Today I am unveiling the Inkatha Freedom Party's Growth
and Development Plan for KwaZulu-Natal. The Growth and Development Plan is a
specially tailored version of our national manifesto, 'Real Development Now',
for the province of KwaZulu-Natal. Like our national manifesto, the Growth and
Development Plan is short on spin, rich in policy. Our approach is action and
programme driven. We are not here to play the politics of promises. We are here
to commit ourselves to actions as the next government of KwaZulu Natal. The IFP
government of KwaZulu Natal in the years 2004 and beyond will be based on
actions. This is not a promise. It is a fact in the making.
The IFP is ambitious for KwaZulu-Natal. We believe that
with the right plan and team, KwaZulu-Natal can be South Africa's most
prosperous and happening province. I laugh when I hear people saying that
KwaZulu Natal must be liberated by the ANC. KwaZulu Natal is the leading
province of South Africa. We have the most advanced plans and programmes in
agriculture, rural development, trade and industrial promotion, housing,
education and many other fields.
We have achieved enormous progress ahead of many other
provinces, in spite of the fact that the IFP-led government of this Province
has been undermined and frustrated by the ANC, at every turn and corner. The
ANC has not been committed to the success of the government of this Province,
but to its failure, and in spite of this we have succeeded. We shall bring this
success into the next five years, but we need greater power and more support to
finish better and without further interferences with what we have begun. The
ANC should be concerned about liberating the Eastern Cape and the Northern Cape
from their disastrous administration, and should leave KwaZulu Natal alone to
be run from success to success by the competent, efficient, clean and
productive IFP government.
This province literally fizzles with potential and
vitality. Our wonderfully diverse peoples; a glorious smorgasbord of cultures
and traditions; international cities with first-class infrastructure and
magnificent deep-sea ports; an abundance of natural resources and fertile land;
two World Heritage Sites; year round sunshine and a desirable location, adds up
to a world-class destination and investment haven. In so many ways
KwaZulu-Natal, as the nation's most populous province, is like South Africa in
miniature. Success in this province would provide a template and paradigm of
development for the rest of South Africa.
There is something special about this Province which,
however, does not come out of the blue. It is the fruit of 25 years of my hard
work and patient progress on the part of social harmony and reconciliation. No
other Province can replicate this overnight. In this province we began coming
together across the then deeply divided racial lines in the late 70's. In 1980
we came together in the Buthelezi Commission, which set the basis for the
KwaZulu Natal Indaba of 1986 in which the representatives of the people of this
Province came together to work together, oblivious of the different colour
pigmentation of our skins or our cultural differences. These joint efforts were
in total defiance of both the laws and the culture of apartheid, and yet they
were so compelling that they allowed Pretoria to be unable to stop the
formation of the KwaZulu Natal Joint Executive Authority, which was the first
interracial government of South Africa, almost a decade ahead of our final
liberation.
In this Province, because of Inkatha, we never saw anyone
as an enemy. We worked as people of KwaZulu Natal, for the benefit of the
people of KwaZulu Natal. The end product is that KwaZulu Natal is today the
most cosmopolitan and racially harmonious Province of South Africa. We shall
build the economic prosperity and social stability of this Province on this
strong foundation. The IFP provincial government will draw upon the two main
assets of the province: our diversity and the talents of our people to drive
our vision. With the people of KwaZulu-Natal, we will work to make the province
an arena of ambition and opportunity for all.
In the 1999 election, the IFP did not achieve an overall
majority and had to form a coalition government with the ANC. Unfortunately,
the ANC-IFP agreement unravelled when the ANC tried to subvert democracy, by
trying to take over the province by the immoral floor-crossing legislation.
They failed. With other opposition parties, the IFP challenged the legislation
at the Constitutional Court. The majesty of democracy prevailed at the end of
the day, but was then defeated and warped when the ANC tampered with the
Constitution and amended it to allow floor-crossing. Today, all that stands
between the consolidation of a one-party-state by the ANC is that KwaZulu-Natal
is governed by an IFP-led administration. That is a tribute to the independent
minded and brave people of KwaZulu-Natal, which is one of the special and
enduring qualities of the peoples of this Province.
