocent villagegirl from Mbongweni who hunted and challenged boys in stick fighting.

Till the end of time, her heartbeat remained the hope and rhythm of Bizana, Soweto, Brandfort, Lamontville, New Brighton, kwaLanga, eMbali, Gugulethu, Orange Farm, Diepsloot and Kanyamazane.

Fellow mourners,

Mama Winnie’s home has a clear view of  Orlando Stadium where we are gathered to honour and celebrate her.

This is a home which, like her heart and her arms, which was a refuge and a place of safety and comfort for those who sought protection against the apartheid state, and a place of counsel for those who wished to contribute to our struggle.

Her home is a monument to an extraordinary life of sacrifice and resilience. It is a home which is a symbol of global victory against apartheid, which the UN declared as a crime against humanity.

In Brandfort, where Mama Winnie was banished by the apartheid state, the home imposed on her, also emerged as a site where the human spirit triumphed.

Around our country, numerous informal settlements bear the name of Mama Winnie, not in vain idolisation but because of the struggle she joined or led in all corners of South Africa.With the adoption of her name, they expressed their hope that those informal settlements will one day be transformed to better living conditions. 

Her concern for the wellbeing of others made her a formidable champion of human rights. Her unselfish activism epitomises true values of servant leadership which all of us must emulate as we go about performing our leadership responsibilities.

As a recipient of the Order of Luthuli for her excellent contribution to our liberation struggle, Mama Winnie joins the gallery of brave South Africans whose fight for freedom caused them to perform feats that achieved gigantic outcomes.

While Mama Winnie became a face and icon of the struggles faced by black women all theworld, her activism cuts across the distinctions of gender, race and class. She was committed to the attainment of all human rights for all people. Her only preoccupation was to servehumanity in its totality.

In the past few days, Mama Winnie’s sense of universalism was echoed by millions across the world, and the visits to her home by various leaders and people from different political persuasions is testimony to her status as a global freedom fighter. 

She triumphed to lead a life of reconciliation, and the reconstruction and renewal of our society.

Our Constitutional vision of a non-racial, non-sexist, united and prosperous South Africa drew inspiration from the values and vision she stood for.

She was one of those indestructible rocks that apartheid struck when it sought to denigrate,abuse and oppress women in our society.

As a young and recently qualified social worker, Winnie Mandela was a shining example of the confluence of professional and political commitment.

Sixty years after Mama Winnie Mandela  qualified as a social worker at the Jan HofmeyrSchool of Social Work, the need for more social workers of her calibre who will place the betterment of our society ahead of their personal wellbeing remains a necessity.

As a militant revolutionary, her objective was always to transform the society she served rather than responding only to individual instances of disadvantage and underdevelopment.

Family  and friends ,there are important lessons that  Mama Winnie  leaves behind for her political home, the African National Congress and all progressive forces of the Mass Democratic Movement.

She valued collective leadership. She stood for truth as it related to the betterment of the lives for which this mighty organisation was formed for. She is a part of leaders that frowned upon personality cults and the idolisation of individuals.

She was always more about the “WE” than  about the “I”. Even when she was no longer in government, she understood the challenges facing the ANC and government. She always sought to find solutions to unite all our people and their organisation.

She could easily do so because Mama Winnie was not known to speak behind her comrades. If she did not agree with you she never hesitated to correct you. Many leaders in the ANC have stories of how Mama Winniewarmly embraced them and kissed them in public while she admonished them in private.

She spoke less about “my children” and more about “our children.” And the enemy perfectly understood what she meant when she said, “my people.”

She was a unifier and a visionary of note. The lasting moment we will ever build for Mama Winnie, is for all South Africans to unite behind the vision of a united, non-racial, non-sexist, just and prosperous society.

By relentlessly tackling poverty, reducing inequality, and selflessly serving the poor, we will be best living the values she stood for.

Fellow South Africans and all our friends around  the globe, Once more, we extend heartfelt condolences to the Madikizela and Mandela families on your irreplaceable loss. May you be consoled in the knowledge that across the length and breadth of our country and the world, young people are opening their eyes and proclaiming that Mama Winnie Madikizela-Mandela did not die, but she multiplied.

