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Enseleni: Sunday 19th April 2009
I am delighted to be here in Enseleni, in
the Othungulu District for the final rally of our election campaign
and to be joined in our proceedings by television audiences all
around the country. OThungulu is very dear to my heart for the
people of this region have stood by my side throughout the long
struggle that the IFP has waged to bring justice and prosperity to
all South Africans.
Today is one of those days where we have a tryst
with destiny. Today we
are in the words of a famous Poet 'masters of our own fate'.
My fellow South Africans, in just three days,
another step will be taken on our long journey together. Whether it
will be a step forward or a step backward is in the hands of all of
us. The decisions that each South African makes next Wednesday will
determine whether the next five years will be more of the same under
the ANC or a change to a better future under the IFP.
This will be entirely in our own hands.
In the hands of each one of us
That is the critical choice before every South
African. It will be no good complaining about the failures and
corruption of the ANC government over the next five years, if we
fail to go out and vote for change in the next few days.
In a democracy we are all responsible for how we
are governed. And it is
a cliché that people get a government they deserve.
We are making this important decision because this is the
moment to decide in your hearts who you will vote for on Wednesday
the 22nd of April. I do
not want anyone to leave this sports ground today with any doubt in
their mind about which Party can take South Africa forward on a path
of true democracy, greater liberty and real prosperity for all.
In the last few months you have heard many promises from
politicians, some outrageous and grand, and some obviously
unrealistic. You have
heard slogans that ring empty such as: "TOGETHER WE CAN" or "UNITE
FOR CHANGE" or "WITH US
YOU CAN WIN" etc. I am
here to give you straight talk such as you are used to from my lips.
So, at this closing rally of our election
campaign, I make no apologies for repeating and indeed reinforcing
the same message that I have delivered at every meeting, on every
doorstep and at every event during the campaign. It is a simple
message but a vital one nonetheless: Whatever else you do on
Wednesday make sure you go out and vote. Make sure your family and
friends and work colleagues go out and vote, indeed make sure that
everyone you know goes out and votes IFP.
All the indications are that this will be a very
close election throughout this country. Really there are only two
possible winners in this province, the IFP or the ANC. Your vote
could be the difference between defeat and victory; between
providing the chance for hope and change to flourish in South Africa
with the IFP, or watching our country stagnate, and service delivery
decline further under the ANC.
I don't need to tell you what will happen if the
ANC win again. You know what will happen because you have had to
suffer the consequences of their failure to deliver basic public
services over the past 15 years, This was not because all the
policies of the ruling party were bad.
They had a number of good policies which they just failed to
carry through either because of the arrogance of power or just sheer
ineptitude.
I sometimes wonder why the expert political
analysts spend so much time speculating over what the ANC will do
after the elections. To me it is really quite simple – they will do
what they did before the elections.
They will fight among themselves and against
anyone who dares to oppose them; they will enrich themselves and
their friends; and they will impoverish the country and every one of
us who lives in it. I have been involved in politics all my life but
you don't need to be a political expert to know that is what they
will do. It is exactly what they have done for the past five years
and - if they are allowed to get away with it on election day - it
is what they will do for the next five years – only worse.
They will fail to tackle homelessness or
joblessness and they will continue to ignore the dreadful poverty
that is to be found in every part of our country. I have lived among
our poor all my life, I know the poverty that affects so many people
and I will never abandon the rural and urban poor as the ANC has.
That is why the IFP is determined to take the necessary action to
raise people out of poverty through increases in social grants and
by ensuring access to education for every citizen.
We have immediate term solutions to meet the current
emergencies and long term proposals.
To this end an IFP government proposes
free education up to and including Grade
12 to
ensure all our children can get a decent education; we have
recommended a basic income grant and to increase the social pension to
at least R1,500 per month in the present economic crisis and we
have proposed the child support grant to R880 per month. These are
the real changes we think can bring the task of tackling poverty and
providing education for all. These are changes that you are not
likely to get under an ANC government. If the ANC is returned to
government they will draw the conclusion that they can continue to
abandon the poor and take the people of South Africa for granted as
we have seen in the last 15 years.
Every day more that the ANC is in power, its
leaders will become more arrogant in their disregard for the people
who elected them; more dismissive of the views of anyone who fails
to carry an ANC party card; and more contemptuous of even the most
basic standards of moral and ethical conduct. We have good
anti-corruption legislation on our statute books and yet we have
seen that the ruling party has not regarded acts of corruption that
have been committed by their members seriously.
15 years ago when we embarked on the first steps
on our democratic journey, we were filled with hope that we could
change South Africa for better. As part of a broad based government
drawing on the talents of varying political and cultural traditions,
I was proud to see IFP ministers contributing to that change and
proud myself to be part of changing South Africa for the better.
