th October 2008
I am issuing this statement as a unified
response to the many media requests I have received for a
reaction to the statement made today by former Minister of
Defence, Mosiuoa Lekota.
It is not my habit to comment on what
happens within other political parties and I have never said a
word about their internal leadership struggles and turmoil.
However, we have reached a point in South Africa in which the
divide between the ruling party and the State has collapsed, and
matters affecting the ruling party have become matters of State
affecting the future of our Republic. Under these circumstances,
it is therefore imperative for anyone to take an interest.
The issues raised by Mr Lekota relate to
the underpinning values of politics and the future of our
Republic, and ought to be debated seriously, also beyond the
boundaries of the ruling party. His comments have again brought
to the fore an old debate on the underpinning values of our
liberation struggle and how they ought to be implemented in the
running of our country.
The founding father of the ANC, Dr
Pixley ka Isaka Seme, was my uncle.
He, Inkosi Lutuli, Bishop Alpheus Zulu
and other prominent founding fathers were my mentors. That is
why when Jimmy Kruger, the then Minister of Police, said that
Inkatha was an exclusive Zulu ethnic organisation, I responded
by saying that Inkatha was structured on the ideals of the ANC
in 1912.
The ANC was founded and managed by my
relatives. After consulting Oliver Tambo, I formed Inkatha to
complement the ANC's action when the ANC was banned and exiled.
For this reason, when in 1979 Inkatha and the ANC broke apart, I
made two statements which I believe to still be valid and
relevant; namely that nobody owns the ANC copyright and that in
its conduct Inkatha remains more faithful to the founding values
of the ANC than the ANC itself.
We are now at the stage in which the
values underpinning our society are under threat. What we have
today is a far cry from the future our forefathers promised us
in 1912 and to which my generation dedicated its life of
struggle. We must not leave this legacy, but preserve it as a
pool of values to inspire future generations.
For this reason, I agree with Mr Lekota
that our society must come together to talk about these values
and should do so not only beyond political divides, but also
beyond that which now divides the political world and a civil
society which is rightly becoming increasingly distant and
disenchanted with politics. Hence, an all-inclusive approach to
the conference he proposes, with the involvement of building
blocks of society, such as churches, traditional leadership and
business, is necessary.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Jon Cayzer
084 555 7144