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Mangosuthu Buthelezi's Weekly Newsletter to
the Nation
January 25th, 2008
My dear friends and fellow South
Africans,
On
Wednesday, the Inkatha Freedom Party hosted a launch of our
Policies and Values at the venerable Durban City Hall.
First a word
about Winnie Ntshaba's of Generations role as narrator in
telling the IFP story. Ms Ntshaba was narrating as an actress.
The media who distorted her role, particularly the Sowetan,
should bow their heads in shame. I am distressed how one of the
lines that Ms Ntshaba extemporised has been blown out of all
proportion.
I find it
remarkable that the very same commentators who caricature the
IFP as being old fashioned, then turn on a young and talented
actress for making her professional skills available to us to
help communicate our story. I am quite sure it would not have
happened if she had done it for the ANC.
The launch
was great: fast paced, high tech, inspiring and well-received by
the audience. The press conference which followed was dismal.
I've have had more fun in the transit lounge at Oliver Tambo
International on a rainy day.
Nearly every
journalist asked if our launch was in response to Mr Jacob
Zuma's victory in Polokwane last month (preparations began in
2006).
For the
umpteenth time, I don't care a fig that Mr Zuma is a Zulu! It
has about much relevancy as Tony Blair being English and Gordon
Brown being a Scot. They are both Labour.
In terms of
the political contest which is gearing up, Mr Zuma is ANC
through and through to the core like the colourful swirl that
runs through a stick of candy rock. If a politician is good,
mediocre or bad has nothing to do with that person's ethnic
identity. One also detects a little, at best, patronising, and,
at worse, racism, here. The logical conclusion of those who say
that Mr Zuma will mop up Zulu support like a souped up vacuum
cleaner is that millions of Zulus vote as one monolithic block.
They don't. Zulus have as diverse needs and aspirations as any
other constituent group in the diverse wonder that we call South
Africa.
I will not
dissemble. I think South Africa can do better than what Mr Zuma
and the ANC offers. Politicians, we know, rarely create waves,
but some are lucky enough to surf them. Mr Zuma, for sure, has
uncanny political antenna and has read the restive mood of the
country for change. But like Hilary Clinton enquiring about her
leading opponent last week, "where is the beef?" I happen to
believe there is quite a lot of beef in the American contest,
but rather less in ours.
The focus of
our launch on Wednesday, however, was not the shortcomings of
the ANC and the other opposition parties. Rather we began to
answer the question of what is the IFP for in 2008. We had long
come to the realisation that it is not good enough for us to use
other parties' performance as the benchmark by which we judge
our own.
The
reassertion of our values, like solidarity and unity, serve as
remainders that the IFP stands for more than the prioritisation
of the needs of the free market. The causes of social recession,
inequality and rootless-ness, are as important challenges as
economic competence for a modern party like the IFP.
In 2004, I
said that I believe that the political force that emerges as an
alternative and counterweight to the ANC will be the one with
the golden policy core with cogent proposals to address
HIV/Aids, crime, unemployment and poverty. Since then the IFP
has been taking strides to reform our organisation internally in
order to address the external challenges presented by
twenty-first century South Africa.
We knew that
the transformation of the IFP's public policy profile requires
more than a cosmetic makeover by management consultants. We have
to transcend short term-ism by resisting the temptation of
cappuccino headlines, and, instead, tap deep into the veins of
the country's DNA.
The IFP,
which happens to be the largest predominantly black opposition
party, announced an extensive policy review on Wednesday, which
as our Secretary- General Musa Zondi said, will be informed by
the full range of South African voices led by nine teams: 'the
fisherman in Soldana Bay, the domestic worker in Phoenix and the
board manager in Sandton, the jobseekers and students, too'.
To
complement this public exercise, we will undertake qualitative
and quantitative research, internal constituency/municipal
polling, focus groups, departmental evaluations and legislative
cross-referencing to ensure our policy drafting process is both
rigorous and relevant.
Students of
politics everywhere are taught to tick off the qualities that
award the status of democracy to a polity. Are there free and
fair elections? Can the voters turn a government out of office?
Are there supporting institutions such as an open parliament,
security of public assembly, elected local government, a free
media, the rule of law? No one of these is either sufficient or
necessary for democracy, which is rather a sliding scale of
choices, to which constitutions and governments ascribe varying
degrees of priority.
Politics, in
the end, is the language of priorities. It is boorish and
fatalistic to say that the political debate, and the ruling
party itself, cannot be shifted. Both can. In SA, The
kaleidoscope has been shaken and everything is in flux. There is
everything to play for in convincing South Africans that there
is another, better, way.
Yours
sincerely,
Prince
Mangosuthu Buthelezi MP
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