President Ramaphosa to lead South Africa’s light-up Table Mountain for World TB day tonigh

Source: President of South Africa –

Headline: President Ramaphosa to lead South Africa’s light-up Table Mountain for World TB day tonigh

President Cyril Ramaphosa will this evening, 24 March 2018, together with Health Minister Dr Aaron Motsoaledi and CEO of TB-HIV Care Mr Gareth Lowndes, lead the “Light up of Table Mountain for TB” as part of the Stop TB Partnership and World Health Organization’s global initiative to light-up several landmarks across the world during the World TB Day.

The Stop TB Partnership and the World Health Organization have called for all well-known landmarks globally to be lit up in red on the World TB Day which is commemorated on 24 March every year to raise public awareness about the devastating  health, social  and economic impact of TB and urge acceleration of efforts to end the global TB epidemic.

In South Africa, Table Mountain became the obvious choice for Light-Up Campaign due to its strategic location and visibility. This will coincide with the lighting-up of other international landmarks in countries such as Geneva, Nigeria and London.

TB-HIV Care is a non-profit organization dedicated to preventing, finding and treating TB and HIV patients.

Members of the media are invited to attend the Light-Up Table Mountain as follows:

Date: Saturday, 24 March 2018

Time: 18h00 – 19h30

Venue: Table Mountain, Lower Cable Station, Upper Tafelberg Road, Cape Town.                                                         

Enquiries: Khusela Diko – Spokesperson on 072 854 5707

Issued by: The Presidency

President Ramaphosa reinforces BRICS relations with China and Russia.

Source: President of South Africa –

Headline: President Ramaphosa reinforces BRICS relations with China and Russia.

Cape Town – President Cyril Ramaphosa underscored the importance of South Africa’s relations with members of the BRICS group of countries in engagements today, Friday 23 March 2018, with the governments of the People’s Republic of China and the Russian Federation.

In the first engagement in Cape Town today, President Ramaphosa hosted a courtesy call by Mr Yang Jiechi, Special Envoy of President Xi Jinping of the People’s Republic of China and member of the State Council of China.

Mr Yang conveyed to President Ramaphosa President Xi’s warmest personal congratulations as well as the best wishes of the government and people of China on President Ramaphosa’s election to the position of President in February 2018.

President Ramaphosa in turn conveyed his congratulations and those of the people of South Africa on the recent re-election of President Xi as leader of the People’s Republic of China.

President Ramaphosa said the re-election of President Xi presented an opportunity for South Africa to deepen its strategic and historic political, economic, social and international cooperation with China at a personal, bilateral, regional and global level. 

Both parties have agreed to State Visits. President Ramaphosa said he is eagerly awaiting a visit by President Xi to South Africa in July ahead of South Africa’s hosting of the 10th BRICS Summit in which Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa will participate. 

President Ramaphosa will also pay a state visit to China ahead of the Forum on China-Africa Cooperation (FOCAC) Summit, which President Ramaphosa will co-chair with President Xi, to be held in Beijing in the latter part of this year, with this theme to be strongly focused on a shared future based on a win-win relationship. 

China has invited South Africa to participate in the first China Import Expo to be held in November 2018 as a guest country. President Ramaphosa further invited China to support initiatives aimed at South Africa’s economic recovery, including amongst them, driving the need for greater imports from Africa to China and participation in the upcoming Jobs Summit and Investment Summit.  

In his second engagement today, President Ramaphosa, on a call with Moscow, congratulated President Vladimir Putin on his re-election by the people of the Russian Federation. 

President Ramaphosa said Russia remained an important partner to South Africa and Africa at large, as evidenced by its support for countries of the South in multilateral fora and associations such as BRICS.

President Putin reciprocated by congratulating President Ramaphosa on his assumption of the Presidency and said the Russian Federation stood ready to deepen bilateral relations, notably in the economic terrain.

President Ramaphosa looks forward to hosting President Putin at the BRICS Summit in July, which will signify the beginning of the second decade of cooperation among this group of emerging markets which have a range of developmental advances and challenges in common.

Media enquiries: Khusela Diko, Spokesperson on 072 854 5707

Issued by: The Presidency

President Ramaphosa amends state capture regulations

Source: President of South Africa –

Headline: President Ramaphosa amends state capture regulations

President Cyril Ramaphosa has made an amendment to the regulations governing the commission of inquiry into state capture to address concerns about the lawfulness and constitutionality of specific sections of the regulations.
 
Of particular concern was regulation 8(2), which deals with the admissibility in possible criminal proceedings of evidence presented to the commission. Submissions received by The Presidency from the Helen Suzman Foundation and Afriforum suggested, among other things, that the regulation may undermine efforts to prosecute any persons implicated in criminal activity.
 
On the basis of legal advice, the President has amended regulation 8(2) to limit the inadmissibility of such evidence to circumstances where a witness may incriminate themselves.
 
Regulation 8(2) has been replaced in its entirety with the following:
 
“A self-incriminating answer or a statement given by a witness before the Commission shall not be admissible as evidence against that person in any criminal proceedings brought against that person instituted in any court, except in criminal proceedings where the person concerned is charged with an offence in terms of section 6 of the Commissions Act, 1947 (Act No. 8 of 1947).”
 
The amendment to the Regulations is being published in the Government Gazette today.