I have never succumbed to the temptation of saying that
nothing good was done at all.
But I must be honest with you, even in those much
better days I had my worries.
Already the ANC was demonstrating an overbearing
arrogance, claiming that only they were the true voice of freedom;
that only they were legitimate participants in the struggle for
democracy; that only their views counted in the new South Africa. To
them there was no place for heroes of the struggle who did not carry
an ANC party card. Their ears were deaf to the voices of sacrifice
and service of our comrades and their eyes blind to the suffering
and struggle of our people.
It didn't matter what your political tradition or
background. It only mattered whether you were prepared to sign up to
the ANC and its version of history - or whether you were not. We
were not and we are not. We know the real history of this country
and the sacrifices of those of us who stayed at home and often stood
alone against apartheid. We do not believe that the evils of
political intolerance or the crushing of opposing viewpoints –
practices learnt by ANC cadres outside the borders of this country -
have any place in South Africa.
And so I am standing here today, just as I have
stood on platforms at rallies all over South Africa. I am standing
here because I believe we have to change the way we are doing things
in this country. Because I know that we will not solve the
challenges of South Africa unless we first understand that we must
solve them together. It is only when the ANC recognises that no-one
has the monopoly on wisdom and that every South African has their
part to play, that we will be successful in re-building this nation.
Change is not just a slogan in this country, it is
an urgent need. If you ever wonder if it will make any difference
whether we change who is in power in our province or our country,
let me give you two illustrations which will leave you in no doubt.
The first illustration is in the field of
education, one of the most critical services for the development of
our country. Consider these stark facts. When the IFP led the
provincial government the matriculation pass rate stood at over 74%.
Today - after just five years of the ANC running the province - the
pass rate has collapsed to less than 58%. In that simple statistic
is represented the hopes of thousands of young people which have
been cruelly crushed by the scandalous incompetence of the African
National Congress. Few of them will be in any doubt of the
difference that a change of government can bring to the lives of
ordinary people. None of us should be either.
The second illustration of the need for change
relates to the terrible tragedy that has come over the country as a
result of HIV/Aids. From the earliest days I spoke out about the
dangers to the country if we did not act rapidly to head off the
pandemic. The ANC closed their ears to our calls for public
information campaigns and the prescription of retrovirals to prevent
mother to child transmission of the virus. In the end the IFP
instructed Premier Mtshali, to take the ANC national government to
court in order to provide protection to
those suffering with HIV.
And it was only by this action that pregnant mothers were able to get NEVARAPINE,
which prevented their children from being born already sentenced to
death by being born already infected with HIV.
In Uganda, where the government had the foresight
to implement the proposals that we were urging upon the ANC, the
HIV/Aids prevalence rate was reduced from over 30% to just 5%. In
South Africa instead it has soared. Had the ANC listened to me and
my colleagues instead of arrogantly dismissing our proposals, tens
of thousands, perhaps even millions of lives could have been saved.
So let no-one underestimate the difference that a change of
government can make.
That is why after over 50 years in political life, I am still here
campaigning with you in Enseleni, despite the many attractions of
retirement.
A lot of people are talking about change in this
election but to most of them it is no more than an empty slogan,
borrowed from an election campaign on another continent. For me,
however, it is very real because I have campaigned for change all my
life and I don't intend to stop until South Africa gets the change
it needs. Sadly, we know that this change cannot come as long as we
have an ANC government that is awash with factionalism and
corruption and devoid of the principles and moral leadership that
our country so desperately cries out for.
The IFP is here to restore that moral leadership
to South Africa so that we can start to tackle the social crisis
that threatens to overwhelm our country. If we are to fix the
problems that afflict our society we will first have to acknowledge
the scale of the crisis. Our society is broken, family structures
are collapsing and an 'anything goes' culture is taking hold in our
urban communities. Never has moral leadership been so desperately
needed nor so shamefully lacking from our government. It is without
doubt time for a change.
Through fifty years of public service I have
sought to provide this moral lead to South Africa. When others
denigrated the traditional values of honesty, hard work and
self-reliance, I championed them. When family values began to
disappear from our country I fought to re-establish them; and when
an 'anything-goes' culture started to assert itself in South Africa I
led the challenge to this way of life.
My passion for traditional values does not arise
out of nostalgia for a distant past; it is rooted in the urgent need
to tackle the social and moral crisis of today. That is why I have
so consistently and urgently sought to impress upon the leaders of
the country a simple truth: that unless they are prepared to provide
a moral lead to the country we will never fix the problems we face.
How can we fight criminality when a never ending stream of ANC
politicians see nothing wrong with helping themselves to the public
purse? How can we uphold the rule of law when our justice system is
disgracefully abused and distorted by the ANC to play out their
vicious factional fights? How can we ever hope to establish a sense
of moral behaviour in our country when ANC leaders provide the
opposite example?