The circumstances, however, in which we have had to work,
has meant that the IFP was unable to fully implement our programme for
government. And, of course, compromise is inevitably part and parcel of
coalition government. The IFP believes that the people of KwaZulu-Natal deserve
the best. The province needs joined-up - not disjointed - government.
KwaZulu-Natal needs the right team and approach. It is time for the IFP to have
the opportunity to serve. We joined hands with the DA because we are like
minded parties. It was a coalition of the willing to work for the people of the
Province. This coalition began in 1999 at the local government level where it
proved its worth, efficiency and benefits for the people of this Province.
However, the roots of this coalition go deep into the history of this Province
when a great number of leaders, who are now in the DA, were with us in the
Buthelezi Commission and the KwaZulu Natal Indaba.
The DA has been committed to the success of the KwaZulu
Natal Government, and not to its failure. It has been a trusted partner who has
worked closely with the Premier to provide this Province with its best possible
government. The whole of South Africa benefits from the great and productive
competition which is now available to the people of KwaZulu Natal. The
agreement we signed with the DA is a commitment to govern together, wherever
the number allows us to do so. An IFP-DA government could save the whole of
South Africa from crucial problems such as HIV/AIDS, crime, unemployment,
poverty and corruption.
The Growth and Development plan is a detailed plan of
action that contains IFP common sense proposals across the spectrum of
governance, that would put KwaZulu-Natal on the road to success and prosperity.
They dovetail with many policies in which the IFP and the DA see eye to eye.
The Office of the Premier in the new administration, will ensure that
KwaZulu-Natal is governed in a joined-up manner, with one vision. The existing
situation of fragmented government activity will not be tolerated any longer.
The Premier will personally set the priorities and objectives of each
department, in line with the overall strategy of the administration and ensure
that each department is focused on accelerated delivery of services to the
people. As Harry Truman famously said, "the buck stops here."
The Office of the Premier will take the lead role in
working to create the framework to make KwaZulu-Natal an economic powerhouse,
and a haven for direct foreign investment. I subscribe to the old saying 'a
rising tide lifts all boats.' Our success on the economy will determine our
success in every other sphere of governance. The IFP administration will be
business friendly. The IFP believes that business people know more about
business than political parties. The Premier will interact with the business
community at every opportunity, to make KwaZulu-Natal a business friendly
province and a haven for investment.
As you will know, I have been advocating at the national
level for the last ten years and before that, when I was Chief Minister of the
erstwhile KwaZulu government, of the need to liberalise our economy like the
Asian Tiger economies did from the ninety-fifties onwards. South Africa is a
country rich in resources, but its most precious resource is human capital. One
of the paradoxes of the post-war global economy is that countries that have
achieved high levels of economic growth, have often been those lacking in
natural resources, but have invested massively in the development of their
human resources. Singapore and Taiwan provide obvious examples. The Office of
the Premier in the new administration will commission an "Asian
Tiger" economies developmental study, to identify in practical terms how
the five Asian Tigers, and other developing countries such as India and
Malaysia, achieved accelerated double-digit economic growth in their
developmental phase.
Our vision is big. We want to place KwaZulu-Natal on the
fast track of economic development. There is no reason why KwaZulu-Natal with
its comparative advantages of an abundance of water, excellent road, rail and
port infrastructure, cannot be a powerhouse economy within South Africa, in the
way that, for example, California is in the USA. The IFP provincial government
will ensure that the provincial budget is used to stimulate economic growth and
use the benefits of such growth to cut through the structural conditions, that
produce large-scale poverty. We will promote broad-based economic empowerment
through government and ensure that it benefits the many, not just an enriched
elite few.