 
Enquiries: Khusela Diko – 072 854 5707
 
Issued by: The Presidency
Pretoria

Address by President Cyril Ramaphosa at the 4th Annual Ubuntu Awards, Cape Town Internatio

Source: President of South Africa –

Headline: Address by President Cyril Ramaphosa at the 4th Annual Ubuntu Awards, Cape Town Internatio

Honourable Ministers and Deputy Ministers,
The Honourable Dean of the Diplomatic Corps, Ambassador M’Poko,
Your Excellencies, Ambassadors and High Commissioners,
Esteemed Members of the Diplomatic Corps,
Business leaders,
Our sponsors,
Esteemed Guests, 
Members of the Media,
Ladies and gentlemen,

I am honoured to address you on the occasion of the Fourth Annual Ubuntu Awards ceremony. 

This awards ceremony takes place as South Africa celebrates Human Rights Month. 

Yesterday we commemorated Human Rights Day under the theme ‘Promoting and Deepening Human Rights across Society’. 

On this day, we remember the tenacity and indomitable spirit of our people and pledge to ensure that their resolve in standing up against injustice endures. 

We commit ourselves never to repeat past mistakes. 

This year is particularly important in the life of our nation as we celebrate the centenary of the births of our struggle icons Tata Nelson Mandela and Mme Albertina Nontsikelelo Sisulu. 

We acknowledge their roles in the struggle for the liberation of our country and their commitment to be disciplined and loyal servants of our people.

At the African Union Summit in January 2018, we launched a year-long Mandela centenary celebration. 

In Madiba’s honour, the AU decided to convene a dedicated meeting at the 31st Ordinary Session of its Assembly in Mauritania in July 2018. 

The continent’s leadership fully support the planned UN Peace Summit taking place on the margins of the UN General Assembly in September as part of these centenary celebrations. 

These activities will recall and reinforce President Mandela’s vision of a world defined by peace, human dignity and decency. 

In his acceptance speech at the Nobel Peace Prize Award Ceremony in December 1993, he said:

“This must be a world of democracy and respect for human rights, a world freed from the horrors of poverty, hunger, deprivation and ignorance, relieved of the threat and the scourge of civil wars and external aggression and unburdened of the great tragedy of millions forced to become refugee.”

President Mandela spared no energy in pursuit of a just, fair and equitable world. 

We have gathered here today to honour those who have distinguished themselves in pursuit of the dream Madiba and Ma Sisulu shared. 

We are proud of all the nominees because their efforts resonate with their commitment to improve the living conditions of our people. 

What we aspire to achieve as a country is aligned with what the peoples of the entire continent seek to achieve. 

This is borne out by the AU’s Agenda 2063, which envisions a continent united in growth, development and prosperity for all.

In this context, we returned in the early hours of this morning from the AU Extra-Ordinary Summit held in Rwanda on the African Continental Free Trade Agreement.

This was a milestone event in our long journey towards an integrated continental economy.

As South Africa, we are proud to have signed the Kigali Declaration on the Establishment of the Continental Free Trade Area, signifying our unequivocal commitment to the achievement of this free trade area. 

Through the Kigali Declaration, we have undertaken to ratify all related instruments in accordance with our domestic laws and process.

We are a continent that is making steady progress towards shared prosperity. 

Ladies and gentlemen,

This is an important year in the implementation of our international programme to fight poverty, inequality and unemployment. 

South Africa continues as the co-chair of the Forum on China-Africa Cooperation (FOCAC), which we assumed in 2015. 

Likewise we are chairing the Southern African Development Community (SADC) and the Indian Ocean Rim Association (IORA), positions that we assumed in August and October 2017 respectively. 

Furthermore we are going to assume the chair of the BRICS formation later this year. 

This provides South Africa with several opportunities to advance Nelson Mandela’s vision of a world order that advances above all else the interests of the poor, marginalised, oppressed and exploited.

We will work with our partners in all these bodies to develop the African continent and establish ties of mutual benefit between the countries of the South.

Your Excellencies,

We encourage our people to participate in domestic and international endeavors through active citizenry. 

Our people cannot be spectators in the development and management of their own affairs. 

We must strive to strengthen public-private partnerships in pursuit of a decent life for all. 

In the State of the Nation Address last month, we detailed our plans to rebuilding our economy, create jobs and tackle poverty.

I call on our people to own these endeavors. 

In this era of renewal, we are guided by Vision 2030 of the National Development Plan, which enjoins us to transform our society for the benefit of all South Africans.

It is therefore fitting that we applaud all nominees this evening, who have taken it upon themselves to fly our flag high as South African ambassadors in various fields of excellence. 

You are the standard bearers of an active citizenry that embraces the principle and practice of Ubuntu. 
 
We must draw inspiration from Ma Sisulu’s selfless service to the people.

It is incumbent upon us to pursue the vision and ideals of President Mandela. 

As we celebrate your individual achievements, so too do we recognise that your work is part of a broader effort to change the world for the betterment of humanity.

Working together, we can build a better today – and an even better tomorrow – for everyone.

I thank you.

Presidency responds to Democratic Alliance enquiry on former President Zuma’s legal fees

Source: President of South Africa –

Headline: Presidency responds to Democratic Alliance enquiry on former President Zuma’s legal fees

Pretoria – The State Attorney, acting on the instructions of the Presidency, has today, 22 March 2018, responded to a request by lawyers representing the Democratic Alliance (DA) for information on the provision of legal representation to former President Jacob Zuma at state expense.

In a letter to the DA’s lawyers, the State Attorney advised, among other things, that:

–  The decision to provide legal representation to Mr Zuma at state expense was taken in accordance with section 3(1) of the State Attorney Act 56 of 1957.

–  This decision was taken by the Presidency in 2006. After receiving a request from Mr Zuma for legal representation, the Presidency sought advice from the Minister of Justice and the State Attorney. The decision was based on advice from the then Chief State Law Advisor, Director-General in the Department of Justice, the Minister of Justice and the State Attorney, who all recommended the provision of legal representation at state expense under section 3 of the State Attorney Act.