The answer is that we cannot. So long as corrupt
and immoral leaders are represented in the upper echelons of
government we will never be able to face down the moral crisis that
challenges this country. It is time for change and the IFP is the
only Party which can offer this change.
Here in KwaZulu Natal, I am very proud to have Mrs
Zanele KaMagwaza-Msibi as our candidate for Premier. Her record of
service and sacrifice is well known to the people of Zululand
municipality. She is an inspirational leader and an able
administrator who will bring order and effectiveness back to the
government of the province.
The scale of her challenge will be considerable.
After five years of ANC rule, this province is in a bad shape. I
have already spoken of the disastrous decline in educational
standards but the ANC's failure goes far beyond that.
The official unemployment rate is over 30% and is
far higher in reality; there is a backlog of more than 300,000
homes; over 6000 civil servants are under investigation for housing
fraud and the classroom backlog is nearly 10,000.
This is the scale of the challenge that will be
left to our Premier candidate by the ANC's reckless, arrogant
incompetence. Nevertheless, I have no question in my mind that our
premier candidate has all the skills and determination required to
meet this challenge.
This record of ANC failure is not confined to
KwaZulu Natal, it is to be found in every province and every town
and city in South Africa where the ANC holds sway. The arrogance and
administrative incompetence of the ANC walk hand in hand. It is
because of their arrogance that they fail to listen to the advice of
others; ride roughshod over the views of the people who elected
them; and preside over declining public services and ever increasing
corruption.
The ANC has had its chance to change South Africa
for the better and after fifteen years it has no more excuses for
its failure. Every one of us has a simple choice next Wednesday,
whether we want another five years of ANC government with more
corruption, more criminality and more people without jobs or homes
or hope. Or whether we want to bring hope and change to South Africa
with a new IFP government.
Those who support the ANC or who stay away from
the voting stations next Wednesday should be very clear about the
message that they will send to the ANC. They will be telling the ANC
that corruption is acceptable; that declining health, education and
welfare services are not a problem; above all they will be telling
the ANC to carry on as usual with corrupt and incompetent
government.
In this election we have presented ourselves as
the tried and tested alternative.
There is an alternative, and that is the IFP.
You know the IFP. You trust the IFP.
We have been in government before, both nationally and in
this Province, and we have a proven track record of good governance
to back us.
There is no
element of uncertainty over where we stand on issues, like there is
with the ANC which bends to the pressures of its alliance partners,
changes with the winds of political correctness and follows the path
of convenience. The IFP
is a tried and tested alternative, and we are the trusted
alternative to bring real change in a direction that has been chosen
by the people of South Africa.
The IFP has worked side by side with ordinary
South Africans for more than thirty years.
We worked and lived and struggled in the trenches with you
during apartheid. We did
not leave South Africa until things got better.
It was on South African soil that we worked to build houses,
schools, clinics and hospitals when the majority of our people lived
in poverty and under the unspeakable burden of racial
discrimination. And it
was in South African soil that we buried our leaders and members who
were assassinated in the low intensity civil war that sprung out of
our rejection of the armed struggle.
Even today, during this campaign our members have
been shot at and harassed by ANC members aided and abetted by
members of the National Intervention Unit of the Police Force.
Talk of a free and fair election, there has never been such a
thing in this country.
This election is no exception.
The IFP has worked for you when we struggled for
liberation. We worked
for you when we chose negotiations instead of war, cognisant of the
pain and loss our people had already been forced to endure.
We worked for you when we went to the World Trade Centre and
demanded that provinces be recognised in South Africa's first
democratic constitution, so that ordinary people would be empowered
to participate in their governance at a local level. We worked for
you when we sat in the Government of National Unity and balanced the
ANC's inexperience with our own firsthand knowledge of good
government practices, the value of public participation and the need
for accountability, absolute integrity and forward planning.
The IFP worked for you in KwaZulu Natal when we
established the KwaZulu Finance Corporation to extend specialist
assistance to entrepreneurs.
We worked for you when we rolled out anti-retrovirals in
KwaZulu Natal to prevent mother-to-child transmission of HIV/Aids;
an action that saved thousands of lives.
We worked for you when we promoted subsistence agriculture to
ensure food security, with the foresight to expect a global economic
decline. We worked for
you when we challenged the ruling Party's flawed fiscal policies,
education policies and job creation programmes.
We worked for you when we called for a free market economy,
federalism, decentralisation, provincial autonomy, recognition of
the Zulu Kingdom, the monarchy and the institution of Traditional
Leadership.
The IFP has worked for you since 1975, and we have
not stopped working for you.