At present over 60% of formal modern economic activity is
concentrated largely in the Durban-Pinetown-Pietermaritzburg corridor, which
means that most of the province's economic potential remains untapped. We will
change that. The IFP provincial government will promote the development of
cities and towns, such as Pietermartizburg, Ulundi, Ladysmith, Newcastle,
Vryheid, Pongola and Port Shepstone, as industrial development nodes. Working
with the Ithala Development Corporation and private and public enterprise, and
directly linking in with the local municipalities Integrated Development
Plan's, we will build new factories in these locations and set the conditions
to make them an attractive destination for investment.
The IFP provincial government will continue to champion
small and medium-sized enterprises, as a sector which has the greatest
potential for growth. South Africa as a whole, captures less of the
international tourist trade than the tiny city-state of Singapore. Tourism is a
vast source of potential revenue and job creation in KwaZulu-Natal. The IFP
provincial government will develop a bold and exciting integrated tourist
marketing strategy, with Durban branded as the Gateway City to the region, and
we will fast track the construction of the King Shaka International Airport to
enhance Durban's position as a major global city.
It is time for a new approach. Innovative. Bold.
Visionary. It is time for the IFP. KwaZulu-Natal is a youthful province with
over 60% of its population under thirty-years-old. Poor socio-economic
conditions, combined with the difficulties of living in a transforming society,
have increased young people's vulnerability in this province to substance and
alcohol abuse, suicide, unplanned pregnancies, physical and sexual abuse. The
IFP believes that young people themselves must be the protagonists of their
development. The IFP provincial government will ensure that there is adequate
budgetary allocation to the KwaZulu Natal Youth Commission for youth
development programmes.
Modelled on Kennedy's successful visionary Peace Corp in
America, we will establish a KwaZulu-Natal Youth Service Corp, so that young
people can contribute to social reconstruction, nation-building, community
mobilisation and fulfil their human potential as proud South Africans. The IFP
is as equally committed to the empowerment of women, and will implement a wide
range of developmental programmes for women. Women make up the majority of the
provincial population, and in many cases they are the only breadwinners for
their families. In their roles as nurturers and caretakers of children, women
suffer disproportionately due to the lack of basic service provision in the
rural and peri-urban areas. These include establishing programmes that enable
women to move from the informal to the formal economy, and to develop existing
income generating skills.
It is time for Real Development Now. As I said when I
launched the IFP's national election campaign on the 18th of January, HIV/Aids
is the ANC government's biggest policy failure. I so often fear that the
statistics of the scale of the epidemic are so frequently branded about and the
political rhetoric so often about point scoring that there is a real danger
that we will become immune to the scale of the crisis.
Let us put it simply: about one in eleven people we meet
on the taxi to work, at the office, in the gym, at the communion rail in
church, and in our family is HIV positive. KwaZulu-Natal has the country's
highest prevalence rate of HIV /Aids and one of the highest in the world. The
fight against HIV/Aids will be one of the top priorities of the IFP provincial
government. It is estimated that the number of Aids orphans is likely to rise
to nearly 500, 000 by the year 2010. The plight of Aids orphans will be
prioritised by the IFP administration. As you know, the IFP has already taken a
groundbreaking stand in KwaZulu-Natal, to prevent the spread of HIV. The
Premier of KwaZulu-Natal ordered the immediate distribution of Nevirapine to
all HIV-positive pregnant women in the province, to prevent their babies from
being born with a death sentence.
We will extend this programme to provide anti-retroviral
drugs for infected mothers and for all those living with HIV/Aids, as well as
extending testing and drug provision sites. And we will identify all children
in exceptional need and promote support for their well-being in the community.
One of the first responsibilities of government is to protect its citizens. The
IFP provincial government will adopt a zero tolerance attitude to crime and
corruption. The tidal wave of crime that is sweeping across our nation is
tearing our society apart, and is one of the major factors inhibiting investors
from coming here.
The Department of Safety and Security in the new
administration will prioritise the development of a crime busting strategy
within the grave constrain of the lack of provincial powers in this field. We
recognise that we need to be tough on crime as well as tough on the causes of
crime. The IFP provincial government will establish urban and rural crime
watches, to enable the community to safeguard each other's and their own
properties more effectively. On the preventative side, we will implement crime
prevention programmes in schools, such as drug's education, which integrates
aspects that discourage youth involvement in crime and extends the role of
community policing forums.