–  The decision was subject to the undertaking by former President Zuma to refund the legal costs incurred by the State in the event that his defence was unsuccessful.

–  While it has not been possible to locate a written agreement between the Presidency and Mr Zuma in this respect, the Presidency does have copies of undertakings signed by Mr Zuma on 22 August 2006 and 26 September 2008.

–  Due to the fact that the Presidents who came after the undertaking was signed are the successor in title in the President’s office, they assume the obligation created in the undertaking. The Presidency is therefore bound by that decision and must continue paying for Mr Zuma’s legal fees on the basis that it undertook to do so until such time as the decision is reviewed and set aside by a court.

The Presidency wishes to reiterate the statement by President Cyril Ramaphosa in the National Assembly last week that this administration is guided by the fundamental principle that public money should not be used to cover the legal expenses of individuals on strictly personal matters or who are found to have committed criminal offences.

Enquiries: Khusela Diko on 072 854 5707

Issued by: The Presidency

President Ramaphosa provides further information on former President Zuma’s legal fee

Source: President of South Africa –

Headline: President Ramaphosa provides further information on former President Zuma’s legal fee

Pretoria – President Cyril Ramaphosa has today, 22 March 2018, submitted to the National Assembly’s questions office further information sought by the Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF) leader Julius Malema on the legal provision relied on to fund former President Jacob Zuma’s personal legal costs.
 
President Ramaphosa undertook to provide further information while responding to questions in the National Assembly on 14 March 2018 
 
In the written response submitted today, President Ramaphosa indicated that:
 
“I was informed that the State Attorney, at the time of considering the request made by President Zuma for legal representation at State expense, considered section 3(3) of the State Attorney Act, 1957 (as amended) to give her discretion where the State was not party to a matter but interested or concerned in it, or it was in the public interest to provide such representation to a government official.
 
“The acts on the basis of which it is alleged that the former President committed criminal offences took place during his tenure as a government official both at provincial and later at national level.
 
“In addition, the Department of Justice considered section 12.2.2 of the then applicable Treasury Regulations, issued in terms of the Public Finance Management Act, 1999, read with section 3(1) of the State Attorney Act, as providing for an obligation to refund the state if any loss was found to be incurred when an official was acting outside the course and scope of his employment.
 
“For this reason, the State Attorney decided that it was appropriate to grant the request of the former President, subject to the condition that he make an undertaking (which he did) to refund monies thus spent should it be found that he acted in his personal capacity and own interest in the commission of the alleged offences.”
 

Enquiries: Khusela Diko – 072 854 5707
 
Issued by: The Presidency
Pretoria

Address by Deputy President David Mabuza on the occasion to commemorate World TB Day

Source: President of South Africa –

Headline: Address by Deputy President David Mabuza on the occasion to commemorate World TB Day

His Majesty, Hlanga Lomhlabathi,
Ondlunkulu nabantwana baseNdlunkulu,
Minister of Health, Dr Aaron Motsoaledi, 
Premier of KwaZulu-Natal, Mr Willies Mchunu,
Chair of the KwaZulu-Natal House of Traditional Leaders, Inkosi PDH Chiliza,
Amakhosi and Members of Traditional Councils present,
Mayor of Ethekwini, Cllr Zandile Gumede,
Deputy Chair of SANAC, Ms Steve Letsike,
MEC for Health, Dr Sibongiseni Dhlomo,
MECs, Mayors, Councillors, and Health Workers,  
UNAIDS Country Director, Dr Mbulawa Mugabe,
Our valued social partners,
Members of the Media,
Distinguished Guests,
Ladies and Gentlemen,

Sanibonani! Namaste! A Salaam Wailllikum! Good Day!

On behalf of the South African National Aids Council, we wish to pay our special gratitude to His Majesty, King Goodwill Zwelithini ka Bhekuzulu, for honouring us with his presence here today.

We also wish to express our deep sense of appreciation to all traditional leaders who have graced this important event with their presence.

Lapho sihlaba umkhosi siwuHulumeni, nisihloniphile naphakama ukuzothungela nathi injobo ebandla. 

Your presence here today will ensure that this event will be a major success.

Our partnership with ubuKhosi carries the promise that our fight to bring an end to the suffering and preventable deaths of our people from tuberculosis or HIV is possible.

Hlanga loMhlabathi, our nation is inspired by the story of your son, Prince Nhlanganiso Zulu, a courageous  TB survivor and a champion against this disease.

We have learned that, after contracting TB in 2010, the Prince availed himself to become a TB ambassador in KZN.

He shares his story openly with South Africans everywhere. He is creating awareness at hostels, villages, informal settlements, and to all audiences across the country. 

Through his initiative called “Isibaya Samadoda”, Prince Nhlanganiso, is working on the ground with men promoting healthy sexual behaviour, condom use, circumcision, and testing for HIV and TB. 

He is giving people with TB a voice, a face, and dignity. 

He is a living champion demonstrating that TB is curable and preventable. 

We salute His Majesty and the Prince for standing up to actively create an awareness that our people require to live healthier and productive lives.

Siphosa inselelo kubo bonke abaholi ukuthi basukume babe yisibonelo esihle esizweni ukulwa nesifo se TB.

Uma siyimbumba sikhuluma ngezwi linye, sizokunqoba kalula ukugula okufana ne TB nengculaza.

Fellow South Africans,
Every year on the 24th of March South Africa joins the international community to commemorate World TB Day. 

World TB represents a special day of hope because it was on the 24th of March 1882 that Robert Koch identified the bacteria that causes TB!

This year we decided to host our national event on the 22nd of March at the historic and resilient community of Cato Manor whose past bring to memory a leader of our people like umama Dorothy Nyembe.

