30 years after Soweto, Mbeki pledges to accelerate change

SANF 06 No 13
South African President Thabo Mbeki invoked several historical markers to illustrate the country’s advances in his recent State of the Nation address “in this year of the 30th anniversary of the Soweto uprising.”

His address ranged back 50 years to the women who marched on the Union Buildings in Pretoria on 9 August 1956 “thus placing the women of our country in the frontline of our struggle for national liberation.”

He reached back 100 years to pay homage to Mahatma Ghandhi’s launch in South Africa of the non-violent struggle that “liberated India and inspired millions of freedom fighters everywhere else in the world.”

Closer in time, he spoke of the “mysterious plane crash” that killed Mozambique’s first president, Samora Machel at Mbuzini in Mpumalanga 20 years ago, on 19 October 1986, a plane crash that he said “still requires a satisfactory explanation.”

Fifteen years ago, he recalled the martyrs who were killed by the apartheid regime in Matola, a suburb of Maputo; and the representative of the African National Congress (ANC) in Zimbabwe, Joe Gqabi, who was assassinated in 1981 in Harare.

The South African president, speaking to a joint session of the National Assembly and the National Council of Provinces, said, “The representatives of the youth that rose up in revolt 30 years ago in the Soweto Uprising sit everywhere in this House, including the benches of the ruling party, and have therefore had no need to have special representatives sitting in the gallery of this House.”

He recollected the visionary speech by democratic South Africa’s first president, Nelson Mandela, at his inauguration in May 1994, on the need for the people to value and redefine their role in the new South Africa.

At that time, Mandela said, “We must, constrained by and yet regardless of the accumulated effect of our historical burdens, seize the time to define for ourselves what we want to make of our shared destiny.”

Mbeki expressed satisfaction with progress in the first dozen years and with the optimism of the business sector and the population noted in recent surveys. He said these surveys communicate an unequivocal message of expectation directed at government to:

  • move faster to address the challenges of poverty and marginalisation;
  • accelerate economic growth to higher levels of at least 6 percent per annum;
  • sustain and improve social development programmes;
  • improve safety and security, and the courts;
  • ensure that the machinery of government delivers effectively and efficiently; and
  • harness the “Proudly South African” spirit toward a better life for all.

Mbeki moved on to address other issues of the present and future, including the Accelerated and Shared Growth Initiative of South Africa (ASGISA), which is committed to accelerate specific interventions, including reduction of unemployment levels.

Noting the objective to halve poverty and unemployment by 2014, Mbeki said government is fully committed and determined to meet these challenges; he thanked the private sector, trade union movement, women, youth and civil society who have made a valuable contribution to an initiative “that must be owned and implemented by our people as a whole.”

He stressed that ASGISA is not a comprehensive development plan but a limited set of interventions intended to “serve as a catalysts to accelerated and shared growth and development.”

Quoting Business Day on the country’s five years of sustained growth, Mbeki said, “We are reaping the benefits of years of sound financial and monetary policy as well as of structural reform in the economy.”

To implement ASGISA, he said state-owned enterprises and the public sector as a whole would make large investments in various sectors, often working through public-private partnerships, to meet demands for electricity and water, and telecommunications and logistic infrastructure.

He pledged that the public sector will accelerate infrastructure investment in underdeveloped urban and rural areas to improve service delivery through provisions of roads and rail, water, energy, housing, schools, clinic, business premises and support centre, sports facilities, and multi-purpose service centres, including police stations and courts.

Specific sectors identified for accelerated growth under ASGISA include tourism; chemicals; bio-fuels; metals and metallurgy; wood, pulp and paper; agriculture; clothing and textiles; the creative industries; and business process outsourcing.

He added that agreement has been reached with the People’s Republic of China to protect the clothing and textile sector.

Skills development is a big challenge, he said, prioritised through a multi-stakeholder working group, the Joint Initiative on Priority Skills Acquisition (JIPSA). He thanked the Freedom Front and others who have responded to an appeal for South Africans with the necessary skills to make themselves available to provide expertise in project management.

The first 90 local experts will be deployed in their new posts in May this year.

He also commended the universities, such as Fort Hare which is celebrating its 90th anniversary this year, for working hard to meet the nation’s expectations for teaching and research.

Mbeki identified land reform and land restitution as critical elements to the transformation of South African society, and he announced that the state intends to play a more central role in acceleration of the land reform programme.

He said the ministry of agriculture and land affairs will this year review the policy of willing buyer, willing seller; review land acquisition models and possible manipulation of land prices; and regulate conditions under which foreigners buy land, in line with international norms and practices.

“We must not forget that this year we will commemorate the centenary of the Bambata Uprising in the present-day KwaZulu-Natal, which was occasioned by the imposition of a poll tax to drive the people off the land, forcing them to join the ranks of the proletariat.”

He promised that South Africa will continue to engage in African challenges, such as peace and democracy in the Democratic Republic of Congo, Côte d’Ivoire and Sudan, the strengthening of the African Union, and the programmes of the AU’s New Partnership for Africa’s Development (Nepad).

“As the current Chair of the G77+China, we will do everything possible to advance the interests of the South, including the in the context of the continuing WTP negotiations, and the urgent challenge to reform the United Nations, including the Security Council.”