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RESOLUTION 1: Prioritising service delivery to communities
Conference noting:
1. that true liberation entails much more
than political liberation; and
2. that to millions of our people,
freedom from hunger, ignorance, illness and violence remain an
impossible dream;
RESOLVES:
To instruct our party and all its organs
and all its representatives, to emphasise the delivery of services to
the people as a top priority for the coming year
And in this regard, further RESOLVES:
1. That the top focus of any governance
involving IFP public representatives in the national, provincial and
especially local, spheres of government must be the improvement in the
living conditions of the poorest of the poor;
2. That the delivery of services to the
people must be equitable, and must prioritise the millions of rural poor
hitherto neglected; and
3. That a special report be made to our
next national conference, indicating specific progress made in this
regard.
RESOLUTION 2: Revolution
of goodwill
Conference noting:
1. the desperate need for a fundamental
reappraisal of the manner in which South Africans relate to each other
and take responsibility for their lives;
2. the call by Prince Mangosuthu
Buthelezi for a revolution of goodwill as a means of bringing together
those prepared to work for a better South Africa;
RESOLVES:
1. To do everything possible to popularise
the concept of a Revolution of Goodwill as expounded by our President;
2. To promote a moral renaissance and
regeneration of lost values among our people, especially the youth; and
3. To actively engage in programmes and
activities which give expression to the revolution of goodwill.
RESOLUTION 3: The critical
role of the family in developing a value-driven society
Conference recognises the appalling damage
inflicted by apartheid on the social fabric of our country and to our
traditional communities in particular.
RESOLVES:
1. That in our post-apartheid social and
economic transformation, it is now critical that as a nation we
acknowledge the pivotal role our families and communities must play in
developing and entrenching the multiplicity of values which must underpin
the protection of human rights, decency and democracy throughout our
society;
2. To note that honesty, integrity,
respect, responsibility, compassion, personal pride, dignity, loyalty,
hard work and a genuine caring for others less fortunate, are some of the
values which must be re-nurtured in our homes and in the hearts and minds
of all our citizens.
3. To note that criminal behaviour,
political intimidation, lack of respect for human life and dignity,
prostitution, drug and alcohol abuse, the plight of street children,
domestic violence, non-payment of child maintenance, systematic
multi-generational poverty and the enormous drain on our social welfare
system, are all examples of the dramatic impact dysfunctional families
have on our society as a whole;
4. That it is long overdue that the
majority of parents in South Africa take holistic charge of the cultural,
spiritual, educational and general material nurturing of their children,
and that the obligations and responsibilities of parenthood are undertaken
in constructive, caring and disciplined family environments;
5. That parents not be permitted to
abdicate their obligations and responsibilities and that society and all
levels of government more strictly sanction parents who neglect their
sacred duty to their children;
6. That communities and their leaders be
more responsive to what is essentially a community problem and work
together with teachers and others to assist families rehabilitate
delinquent children.
7. That the positive influence of
traditional customs be reintegrated into daily lives in both urban and
rural environments, and that the enormously important role of extended
family structures be rejuvenated and strengthened.
RESOLUTION 4: HIV/AIDS
Conference noting:
1. the awful incidence and rapid spread
of HIV/AIDS in our country, and in KwaZulu Natal in particular;
2. the limited governmental health
resources available to tackle the pandemic; and
3. the critical need to prioritise a
change in behaviour, and the role of the individual, the family and the
community in bringing about the required change;
RESOLVES:
1. To commit the IFP to doing everything in
its power to support HIV/AIDS awareness in our communities;
2. To call on our leadership at all levels
to communicate openly to our constituency with socially responsible
messages;
3. To use the structures of the party to
advance all preventative and educative campaigns; and
4. To encourage tolerance, empathy and
support for those afflicted with HIV/AIDS rather than hostility;
And in the light of the hugely important
international AIDS Conference being held in Durban from 10 July, further
resolves:
1. To send a message of support to the
organisers of, and delegates to, the conference; and
2. To indicate our support of the
conference theme: "Break the Silence".
RESOLUTION 5:
Reconciliation
Conference noting:
1. The crucial need for peace and
stability as a necessary precondition for the development of our people
and of our communities disadvantaged by 45 years of apartheid, as well
as by nearly 15 years of internecine conflict;
2. The powerful impetus for
reconciliation that has emerged since 1994 between the top leadership of
the IFP and of the ANC, especially within the national government;
3. The deeply troubling countervailing
trend within KZN in which elements within the provincial ANC leadership
appear to be pursuing a pre-1994 agenda; and
4. As but one instance of this agenda,
the prevalence of and sharp escalation in political violence,
politically motivated killings and political assassinations of IFP
leaders by those associated with ANC mobilisation in Nongoma and
surrounding areas;
RESOLVES
1. To call on the ANC's national leadership
to hold its KwaZulu Natal leadership to account for the badly
deteriorating relationship between the provincial coalition parties;
2. To call on the ANC to reign in those
within its ranks responsible for pursuing any agendas other than that
agreed to by the parties nationally; and
3. To call on the ANC to ensure that its
participants in the 10-a-side have as their objectives the furtherance of
reconciliation rather than the furtherance of conflict;
And in response to intense provocation,
further RESOLVES:
1. To call on our members not to be drawn
into a cycle of violence, but to stand firm in their commitment to
peace; and
2. To urge that our leadership continues
to pursue the cause of reconciliation so correctly espoused by our
President.