As I conclude, allow me to read excerpts from Alice Walker’s poem she dedicated to the mother of the nation in the eighties:

“Winnie Mandela
We love your vigilance.
We love your impatience
With killers

And charlatans.

We love your hatred
Of the deaths of our people.

We love your hatred
Of despair.

Winnie Mandela, Sister,
We love you.

Yours is the contemporary face
Of the mother
Of the human race.”

Thank you very much.

President Ramaphosa saddened by the passing away of Dr Zola Skweyiya

Source: President of South Africa –

Headline: President Ramaphosa saddened by the passing away of Dr Zola Skweyiya

President Cyril Ramaphosa has expressed his sadness at the passing away of Dr Zola Skweyiya – former Cabinet Minister and High Commissioner to the United Kingdom – and has extended condolences to the family, friends and comrades of Dr Skweyiya.

Dr Skweyiya has passed away at the age of 75 after a period of hospitalisation.

“Our thoughts, as colleagues and comrades, go out to the family and friends of Dr Skweyiya who served our country with great passion and distinction during his time in Cabinet and the diplomatic service. Dr Skweyiya’s endearing engagement and his contribution to our society – especially his role as the first Minister to lead the Public Service in a democratic South Africa – will be greatly missed and honoured,” President Ramaphosa said. 

Dr Skweyiya served as Minister of the Public Service and Administration from 1994 to 1999 and later as Minister of Social Development before retiring as a Member of Parliament in 2009. 

In the same year, Dr Skweyiya was appointed High Commissioner to the United Kingdom and Northern Ireland – a position that acknowledged the long period Dr Skweyiya had spent in exile during the apartheid era. 

Details of memorial events will be communicated in due course.

Media enquiries: Khusela Diko, Spokesperson to the President on 072 854 5707

Issued by: The Presidency
Pretoria

Deputy President briefs political party leaders on the state of readiness for official ser

Source: President of South Africa –

Headline: Deputy President briefs political party leaders on the state of readiness for official ser

Deputy President David Mabuza and Leader of Government Business has today, Tuesday, 10 April 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 (IMC) 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 3 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. 

Media enquiries: Khusela Diko, Spokesperson to the President on 072 854 5707

Issued by: The Presidency
Pretoria

President Ramaphosa mourns the passing away of Ambassador Sipho George Nene

Source: President of South Africa –

Headline: President Ramaphosa mourns the passing away of Ambassador Sipho George Nene

President Cyril Ramaphosa has expressed his sincerest condolences at the passing away of veteran diplomat Ambassador Sipho George Nene.

As a member of the African National Congress, Ambassador Nene served the organisation during exile in Lusaka, Zambia, before joining the diplomatic service of a liberated South Africa in 1994.

He was appointed as South Africa’s first High Commissioner to the Republic of Nigeria and later served as South Africa’s ambassador to Switzerland.

During his tenure as Deputy Director-General: Multilateral Affairs, Ambassador Nene advanced South Africa’s interests in a broad range of international fora.

“We have lost a special patriot and career diplomat who flew our flag with distinction and dedicated his period in exile to mobilising our region and continent to secure the liberation of   our country,” President Ramaphosa said.

“Through his leadership in our diplomatic service, Ambassador Nene was instrumental in preparing South Africa’s emerging diplomatic representatives for the dynamics and demands of a rapidly changing world. His contribution therefore lives on South Africa’s regional, continental and global relations.”

Ambassador Nene retired from the Department of International Relations and Cooperation two years ago.

Media enquiries: Khusela Diko, Spokesperson to the President on 0728545707.

Issued by: The Presidency
Pretoria

President Ramaphosa to attend the Queenship celebration ceremony of the Queen of Balobedu

Source: President of South Africa –

Headline: President Ramaphosa to attend the Queenship celebration ceremony of the Queen of Balobedu

President Cyril Ramaphosa will tomorrow, 07 April 2018, attend the Queenship celebration ceremony of the Queen of Balobedu at Mokwakwaila Stadium in Bolobedu, Ga-Modjadji, Limpopo Province. 