One of the major causes of crime is the vicious cycle of
inter-generational poverty that cruelly robs people of their dignity. The IFP
will break the chains of poverty by equipping people with the skills and
resources they need, so that they can go as far as their God given talent will
take them. A hand up, not a hand down. The IFP provincial government will
transform the province's Department of Public Works into an instrument to
spearhead rural development and job creation. The Department of Works in the
new administration will work with the other departments to develop a
fully-fledged Rural Development Programme.
Agriculture provides one of the major opportunities to
get people into work and lift communities out of poverty. We will develop the
province as the nation's breadbasket, by developing a non-land intensive and
labour intensive, high value added crop agronomic industry. This will be
achieved by implementing a provincial back-to-basics food security campaign,
and launching a "New Deal" for people in the rural areas, which will
ensure that land is fully optimised for agricultural activity by supplying
farming implements, such as tractors, dipping tanks, fertilisers and seeds.
I endorse what the Premier of KwaZulu announced in his
State of the Province address of this year, which reflects policies which I
promoted for many years. I refer to the so-called Green Revolution, which holds
the promise capable of generating hundreds of thousands of jobs in our
province. The IFP government will create incentives for farmers to convert part
of their farms to labour intensive crops, which do not require much land, but
produce high added value, such as avocado pears, spices, tropical nuts and
specialised citrus fruits. This programme will also enable the creation of
smaller, but highly efficient and highly productive agricultural units, which
can support a more equitable distribution of land, and the emergence of a new
class of farmers, especially amongst the most disadvantaged segments of our
population. The provincial government will take it upon itself to market
agricultural products of KwaZulu Natal on a worldwide based scale, branding
them as high added value quality products, the same way the Western Cape has
done in respect of its own, especially wine. The Green Revolution can change
the face of our province, creating jobs for everyone and turning what was once
"the garden of the empire" into the "delicatessen basket"
of the world. The Green Revolution can put people to work, assist with the land
issue and make money for all.
To drive the pace of delivery, the IFP provincial
government will continue to improve the capacity of councillor's performance by
increased training and monitoring. We will strengthen the delivery capacity of
municipalities, by ensuring that they receive the necessary support and
know-how to implement their Integrated Development Plans. We will also
strengthen the administrative capacity of traditional authorities so that they
can be the primary vehicles of development in their areas. Traditional
authorities will be empowered to implement the latest ideas and best practises
in modern land management and land reform.
Our cutting-edge programme is based upon the timeless
IFP's twin values of self-help and self-reliance. The IFP has always believed
that education is the best long-term investment with the best returns that any
government anywhere can make.
The IFP-led provincial government in the 2004/5 budget
has already allocated R13.2 billion to invest in our education priorities.
These include 1, 300 new classrooms and increasing the amount spent on pupil
learner support material to R263 in 2004/05 - well above the national average.
We will build on our excellent record on education, by strengthening existing
and building new township and rural schools and placing particular emphasis on
the provision of learner support materials in under-privileged schools.
I have only been able to briefly outline some of the
IFP's proposals in our KwaZulu-Natal Growth and Development Plan, to transform
KwaZulu-Natal and place it on the path to prosperity and success. The IFP
provincial government will be rooted in the bedrock of the three 'C's that the
IFP adheres to. They are Caring, Capable and Clean. We will not tolerate
corruption or tardiness. This writ will run wide and deep. No exceptions will
be made.
I love this province. Even my detractors would concede
that! The development of its peoples has always been my abiding passion. One of
the marvellous traits about this province's peoples is that they so often have
had the courage to be different: to break away from the herd instinct. The poet
Robert Frost once said, "I am against a homogenised society. It stops the
cream rising to the top." I want the cream we call 'KwaZulu-Natal' to rise
to the top. With an IFP government it will. All we ask is for the opportunity
to serve. My greatest honour and ambition has been that of serving the people
of this Province and, with the help of God, I shall continue to do so.
May God
bless KwaZulu Natal and all its people.