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MEETING OF
THE AMAKHOSI OF THE KINGDOM OF KWAZULU NATAL
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R E S O L U
T I O N S
ULUNDI : MARCH 22, 2002 |
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The amaKhosi of the Kingdom of KwaZulu Natal met in Ulundi on March 22,
2002 and unanimously adopted the following Resolution:
AmaKhosi:
- Noted with great alarm and disquiet the
careless and almost arrogant fashion in which the provincial
Legislature of KwaZulu Natal approached the handling of the delicate
and sensitive issue of the capital of the Province.
- Expresses their recommendation that the
issue of the capital of KwaZulu Natal should be treated with
sensitivity and in an all-inclusive process which forges a consensus
solution around which the Province can unify.
- Warn against taking such a fundamental
and long-lasting decision in a rushed fashion and by a simple
majority, for this would alienate those who do not concur with such
decision, dividing the Province and creating a long-lasting cause for
attrition, conflicts and possible violence.
- Recommends that all political Parties
respect the agreement which they reached when they accepted the
findings and proposals of the Cadman Commission.
- Urges the provincial Legislature to lift
the issue of the capital from the contentiousness of political
bickering and heed the time-tested wisdom of amaKhosi.
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| The amaKhosi of the
Kingdom of KwaZulu Natal met in Ulundi on March 22, 2002 and unanimously
adopted the following Resolution:
AmaKhosi:
- Note with extreme disquiet and
displeasure that certain Cabinet Ministers of the Province of KwaZulu
Natal engaged in unbecoming and unruly conduct in front of His Majesty
the King on the occasion of the opening by him of the provincial
Legislature.
- Note that such behaviour was so out of
control that those concerned did not even heed the repeated calls to
order and to maintain respect, made by the Speaker of the Legislature.
- Express the greatest concern at the
sight of leaders behaving with such lack of respect for His Majesty
and the parliamentary institution which gives a terrible example to
our people, especially our youth.
- Reiterate that the culture of respect is
essential for any established society and is the characterising
feature of the Zulu Nation.
- Condemn any break-down in our ancestral
culture of respect and actions which undermine the dignity and the
office of the Monarch.
- Call on those who lack respect for the
King to atone themselves by apologising to His Majesty and the Nation.
- Urge all those concerned to look at the
example which amaKhosi of the Kingdom of KwaZulu Natal have constantly
given with their behaviour which even under the most taxing and
stressful conditions has never degenerated into unbecoming behaviour,
insults and verbal abuse.
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