We are here today with the warm people of eThekwini and our traditional leaders for a very good reason. 

The reason is that the global theme for World TB Day 2018 is: 

“Wanted: Leaders for a TB-free world. You can make history. End TB”

Yes, every leader in our country can help to end TB by 2030. 

And our traditional leaders, by their close proximity with our people, carry a huge responsibility to reverse the tide against new TB infections and TB related deaths.
Working with you, we have a better opportunity of ending the TB epidemic by 2030.

This is also a call to leaders in all avenues of human endeavour. 

It is a call to action to leaders in government, civil society organisations, academia and industry. 

It is a call to social activism to our national icons in sports, arts, music, and the media.

Fellow South Africans,
This World TB Day is special for our country in another respect.

This month we mark the anniversary year of the launch of the new National Strategic Plan for HIV, TB, and Sexually Transmitted Infections for the period 2017-2022.

The National Strategic Plan was launched by former Chairperson of SANAC, President Cyril Ramaphosa during our commemoration of World TB Day in Mangaung last year.

As you would know, Goal Six of this Plan makes an impassioned call for leadership and shared accountability for a sustainable and effective response to the pandemics of HIV and TB.

We are pleased to report that the Implementation Plans of the provinces of KwaZulu-Natal, Eastern Cape, Limpopo, Mpumalanga and Western Cape will be ready by the end of this month.

All our provinces must urgently finalise their plans so that we can move together promptly and in a coordinated manner to improve the health and wellbeing of our people.

Our Constitution and our people expect nothing less.

Our success in implementing this National Strategic Plan depends on the functionality of the AIDS Councils at all levels, from national down to the Ward levels.

Once again, we urge all Premiers and Mayors to demonstrate leadership by ensuring that AIDS Councils are functioning to achieve our objectives. 

As you are may be aware, government departments implementing social and human development initiatives are expected to contribute to the implementation of this Plan. 

It is thus crucial for the political leadership in these departments to ensure that adequate budget is allocated for the effective implementation of this programme in their Annual Performance Plans and Medium Term Expenditure Framework.

Regular implementation reports aligned to the NSP goals should be provided timeously to the Department of Planning Monitoring and Evaluation, and SANAC Strategic Information Units to monitor their contribution to the progress on the NSP implementation.

Fellow South Africans,
TB remains the leading infectious disease killer of South Africans. 

More people die of TB than HIV. In fact, people with HIV frequently die of TB. 

Stats SA reported that in 2015, there were 460 000 recorded deaths from various causes. Of these, TB contributed 33 000, followed by diabetes which contributed 25 000. 

While the deaths from both these diseases are slowly declining, they are significant causes of deaths in our country and they are linked – just like HIV and TB are linked. 

Research shows that sixty percent of people with HIV also have TB, and people with diabetes are 3 times more likely to have TB!

While people dying of TB is very bad, what is equally bad is the suffering as well as its impact on families and the economy of the country. 

Yet, TB is curable! Taking treatment for just 6 months cures TB and the treatment is provided free of charge in clinics by our government!

It is worrisome that TB still cause so much pain and suffering in our country when it is curable.

However, there is an explanation.

TB is a very old disease but very stubborn. 

As I said, it is curable but, people with coughs, night sweats, chest pains and weight loss – the symptoms of TB, often ignore these symptoms. 

They come to the clinic when they are very sick. Sometimes, people recognise the symptoms but are scared or feel that they will be judged by others for having TB. 

Stigma is still very prevalent in our communities and leaders have a critical role to play in ensuring that we get rid of stigma for all diseases, especially TB and HIV.

That is why we are calling on all leaders, starting with traditional leaders, to take action.

People die alone and silently fearing the burden of being shamed and discriminated.

People also feel stigmatised because they think that it is their fault that they have TB. 

Having TB is no one’s fault. As  Health Minister Motsoaledi has often said – for as long as we breathe we can get TB because TB is transmitted through the air!

We can also learn a great deal from an international TB champion, founding President Nelson Mandela, whom we are commemorating the centenary of his birth this year.

He was diagnosed with TB in prison.

As a leader who understood his impact and responsibility to his people, Madiba decided to speak openly about his disease to his friends and the media.

He did so to encourage those infected with TB to seek treatment, be cured, and not feel ashamed. 

Speaking in Bangkok in 2004, Mandela said,

“I spoke about it openly because I knew that once people were aware of the effects, they would support me. The press admired me for declaring my status, and I’m convinced that the support of my family, friends, and the public in general contributed to my healing process.”

We all share the responsibility to stand up and support those who have TB.

We must show the care towards people with TB as we do with other life threatening diseases.

Mandela also warned global leaders and policy makers that the world has no chance of overcoming AIDS-related deaths if it does not combat the silent killer of TB and the social stigma linked to it.

We urge all leaders in society, starting with traditional leaders across our country, to follow the good example of Nelson Mandela in fighting stigma and encouraging people to be screened and treated.

Distinguished Guests,
Let us empower our communities with knowledge of the small, but very crucial, actions they can take to stop the spread of TB.

We can do a number of things.

If you have the symptoms of coughing for more than two weeks, night sweats, chest pains and losing weight, please go to the clinic as soon as possible. 

At the clinic you will be tested and treated if you are found to have TB. 

Taking TB treatment for just six months will cure you. 

Let us be aware that if someone in the family or someone at work is diagnosed with TB, it is possible that they have already spread the TB to others in the family or at work. 

This means that everyone that has come into contact with a person diagnosed with TB must also get screened and tested for TB. 

What we know is that a person with undiagnosed and untreated TB can infect up to 15 people! 

This means that there is a responsibility on those of us with TB symptoms and those that come into contact with people with TB to get tested for TB. 

