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RESOLUTION 1
Conference:
NOTING:
The unpleasant reality that South Africa is
now being recognised in international indices as a country in which
corruption is pervasive and that this fact threatens any hope we have for
meaningful and sustained socio-economic development;
RESOLVES:
- That the Inkatha Freedom Party
must lead by example as a Party of integrity and prioritise the fight
against crime within its own ranks by not tolerating corruption;
- To thank the President of the IFP
for the outstanding example he has personally demonstrated in this
regard through all his many decades of exemplary public service;
- To applaud the intention of the
leadership of the Party to strengthen the constitution of the IFP so
as to ensure that persons who are incompetent or corrupt will be
swiftly removed from within our ranks;
- To request that senior leadership
of the Party serving within the executive of the National Government
and Members of Parliament in the National Assembly continue to remain
vigilant and intolerant of corruption and to support all efforts to
expose such practices and to fight crime wherever that crime might be;
- To insist that the IFP leadership
of the Government of KwaZulu Natal continues to demand loyalty and
respect for authority as well as openness and decisiveness in dealing
with the misconduct of officials of whatever rank. We congratulate the
Premier for his uncompromising public stand in dealing with such
matters to date;
- To ask members and supporters to
declare war against crime and to spread the message throughout their
communities that those who steal and who are corrupt are the enemies
of the people and that they are strangling our struggle for liberation
and development;
- To recognise that at the root of
crime is the moral degeneration of men and women throughout our
society and that our current crisis will not be resolved unless all
leaders throughout our land are capable of expressing moral leadership
and of demanding respect for law and order
from our citizens; and
- To call for a national campaign to
mobilise sectors of our country at all levels to effectively focus on
the moral regeneration of the entire fabric of South African society.
RESOLUTION 2
Conference:
RECOGNISING:
- The decisive turn-around of the IFP
represented by the December 2000 local government elections victory;
- The extent to which the electorate
is growing increasingly disenchanted with the lack of delivery and
development by the ruling party and that the electorate is becoming
increasingly receptive towards a party that is prepared to genuinely
feel its pains and articulate its concerns; and
- That we need to position ourselves
now, to develop a governance track record now, and to build the
party now, to ensure electoral victory for the party in 2004;
RESOLVES:
- To demand of all our elected public
representatives in the national, provincial and local spheres of
government the highest standards of integrity, honesty and dedicated
service as exemplified by our President, Prince MG Buthelezi;
- To require of our public
representatives that they, working with the structures of the party,
directly involve themselves in community development projects;
- To restructure the party as rapidly
as possible to conform to the structures set out in our revised
Constitution;
- To ensure as far as is possible,
the presence of an active IFP branch in every municipal ward;
- To improve liaison between party
structures with a view towards strengthening their operations;
- To strengthen the party's
communication by clarifying the roles and responsibilities of
various office bearers and elected representatives;
- To require regular reporting by
elected office bearers to party structures;
- To require of our national and
provincial leaders that they make themselves more available in
responding to local disasters, accidents and the like.
- To ensure that new membership is
correctly oriented on the principles and policies of the party, and
further that the youth in particular is familiarised with the
history of the struggle;
- To strategically deploy our key
people; and
- To charge all structures of the
party with developing specific mobilisation plans, the results of
which are to be reported on at the next annual general conference.
RESOLUTION 3
Conference:
RECOGNISING:
- The manner in which many countries
have successfully integrated their institutions of traditional
leadership into their systems of governance; and
- The visionary stand taken by the
IFP President in seeking to resolve the issue of traditional
leadership in our country by means of international mediation;
NOTING:
- The intransigence of government in
honouring the many promises made by the President and Deputy
President to the Coalition of Traditional Leaders;
- The crisis of confidence felt by
the community at large in governments that have repeatedly failed to
honour their word, reflected in both the current impasse and the
crisis after 1994 in respect of International Mediation;
- The urgency of reaching a solution
to the crisis without which the viability of local government in
much of rural South Africa is threatened; and
- The need to finally put this matter
to rest as a necessary precondition to reaching full reconciliation
with the ANC;
RESOLVES
- To condemn in the strongest
possible terms government's refusal to honour its promise;
- To recommit the party to supporting
the legitimate demands of traditional leaders and their communities
for a constitutional settlement to the matter;
- To commend church leaders who have
intervened in support of a settlement; and
- To recognise the necessity for the
resolution adopted by IFP councillors in Ulundi on 20 April 2001, to
request of them that it be implemented forthwith, and to lobby other
groups to expand the campaign pursued by our councillors of refusing
to usurp the legitimate local government powers and functions of
traditional authorities.