The Balobedu Queenship was officially recognized in March 2016 after the Commission on Traditional Leadership Disputes and Claims (CTLDC) conducted research on the status of the Balobedu as per the claims submitted to the CTLDC. It is the first Queenship in the Republic of South Africa. 

The details of the coronation are as follows: 

Date: Saturday, 07 April 2018
Time: 10h00
Venue: Mokwakwaila Stadium, Bolobedu Ga-Modjadji, Limpopo Province
 

Media enquiries: Khusela Diko – Spokesperson to the President on 072 854 5707

Issued by: The Presidency
Pretoria

President Ramaphosa to attend the coronation ceremony of the Queen of Balobedu in Limpopo

Source: President of South Africa –

Headline: President Ramaphosa to attend the coronation ceremony of the Queen of Balobedu in Limpopo

President Cyril Ramaphosa will tomorrow, 07 April 2018, attend the coronation ceremony of the Queen of Balobedu at Mokwakwaila Stadium in Bolobedu, Ga-Modjadji, Limpopo Province. 

The Balobedu Queenship was officially recognized in March 2016 after the Commission on Traditional Leadership Disputes and Claims (CTLDC) conducted research on the status of the Balobedu as per the claims submitted to the CTLDC. It is the first Queenship in the Republic of South Africa. 

The details of the coronation are as follows: 

Date: Saturday, 07 April 2018
Time: 10h00
Venue: Mokwakwaila Stadium, Bolobedu Ga-Modjadji, Limpopo Province
 

Media enquiries: Khusela Diko – Spokesperson to the President on 072 854 5707

Issued by: The Presidency
Pretoria

Remarks by Deputy President David Mabuza on the occasion to mark the 39th Anniversary of t

Source: President of South Africa –

Headline: Remarks by Deputy President David Mabuza on the occasion to mark the 39th Anniversary of t

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 1 250 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.

Keynote Address by Deputy President David Mabuza on the occasion of the Solomon Kalushi Ma

Source: President of South Africa –

Headline: Keynote Address by Deputy President David Mabuza on the occasion of the Solomon Kalushi Ma

The family of Solomon Kalushi Mahlangu,
Ministers, Deputy Ministers, and Senior Government Officials,
The Leadership of the Solomon Mahlangu Freedom College Trust,
The Leadership of the National Youth Development Agency (NYDA),
Representatives of various youth formations in our midst
Members of the Media,
Distinguished Guests,
Ladies and Gentlemen,
 
Thank you for inviting me to address you on this special occasion to celebrate the memory and contribution of Solomon Mahlangu to our liberation struggle.
 
We meet at a time of national mourning, when we have dipped our flags in honour of our struggle icon, Mam’ Nomzamo Winfred Madikizela-Mandela.
 
What do we say of Mam’ Winnie? She needs no tales to be told, she who speaks for herself, in her own words, with her heroic deeds forever written in the minds of our people.
 
What do we say of this mother of our nation? Of this phenomenal woman, a God-send, this great gift from our ancestors alike?
 
We can only say— thank you— our grateful grace that she will finally rest in peace.
 
Since that day that she walked into the dusty streets of SOWETO, that day that she married the struggle, vowed her commitment to liberation, she has never wavered, deserted nor broke where many a man ran coward.
 
She was the embodiment of our struggle, the proud bearer of the scars of liberation and the mother who stood bravely between bullet, child and the people.
 
Her reception in marriage was a union with her people, a love for country and undying spirit for truth and justice. Indeed, she stood between bullet, child and the people.
 
She had the generosity of spirit to give her life for those who never asked for it but deserved justice nonetheless. She loved her people as they did her; and long after the lions of history have written their tales, the vegetarians will remember her for the truth she spoke about her struggle.
 
She was a self-made woman, a torcher-bearer for freedom, a true revolutionary, and a unifier.
 
We meet today to remember yet another leading light of our nation, Kalushi Solomon Mahlangu.Thirty nine years ago, the evil apartheid regime executed this young patriot and freedom fighter, Solomon Kalushi Mahlang.
 
At dawn on Founder’s or Van Riebeeck’s day, it must have been difficult for our mother, umama Martha Mahlangu to say, “kulungile baba uma kuyintando yakho.”
 