We also share the responsibility to protect those we have been in contact with by encouraging them to be screened. 

Fellow South Africans,
It is absolutely critical that those that are put on treatment, complete their treatment. 

This is important for the person with TB and those that come into contact with that person. 

People who don’t complete their treatment and are not cured can become resistant to TB treatment.

Failure to complete treatment can result to multi-resistant TB which does not respond to regular TB treatment.

Those with multi-resistant TB need more drugs that can take up to 24 months to work! 

Masenze kahle sizwe sakithi. Asihlole ukuthi asinalo igciwane le TB. 
Liyelapheka. I- TB ukugula njengakho konke ukugula. 
Asingahlebi futhi singabandlululi abantu abane TB.
Siyacela sizwe sakithi ukuthi singalenzi iphutha lokushiya phakathi i-treatment. 
Thathani amaphilisi njengoba besho abezempilo. Ngemva kwezinyanga eziyisithuba – six months nje kuphela – uzobe uyinqobile i TB, usinde ube ngumqemane. 
Ukushiya phakathi i-treatment singakapheli isikhathi ngoba uthi usungcono kukubeka ebucayini, kwenze ukwelapheka kube nzima futhi kuthathe eside isikhathi.

Fellow South Africans,
In order not to spread TB, besides getting treatment as quickly as possible there are a number of things we can do to prevent TB. 

You can prevent it by coughing or sneezing into your upper sleeve.

Our elbows must be active, moving to our mouths, in a new death-defying “dab dance” to prevent the spread of TB.  

Asivale umlomo ngengalo uma sikhwehlela siyitshele i-TB ukuthi kade siyazi imikhuba yayo, yingakho ke siyivimba ukuba idlondlobale. 

We can also use tissues to cover our mouths or noses when we cough or sneeze. After use, lets us discard the tissue appropriately.

We can also prevent being infected by TB by washing hands frequently; keeping windows open; eating nutritious food. These actions prevent the TB bacteria from spreading easily.

Fellow South Africans,
TB remains a huge global problem.

And the Ministers of Health around the world have decided that we must eliminate it by 2030.

Our Minister of Health,  who is also the Chairperson of the Stop TB Partnership Board made a call at the United Nations General Assembly in 2016 for the UN to host a high level meeting on TB.

This is a call to Heads of State and Government to discuss how the world will eliminate TB.  And we are happy to announce that this meeting will take place in September in New York this year!

To prepare for this meeting, we wish to announce today that South Africa will launch a national campaign to test and treat at least an additional 80 000 people with TB between April this year and March next year.

The campaign is targeting people who are currently either not diagnosed or have stopped TB treatment before they were cured.

Many of our citizens have been “missed” by our health system as they have not been reported, and therefore have not been diagnosed. 

We seek to find and treat at least 40 000 before we go to the High Level Meeting in New York in September.

We therefore call on all leaders, especially all South African traditional leaders, to help us to end TB. 

We can only do this by talking about TB, noticing its symptoms, going to the clinic when sick and completing treatment.

We can end TB if we take action to stop its spread.

Leaders have a very important role to play in our communities. Without your help our country cannot progress. 

We call on every leader in every corner of our country to help us to help our people. 

We urge you to encourage the people that you lead to take action to end the TB epidemic. 

Let our actions count.

I thank you!

President Ramaphosa to speak at the 4th annual Ubuntu Awards

Source: President of South Africa –

Headline: President Ramaphosa to speak at the 4th annual Ubuntu Awards

President Cyril Ramaphosa will this evening, 22 March 2018, deliver the keynote address at the fourth Annual Ubuntu Awards in Cape Town. The Awards will be held under the theme: “Honouring Madiba: A Global Champion of Human Rights, Peace and Reconciliation”.

Launched in 2015 by the Department of International Relations and Cooperation, the Ubuntu Awards celebrate South African citizens who play an active role in projecting a positive image of South Africa internationally through diligent service in their respective fields.

Amongst the participants will be members of the diplomatic corps, members of Parliament, cabinet ministers, deputy ministers and other invited guests. 

The media are invited as follows: 

Date: Thursday, 22 March 2018
Venue: CTICC, Cape Town
Time: 18h00

Media enquiries: Khusela Diko on 072 854 5707

For confirmations of media attendance: MtshaliP@dirco.gov.za

Issued by: The Presidency
Pretoria

President Cyril Ramaphosa hails African Continental free trade area

Source: President of South Africa –

Headline: President Cyril Ramaphosa hails African Continental free trade area

President Cyril Ramaphosa has welcomed the historic adoption by the African Union of an Agreement on the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) as a new beginning for the continent that will catapult African countries and companies to much higher levels of growth.

President Ramaphosa has undertaken that South Africa will become a signatory to the agreement once the legal and other instruments associated with AfCFTA are processed and ratified by South African stakeholders and Parliament. The agreement was adopted today, Wednesday 21 March 2018, by the 10th Extraordinary Summit of Heads of State and Government of the African Union.

As a demonstration of South Africa’s unequivocal commitment to this continental venture, President Ramaphosa signed the Kigali Declaration for the Launch of the African Continental Free Trade Area during today’s plenary session of the Summit.

“This is an opportunity that is going to yield great benefits for all countries on the continent as well as big business, small companies and micro-traders,” President Ramaphosa said at the conclusion of his Working Visit to the Republic of Rwanda.

In remarks prepared for delivery to the Summit, in his capacity as the Chair of the South African Development Community, President Ramaphosa said the trade-focused Kigali Summit was a “forward step in the arduous journey to translate the African Continental Free Trade Area legal instrument into an effective conduit for increased trade and investment across the African continent”.