RESOLUTION 6: Community
development
Taking cognisance that:
1. The IFP was conceived and born in the
service of the people to meet their daily needs and their fundamental
quest for upliftment;
2. For 25 years the IFP has championed
developmental efforts at community level spreading its philosophy of
self-help and self-reliance.
Conference RESOLVES that:
1. The IFP shall continue to lead the
struggle for development, concentrating its political efforts to enable
communities to better their conditions of life;
2. To establish a Development Office with
the necessary staff and infrastructure, which will liaise and co-operate
with relevant government departments and like-minded organisations;
3. The IFP will not run its election
campaign only on the basis of slogans, but primarily through deeds of
community work.
4. The culture of self-help and
self-reliance now becomes more important than ever to enable communities
to grow and develop in spite of the necessarily limited assistance they
may receive from any level of government;
5. The place of the IFP is there where it
all happens which is within our communities, the work-places and
families where political work can be transformed into tangible results,
and
6. The IFP has not stopped the struggle
for liberation and will never accept the notion that the struggle is
over because some people have achieved political power.
RESOLUTION 7: Combatting
the scourge of criminality
Conference noting:
1. The scourge of crime remorselessly
sweeping the country;
2. The serious effects of crime on
individual victims, on communities as well as on the country as a whole;
3. The contribution of crime to negative
perceptions of South Africa, particularly on potential investors; and
4. The enormity of the challenge facing
the SAPS in effectively combatting crime;
RESOLVES
1. To call on all party structures, public
representatives and members to play an active role in facilitating closer
co-operation between the SAPS and communities;
2. To call on its members to strengthen
existing community police fora, particularly those that are less than
optimally functional;
3. To be the "eyes and ears" of
the police in attempting to create crime-free communities;
4. To call on communities to refuse to
harbour known criminals in their midst, and to facilitate their
apprehension by the police;
5. To call on communities, local government
and the Party to prioritise our youth, inter alia, by way of:
organised sports and recreation; workshopping those particularly exposed
to crime, as well as their parents; giving inspirational talks to learners
at school; working with youth-oriented NGOs; and through finding an
appropriate role for the youth in crime prevention programmes; and
6. To call on all South Africans to
recognise that crime is not an abstract notion but dwells in the deeds and
thoughts of people and that, therefore, should be fought by changing
people and ensuring that the lure of criminal conduct does not impact on
them.
RESOLUTION 8: Traditional
leaders and the demarcation process
Conference noting:
1. The very substantial difficulties
experienced by traditional leaders since the commencement of
negotiations at CODESA right through to the present in having their
status and role in governance properly addressed;
2. the central role played by traditional
authorities in the provision of popular, participatory and accountable
governance within traditional communities; and
3. the uniquely African nature of the
institution of traditional leadership and the manner in which such
leadership is exercised within communities in which traditional
authorities are fully legitimate;
RESOLVES:
1. To reiterate the need to reconcile that
which is indigenous to Africa with that which has been imported from the
West;
2. To express our support for traditional
leaders seeking to have their plight addressed by government; and
3. Calls on government to recognise the
invaluable contribution the institution of traditional leadership plays,
particularly at the local level, in providing quality governance.
RESOLUTION 9: The President
of the IFP
Conference noting:
1. The enormous domestic and
international political stature of Prince Mangosuthu Buthelezi;
2. The giant contribution made by the
President of the IFP to the political liberation of South Africa;
3. The humanity of the IFP President,
particularly in respect of the poorest of the poor who have always been
his first priority;
RESOLVES to
thank Prince Mangosuthu Buthelezi for:
1. The sterling and frequently
ground-breaking political leadership role he has played over his entire
adult life;
2. The farsightedness he displayed in
forming Inkatha yeNkululeko yeSizwe in 1975 to advance the struggle for
emancipation of all the oppressed in South Africa;
3. The selflessness, toughness and wisdom
characterising his leadership of the cultural liberation movement and
from 1991, its successor, the Inkatha Freedom Party; and
4. His dedication in government over the
past 25 years to serving the people, first as Chief Minister of KwaZulu
and then as Minister of Home Affairs in the national government;
And wishes furthermore,
1. To congratulate Prince Mangosuthu
Buthelezi on once again being elected President of Inkatha Freedom
Party; and
2. To extend to him our heartfelt hopes
of a long life, good health and personal happiness.
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