How could it have been well with a mother’s soul to know well in advance the date of her child’s cruel death and she could do nothing to protect him.
 
In the aftermath of his death, Dennis Brutus wrote the poem, In Memoriam: Solomon Mahlangu
 
In part, Brutus said,
 
Singing
he went to war
and singing
he went to his death…
 
The body hurried secretly
and friends excluded;
thousands of mourners barred
 
At the cemetery in Mamelodi
Mahlangu’s mother
and thousands of friends
wait
 
The thousands waiting
weeping, angry
are told to disperse
 
The police announce
“The corpse you are waiting for will not be delivered ”
 
On the road to the airport
I search the news
till I find the dread item:
he was hanged at dawn
 
All night
his name
his face
his body
his fate
the cell
the gallows
pressed on my awareness
like a nail
hammered in my brain
 
Singing
he went to war
and singing
he went
to his death
 
Solomon Mahlangu was drawn into the struggle because of his deep love for his country and people. His life teaches us that revolutions are born out of deep love and deep care for others.
 
To honour him, we must continue to demonstrate great care and compassion for our people. We must work with them all the time to improve their living conditions.
 
As a nation, we owe a great debt of gratitude to freedom fighters like Solomon Mahlangu, Andrew Zondo, Kgosi Mampuru, Inkosi Miskofini Dlamini and many others who were executed in apartheid and colonial prisons.
 
At Kgosi Mampuru Correctional centre alone, no less than 132 political were hanged to death.
 
We pay tribute, not only to these fallen heroes, but to their families as well for their irreplaceable loss and suffering in the cause of national liberation.
 
Perhaps as Mam’ Winnie departs to her final rest, as she joins his family of icons, revolutionaries and stalwarts, we ought to speak about the importance of the new struggle against forgetting how far we have come.
 
Our history shows that our struggle is not only a statement about the victors and vanquished.
 
It is an inter-generational struggle for a united, non-racial, non-sexist, just and prosperous South Africa.
 
In commemorating the memory of Solomon Mahlangu we honour the struggle he and his generation fought against— a struggle against dispossession and oppression.
 
In their stories of bravery and valour, in their songs of suffering, in their resilience, we must continue to find hope and inspiration. 
 
In celebrating his life we must create the new society he fought for, a society based on a humanist ideal; an acknowledgment and atonement for the horrors of our past; yet also to stake a claim for justice, restitution and reconciliation.
 
For in truth and sincerity, the grand-children of Winnie Madikizela-Mandela, the Children of Solomon Mahlangu, are not yet at ease.
 
They still live in over-crowed and forlorn townships, in back-yards and shacks, in Alexandra, Diepsloot, Langa, Seshego, Kwamhlanga and many others.
 
They still shout— it is not yet Uhuru, Aluta Continua!
 
They weep for the land of their forefathers. They call for reconciliation tempered with restitution; human rights that come with responsibilities; equality balanced with economic freedom in their life-time; a democracy grounded in social justice.
 
Yes the trees nourished by the blood of Solomon Mahlangu are set to bloom. Yes we have made remarkable progress, yet these trees are still to bear the ripe fruits of freedom.
 
More than anything the children of Solomon yearn for the right to learn. They fight for fees to fall and demand a right to education.
 
They want to change their given family conditions by the sheer weight of their talents and determination. They seek a hand up, not hand outs. They want to be hoisted and tethered by the height of their own boot straps.
 
They are also demanding fee-free quality and decolonised education— the education Solomon Mahlangu imagined and paid forward for them.
 
In truth our education system is struggling to carry their demands and weighty expectations.
 
On the other hand there are millions of young people who sit at home by no choice or fault of their own.
 
Their talents lie wasted, buried deep in a society that is appears unable to unearth them.
 
Around four million – they are neither in education, training or employment.
 
For these young people formal education is no longer something to aspire to, it has become a justification for their exclusion; for their permanent subjugation.
 
For many of them as drop-outs, access to quality education appears to symbolise the ongoing legacy of apartheid, elitism and social marginalisation.
 
It is for this reason that we salute the excellent work done by the SOMAFCO Trust in raising scholarships for deserving and needy students.
 