He urged that the African Continental Free Trade Area should provide new and meaningful trade and investment opportunities across the African continent.

“Africa’s vulnerabilities and limited participation in global trade are indicative of its traditional reliance on the export of raw commodities and the import of value-added products,” President Ramaphosa said.

Yesterday, Tuesday 20 March 2018, President Ramaphosa paid a courtesy call and had a working lunch with host President Paul Kagame. The Presidents held discussions on strengthening bilateral relations and strengthening cooperation on continental and global questions. Also yesterday, President Ramaphosa served as chair of an AfCFTA Business Forum on the financing of intra-African trade, before attending a welcome dinner hosted by President Kagame in honour of visiting Heads of State and Government.

President Ramaphosa returns to Pretoria this evening, 21 March 2018

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

Address by Deputy President David Mabuza during the commemoration of Human Rights Day, Sha

Source: President of South Africa –

Headline: Address by Deputy President David Mabuza during the commemoration of Human Rights Day, Sha

Our Hosts, the Acting Premier of Gauteng, Mr Panyaza Lesufi and the Executive Mayor of Sedibeng District Municipality, Cllr Busisiwe Modisakeng,
Minister of Arts and Culture, Mr Nkosinathi Mthethwa and all Ministers present 
Deputy Ministers, Members of the Gauteng Provincial Executive Council and Members of Parliament and Provincial Legislature present,
President of the Pan Africanist Congress 
Leaders of various political parties represented here,
Leaders of Labour, Faith-based organisations, and Civil Society,
Community of Sedibeng,
Distinguished Guests,
Ladies and Gentlemen,

Dumelang! Sanibonani! Good Day!

I am humbled and honoured to join the community of Sedibeng to mark our country’s Human Rights Day.

In the past, we commemorated this day as Sharpeville Day.

It is a day which serves as a painful reminder of our struggle for a united, non-racial, non-sexist, just and prosperous South Africa.

It is a day to pause, think and reflect. We commemorate not only to remember, but also to measure how far we have come in achieving the ideals cherished by those who lost their lives in the struggle.

On this day we remember the tenacity and indomitable spirit of our people. We celebrate their bravery and courage. They stood fearless in defiance against the murderous and illegitimate apartheid regime.

And so today we still evoke the memory of one of the finest stalwarts of the liberation movement, Robert Sobukwe, who died forty years ago.

We give credence and gratitude to his struggle and that of many of his luminaries. 

We grant them this honour to claim their rightful place in history; to learn from them, to learn what it means to one’s soul for a deeper love of country and one’s people.  

On that fateful day, fifty eight (58) years ago, anillegitimate and brutal apartheid regime sought to silence an unarmed and defenceless people with guns.

When the last order to shoot finally stunned in silence, 68 souls lay dead, strewed over the streets of Sharpeville, with nearly 200 wounded. 

Their rivers of blood remain deep in this soil.  

For us who live today, for us who enjoy their fruits of freedom, it must remain a constant reminder that our freedom was paid for. Our remit is to pay it forward for those who are yet to come.

Long after we have lived, future generations must say we inherited a struggle, we made good on the promise of our forebears, and then left forthem a united and prosperous South Africa. 

Each generation must take up its struggle for unity and freedom and keep paying it forward.

Never must our pain and memory of the past paralyse us. 

The guns may be silenced, but we must never stop the irreversible march to meaningful freedom and democracy— a democracy where all our people will benefit from our struggle of radical socio-economic transformation. 

Compatriots,

At the heart of the struggle for human dignity and freedom lay the struggle against the despised pass laws— the carrying of die dompass— which sought to subjugate black South Africans as inferior and subhuman. 

These were pass laws that stripped black South Africans of their citizenship, restricted their movement, and excluded them from businessopportunities and well-paying jobs. 

It was deliberately designed to oppress themand to render them beggars in land of their forefathers.

As early as 1922, the Stallard Commission set up by the Smuts government wrote in its report that, 

“The native should only be allowed to enter urban areas, which are essentially the white man’s creation, when he is willing to enter and to administer to the needs of the white man, and should depart there from when he ceases so to minister.”

Therefore, die dompas became a symbol of black humiliation, of subjugation, and of exile. 

So the anti-pass campaigns led by gentle giantslike Robert Mangaliso Sobukwe and Nelson Mandela was a continuation of anti-pass resistance.

Just as we have to pay forward our struggle, many South African women came before them.

Sharpeville gave impetus to earlier anti-pass struggles led by Charlotte Maxeke in 1913 in Bloemfontein.

It was a continuation of the struggle in the fifties against passes spearheaded by women like Bertha Gxowa, Lilian Ngoyi, Rahima Moosa, Sophie DeBruin- Williams, Helen Joseph, and the  women of Zeerust.

Their struggle was taken forward by the generation of young lions and black consciousness activists in the seventies, COSATU, and the UDF in the eighties

At the heart of all these campaigns against the indignity of the passes, was the struggle for equality and citizenship. At its core was a struggle for fundamental human rights.

When President Nelson Mandela paid it forward, he recited Ingrid Jonker’s Poem, Die Kind (The Child), written in the aftermath of the Sharpeville and others massacres throughout the country, in his inaugural speech to Parliament in 1994:

“The child is not dead 
the child lifts his fists against his
mother who shouts Africa!…
The child is not dead
Not at Langa nor at Nyanga
nor at Orlando nor at Sharpeville
nor at the police post at Philippi
where he lies with a bullet through his brain…
the child is present at all assemblies and law-giving
the child peers through the windows of houses

and into the hearts of mothers
this child who only wanted to play in the sun at Nyanga
is everywhere
the child grown to a man treks on through all Africa
the child grown to a giant journeys
over the whole world
without a pass!”