We are the party that works, because we have the
experience, capacity, political will and humility necessary to serve
the people of South Africa.
The IFP has always had a long –term vision and a strategic
plan for the future.
Much of what we said in years gone by was rejected and even
ridiculed, but is today accepted as common sense and best practice.
We have a lot to say about the future of South Africa, and we
know that in a few years time people will again look back to what
the IFP said and recognise that it was right, necessary and timely.
We have come to a Kairos moment in South Africa.
The results of Wednesday's election will determine how South
Africans will feel when they look back on this moment in a few years
time. Will they regret
that they did not empower the IFP to bring the solutions they
needed? Or will they
thank God that the IFP rode the crest of the wave of votes right
into governance in this Province, bringing solutions, hope and
change? The IFP is the
tried and tested alternative.
Will you go with what you know works, or will you accept to
eat more of the same bitter meat the ANC has been feeding KwaZulu
Natal?
This is the time to inspire hope for change in
KwaZulu Natal. Things
can change here and they must change.
The IFP has put out its manifesto for all to see, and we have
travelled across South Africa answering the questions put to us by
South Africans. You know
us and you know what we stand for.
You know that I have never made false promises.
I talk straight.
The IFP has always spoken truth to power and we are not afraid to do
so again. No matter how
powerful the ANC thinks it has become, the IFP will speak the truth
when justice is compromised, corruption is covered up and policies
are unworkable. We are a
loud voice in Parliament, and we want to be a loud voice across
South Africa.
The voice of the IFP is the voice of the people.
We do not say anything we have not heard you saying
yourselves. We have
heard you saying that Outcomes Based Education is not working, and
we have voiced your voice.
We have heard you saying that crime is out of control, and we
have voiced your voice.
We have heard you saying that the social grant system is inadequate
in the face of widespread poverty, and we have voiced your voice
loud and clear. The IFP
recognises the voice of the people, and we speak with the same
voice. We will not tell
you what you need. We
will have you tell us what you need, so that we can serve you.
The IFP lacks the arrogance of power.
Our authority comes directly from the people.
You, the people, have given us a mandate to serve, and we
will continue to serve for as long as you speak through the ballot
box and give us your mandate.
Twice I have tried to retire as the President of the Inkatha
Freedom Party. But twice
my Party has unanimously urged me to stay.
I know that I bear a responsibility to my Party, to my
country and to God to continue to offer the IFP's contribution to
South Africa. Through 12
years, the IFP's contribution has secured a better country.
South Africa still needs us – and it needs us now more than
ever.
Since the dawn of democracy, there has never been
a moment so decisive and so important as this next election.
South Africa stands on the threshold of possibility.
The results of this election will place us on a definitive
course that will be very difficult, if not impossible, to change.
If the ANC is given more power, we are headed for a future in
which corruption, unemployment, criminality, poverty, lack of
development, despair and immorality will become our daily
companions. But if the
IFP is given more power, we can again save our country from absolute
perdition. In 1980
Zimbabwe gained her independence and it was regarded as the economic
jewel and bread basket of Africa.
We were all proud and rejoiced.
She was our biggest trading partner.
We have seen that it does not take much to destroy even a
wonderful a jewel that Zimbabwe was in 1980, and subsequent years.
South Africa needs to wake up and prevent us becoming a
one-party state where our country becomes virtually an elective
dictatorship.
That is not what South Africa wants.
The country is crying for change.
But let us be honest.
South Africa won't get change by voting for things to stay
the same; it won't get change if people stay at home complaining
instead of going out and voting.
Change comes when people demand it and that is what every one
of us must do next Wednesday.
This is a day when every South African will be as powerful as
the next. There is no
excuse for any of us not to use that power to change our politics
and choose a government that will wage war on poverty; root out
corruption and criminality, uphold the rule of law and provide a
real moral lead to the country.
The IFP will provide such a government.
You have within your hands a powerful tool for
change. Every single one
of us in this stadium has an equal vote.
Every vote counts.
I urge you to get to the polling stations early on Wednesday
and cast your vote for the IFP.
Then go and wake your neighbours and get them to the polling
stations to vote IFP.
SMS your friends and ask if they have voted for
the IFP yet. Speak to
your colleagues, speak to your family, speak to everyone you meet on
the street and tell them to go and vote IFP, because every vote for
the IFP is a vote for victory.
Today, victory calls all the people of goodwill in South
Africa to make up your minds to vote IFP.
Decide now. Make
your decisions now. Do
not leave this place today without knowing what you are going to do
on April 22nd.
I will tell you again; the IFP is the tried,
tested and trusted alternative.
Let's work together again to restore hope to South
Africa. May God bless
our country as we go to vote.
May God bless South Africa.
Contact:
Liezl van der Merwe, 083 611 7470.
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