In doing so, you have picked up the fallen spear of the MK combatant of the June 16 Detachment, Solomon Kalushi Mahlangu.
 
You are showing that our young people must be treated, not as a problem, but as assets of national development.
 
You have made it your generational mission to open the doors of learning and culture.
 
And we applaud all the young people who are beneficiaries of the scholarship which has been named after a young person who had to leave school early after the aftermath of June 16 to fight for other young people.
 
He returned on the eve of the first anniversary of June 16 commemoration armed and combat ready to ensure that there would be no repeat of the massacre of innocent school children.
 
Little did he know that his love for his people would lead him to be hanged for a murder he did not commit.
He lived in an era where courts and parliament were instruments used to put a black person in his place including sending them six feet underground if they dared challenge racial oppression.
 
Your generation have heeded Mahlangu’s call that we must love our people and that we must continue the fight to restore our people’s dignity.
 
We believe that this scholarship will produce young South Africans who will be patriotic, and love our people and our culture as envisaged by the Freedom Charter.
 
We also wish to acknowledge the good work of the NYDA in being the voice of South African youth.
 
As Deputy President and Chair of the Human Resource Development Council (HRDC), I have committed to work more closely with the NYDA to ensure that we multiply the success of the NYDA in its youth development programmes.
 
As government, we will continue to prioritise the empowerment of youth through skills development, enterprise development, and job creation.
 
We look to your generation to lead the efforts to end AIDS by 2030. We look to you to promote safe sexual behaviour, the use of condoms, and for fighting stigma associated with disease like AIDS and TB.
 
You must be at the forefront of crime prevention and crime  fighting initiatives in your communities.

Working with you, we must mobilise the South African private sector to make sure that the recently launched Youth Employment Service (YES) by President Ramaphosa becomes a success and is sustainable.
 
Working with you, we must reignite hope and turn our back on a culture of izikhothane, greed, opulence, and conspicuous consumption.
 
And so your task as young people, as the NYDA, as the SOMAFCO Trust, as the custodians of the legacy of Solomon Mahlangu is to speak for these young people.

These are young people who today make a living out of fear and despair. 
 
With each rising dawn they are caught between a life of rocks and hard knocks.
 
Those whose consciences still speak rise each morning to stand at street corner to wait for employment.
 
Daily we see them pulling trollies of hard toil, on the sides of our roads, doing back-breaking work to make cash out of trash; to remind us daily that poverty is no excuse to do crime.
 
And so we have to confront these harsh realities of our time; if we are to make anything meaningful of Solomon Mahlangu’s legacy. 
 
While we have tried to formalise the education system, the truth is that about half of those who enter our schools have dropped-out.They look to the NYDA and as their representatives; they look to you to speak for them; to hear them; to bring hope and to respect them enough not to play partisan politics with their future.
 
They have laid their hopes and aspirations at your feet to give them a fighting chance and not to fight amongst yourselves.
 
They care precious little for our ideological and party- political wrangling, they ask only that we serve and work in their interest.
 
They look to you to help them unlock their talents; to create opportunities for skills and decent work.
 
They seek the dignity of earning a living; gaining a skill; something to turn into enterprise; if only by the sweat of their brow and nothing else.
 
They are hoping for a skills revolution; a system that recognises that skills do not depend only on formal schooling; skills that enable them to learn by hand; skills that are portable from business to business, from one employer to the next.
 
As the poet laureate Maya Angelou writes in, I know why the caged bird sings:
 
“We must always be intolerant of ignorance but understanding of illiteracy. That some people, unable to go to school, are more educated and more intelligent than college professors. We must always listen carefully to what country people called mother-wit; in those homely sayings was couched the collective wisdom of generations.”
 
In the name of Solomon Mahlangu. Let us join hands to empower young people; to teach them to fight ignorance through skills and to make more of life than what is taught only in formal education.
 
Giving young people skills and abilities to fend for themselves is the best honour and gift to give to the memory of Solomon Mahlangu.
 
Remember always, for these millions of young people, it is not yet Uhuru!
 
You are our best hope.
 
Only you can give a new meaning to the dawn on which Solomon Mahlangu’s blood was spilled.
 
Singing
he went to war
and singing
he went to his death
 
I thank you.