Madiba described Ingrid Jonker as a woman who transcended a particular experience. She had unclothed herself of her skin colour. She became a South African, an African, and a citizen of the world.

As a decent human being, she shared fully the pain of her South African people. 

She humanised herself, she asked her people the question: what superiority and justice could we claim when the police fatally wound an African baby in her mother’s arms in Philippi, when we kill the black child in Soweto for demanding a decolonised education, when we deny those who work the land the right to own it.

In our journey to heal the wounds of the past and rebuild our country, our nation yearns for many more Ingrid Jonkers who will fight – without regard to race – for the rights of children in our townships and villages.

All South Africans, black and white, must be outraged by the death of five year old Viwe Jaliin a school latrine pit toilet in Mbizana. 

Oliver Tambo was born in Mbizana. What would he say to us who busk in the glory of his struggle, if we still fail to protect our children, years after  Grade R learner, Michael Komape,died in a similar undignified manner in 2014.

Why would The Lion of the North, Peter Mokaba, not turn in his grave when he learnsthat recently, a five year old girl in grade R, was electrocuted at a school in Limpopo.

What do we say, when in November last year, five children died a gruesome death in Soshanguve when an overhead light fell on them.

What do we say to our innocent children about a police officer who molests children placed in his care, children who have entrusted justice and salvation to him after they were raped?

What has gone wrong? Why have we becomeso numbed to the tragedies that rob our children of their innocence?

And so on this day, as we remember Sharpeville, as we celebrate our human rights, we have many questions to answer to in our quest for renewal and unity.

We must begin to do things differently. We must again become men and women of moral stamina, courage and conviction. We must be like those who died in Sharpeville. 

For rights come with responsibilities. We must all do our part with utmost regard for the life of others, especially those that are vulnerable and marginalised.

It requires that we return to our values that embrace the sanctity of life.

It requires that we conduct ourselves ethically. That we give the highest quality of service to our people. That we become public servants again. That we use our freedoms and democracy toserve our people selflessly at local, provincial, and national government.

Our real hope for the renewal, the regeneration of the soul of our nation, rest in our ability to fixour public service and improve the performance of our developmental state.

Our state must be led by men and women of high moral rectitude, and dedication; peoplewho have made it their mission to selflessly serve and improve the lives of ordinary South Africans; people who have nothing else but the interest of our nation at heart.

Fellow Compatriots,

Today South Africa also joins the nations of the world to mark the United Nations International Day for the Elimination of Racial Discrimination. 

We are called upon to work together to advance human rights, inclusion, and unity. We must create a world free from the evil clutches of racism and social exclusion.

As government, we condemn the resurgence racism in our country. 

It is an indictment on all of us that after defeating the inhumane dompass system, racialabuse and racial attacks are on the rise.

They are everywhere. On the factory floor, in board rooms, in multi-national clothing stores, at pubs, gas stations, and at the farms. 

All of this renders the struggles and the deaths of the people in Langa, Sharpville, Boipatong,Bisho and many others worthless.

We cannot count ourselves worthy of their contributions if we fail to rise above racial prejudice and unite as a nation.

Fellow South Africans,

This year we commemorate Human Rights Day during the year of a global human rights ambassador, Nelson Rolihlahla Mandela.

We mark it under the theme “Promoting and Deepening Human Rights Across Society.”

Madiba taught us that “to deny people their human rights is to challenge their very humanity.”

In honour of Madiba’s memory, we urge our citizens to work tirelessly to expand the frontiers of freedom, justice, and peace.

To succeed, we must all start from the standpoint that people are born with their inherent dignity.

On a day like this, we implore those in leadership in government, business, and communities to be actively involved in championing the rights of all our people, especially the vulnerable and marginalised.

We implore mayors, councillors, ward committee members, civil servants to embrace the ethos of batho pele

Our Constitution demands that we work collaboratively to render quality services andimprove the living conditions of our people.

We also urge our people, in the spirit and ethos of Thuma Mina, to rise and lend a hand to make South Africa a better place to live in.

To build a country is an enormous challenge requiring a new sense of patriotism.

It requires that we return to our people’s traditions of sacrifice and voluntarism.

It requires that we get involved in small but important tasks like helping township and rural youth with their homework to improve educational outcomes.

It requires that we become part of the activist movement that rises early, that eats healthy, exercises, and clean its streets.

It requires that we become active in remote and rural communities to help impoverished families access social security grants.

We must not look away at the plight of children living in the streets without food, shelter, and access to health.

We urge law students, law firms, universities, NGOs, and communities to contribute their skills and time to ensure that such children are cared for, that their rights to dignity and access to food are fully realized.

Whilst efforts have been made by the Department of Justice and Constitutional Development to educate people about their rights and responsibilities, much still remains to be done. 

To raise human rights awareness, the Department of Justice and Constitutional Development is involved in initiatives like the National Schools Moot Court Competition (NSMCC) which it undertakes in partnership with the DBE and the University of Pretoria.

We urge our South African media to also utiliseits vast resources and skills to partner with government in educating our people about their rights and how they can enforce them.

Access to justice must never be a privilege to be enjoyed by the rich and powerful. Our justice system and institutions must work for the poor and the needy.

We encourage our young people, especially black women, to follow careers in law. We need more human rights lawyers to defend the socio-economic rights of people living in informal settlements and villages.

Our children in schools and communities must be empowered through popular programmes like Street Law about our laws and how to enforce the law.  

Fellow South Africans,

Human Rights Day reminds that irrespective of our race, gender, status, or creed, we are all part of the human family.

It’s a day where we are reminded that our Bill of Rights is the bedrock of our democracy and freedom.

It’s a day reminding us that South African workers have fought hard to resist inhumane working conditions, slave-wages, and unfair labour practice. 

So today we must rededicate ourselves to the course of defending the rights of the most vulnerable among us.

But it is also a day that must remind us that freedom and democracy remain meaningless if the majority of South Africans remain trapped in poverty, without work, without bread, and without land.

Compatriots,

As a country, we owe our flourishing human rights ethos to a global human rights icon like founding President Nelson Mandela and his generation.

We must all rise and lend a hand to make sure that no child travels long distances without shoes to dilapidated schools without clean water, sanitation, and electricity. 

We must all rise and lend a hand in building communities where women can walk freely at night without fear that they will be raped or killed.

We must put shoulder to wheel to help families rehabilitate their sons and daughters who have surrendered their lives to drugs and alcohol abuse.

We need parents, teachers, traditional leaders and spiritual workers to educate our children that it is not cool to lay hand on a women. To teach them that to beat a woman is an insult to our culture and traditions. To teach them that when a woman says no she means exactly that, NO.

To honour Madiba and to deepen human rights, we must do more to fight the root causes ofviolent crimes and high murder rates in our country.

We must unite to fight the triple scourges of poverty, unemployment, and inequality.

Compatriots,

Human rights can only thrive where there is freedom, where communities are overcoming discrimination. 

They thrive when we work together to fight the stigmatisation of people living with HIV.

They thrive in conditions where people living with mental illness are supported and their humanity affirmed.  Not where they are shamed, starved, neglected, sexually abused, and beaten.

President Mandela taught us that, “For to be free is not merely to cast off one’s chains, but to live in a way that respects and enhances the freedom of others”.

Within the spirit of the Sustainable Development Goals that We Leave No One Behind, I call on South Africans that we walk the extra mile in upholding the rights of persons with disabilities as equal citizens and residents of South Africa. 

Our country is emerging from a painful period in which 144 persons with psychosocial disabilities perished because we did not do enough as government to uphold their rights to self-representation, to protection from harm, to access to quality care.  

The past few years have regrettably also seen the emergence of killings of children and adults with albinism and of desecration of their bodies.

Two years ago we lost the lives of three Deaf children when the boarding facility they were supposed to be safe in, burnt down due to insufficient disability inclusive emergency measures.

As we celebrate Human Rights Day today, as the world celebrates World Down Syndrome Day today, let us individually and collectively, speak out and act with more urgency, in solidarity, when we witness abuses and human rights violations against people with disabilities.

We must refuse to be numbed by the persistent cruel murderers of our people.

We must refuse to embrace cruelty and torture as a new normal as we saw recently with themurder and burning of 21 year old TUT student and Taxify driver, Siyabonga Ngcobo.

We cannot rest as a nation when our daughtersdie painfully and their bodies are burned.  We saw this with the murder of 22 year old KaraboMokoena last year. 

We call on all South African men to get involved in ending the murder of women who die in the hands of their partners.

Each day we must remind young boys and men that women’s rights are also human rights.

Men of good moral conscience must stand up against the discrimination, abuse, and murder of people in the LGBTI community.

Fellow South Africans,

We must never allow the face poverty and landlessness to become the new dompas.

We dare not let the sacrifices of the people of Sedibeng be in vain.

To honour them, we must remain vigilant and jealously guard the gains of our freedom.

In service delivery, we must Return to Basics to involve communities in our municipality plans and to utilise our people as drivers of change.

We must use the limited state resources for the benefit of all our people, not for the benefit of the connected few. 

This new era demands that their rights are fullyprotected and that they are never treated with contempt. 

On Human Rights Day, we must ask ourselves if our words and actions are befitting the honour of the victims of the the blood that was shed at Sharpeville, Sebokeng and Boipatong.

Driving here this morning and listening to residents, it is clear that our people believe that our government can do much better to improve their lives.

I will be working closely with Premier David Makhura to make sure that we speedily respond to their concerns.

My office and the Premier’s Office will coordinate efforts to deepen service delivery, alleviate poverty, and eliminate unemployment.

This work begins now. My office is adoptingSharpeville as one of its priority projects.

We will begin by simple actions of cleaning the graveyards of where our heroes and people are buried.

When we commemorate sixty years of the death of the victims of Sharpeville in two years, we must be able to say it pays to respect human rights and the rule of law.

We must be able to say that our people were correct to adopt our first Bill of Rights called the African Claims at the ANC 1943 National Conference.

We must affirm the correctness of their logic is stating that,

“We, the African people, regard as fundamental to the establishment of a new order in South Africa the abolition of all enactments which discriminate against the African on grounds of race and colour.”

The governing party’s programme of accelerated radical socio-economic transformation seeks to address these historical demands which were raised in the African Claims and the Freedom Charter.

Fellow South Africans,

This region of Sedibeng is an important station in South Africa’s liberation route

It stands out as our mecca of freedom.

Our pilgrimage to Sharpeville gives us the possibility to taste the deep wells of liberty.

The streets, smells, and sounds… the courage and smiles on the faces of the people of Sedibeng evoke the echoes of a place deeply rooted in history and memory.

Coming to Sharpeville, Sebokeng, and Boipatong gives us another chance to sip from the overflowing fountain of our people’s resilience and heroism.

They risked life and limb to defend our dignity and humanity.

We dare not fail them.

We dare not allow poverty, landlessness, and despair become our new dompas.

The dompas is dead. 

But the child is not dead. 

The conscious voice of Ingrid Jonker must reawaken to remind us, black and white that, “Die kind is nie dood nie.”

We must find one another.

And together we must build the South Africa of our deepest aspirations.

I thank you.

Issued by: The Presidency
Pretoria