RESOLUTION 4
Conference:
AFFIRMING
- The vital role played by provincial
governments in the governance of South Africa; and
- The classic example exemplified by
the erstwhile government of KwaZulu, of second-tier government
facilitating service delivery and development in an efficient and
effective manner;
RESOLVES:
- That provinces, keenly attuned to
the cultures, values and needs of its people, should have expanded
powers to enable them to deliver more efficiently and more
effectively to its communities;
- That policing specifically be made
a provincial competence to facilitate improved servicing of our
beleaguered communities;
- That there should be close
cooperation between all three spheres of government, particularly in
respect of development and service delivery;
- That provinces utilise their
budgets to maximise delivery to the poorest of the poor and to
secure development of the province for the benefit of all its
inhabitants;
- That provinces should ensure their
public servants are suitably skilled and motivated to render the
service required of them; and
- That provincial governments must
educate the youth in work-related skills, and in facilitating their
involvement in sports and leisure activities.
RESOLUTION 5
Conference:
NOTING:
- The developmental role to be played
by municipal councils in advancing the interests of all members of
the community, but particularly the poorest of the poor;
- The key role of to be played by IFP-run
and IFP-led councils in giving effect to the party's 2000 election
manifesto - "Leading the Struggle for Development"; and
- The fact that IFP councillors and
IFP councils represent the public face of the IFP at the local
level;
RESOLVES:
- To strengthen communication and
accountability between councillors and the community they serve
beyond the minimum statutory requirements;
- That party structures and leaders
work hand-in-hand with councillors to ensure programmes are
implemented;
- That workshops should be held for
both communities and councillors to examine their respective roles,
powers and functions;
- To support the free supply to each
qualifying household, of 6kl water per month, and to request of
KWANALOGA that it pressurise government for sufficient funding to
implement the policy;
- To deploy IFP councillors to chair
all available council committees, particularly the human resource
committee, and further to seek to employ IFP persons as senior
officials.
- That prior to any council meeting
or any meeting of one of its committees, IFP councillors must hold a
caucus meeting to deal with the relevant council agenda, and that
party leaders should be deployed to assist;
- That in our relationship with the
Democratic Alliance we stand firm in adhering to our party
principles, and that we remain committed to implementing
developmental programmes benefiting our supporters;
- That in councils in which we are
not a governing party, we constitute ourselves as a constructive
opposition addressing issues of relevance to our people.
- That leaders deployed to assist
councillors be visible; and
- To urge that the allocation of
powers and functions of district and local municipalities be
expedited.
RESOLUTION 6
Conference:
NOTING:
That the HIV/AIDS pandemic is now a
blight on the lives of many millions of South African men, women and
children and that myriad campaigns to alert citizens as to the cause and
prevention of this insidious disease have clearly not had the desired
result as infection rates continue to escalate;
RESOLVES:
- To recommend that national,
provincial and local governments and all others involved in HIV/AIDS
awareness programmes recognise the necessity to refocus their
existing tactics and strategies and, in particular, prioritise local
communities and civic structures;
- To propose the rapid implementation
of appropriate sex education and HIV/AIDS prevention programmes
within all our schools;
- To insist that traditional African
cultural perspectives be incorporated into all HIV/AIDS awareness
policies and programmes;
- To recognise research that reveals
that gender perspectives and the empowerment of women are
fundamental elements in the reduction of the vulnerability of women
and girls to HIV/AIDS;
- To continue to request members and
supporters to stress to their families, friends and others that
responsible behaviour within their personal relationships is the key
to combating the disease;
- To encourage tolerance, empathy and
support for those afflicted with HIV/AIDS;
- To recognise the burden being
placed on the elderly in our society who now face the tragedy of
caring for their dying children and their orphaned grandchildren;
- To emphasise the important role of
cultural, family, ethical and religious factors, as highlighted at
the recent United Nations Special Session of HIV/AIDS in New York,
in the prevention of the epidemic;
- To request all structures within
the Party to assist traditional leaders, individuals and families
within our communities, welfare organisations, churches and all
others attempting to help all those in need of care as a result of
this appalling human tragedy in our midst.
RESOLUTION 7
Conference:
NOTING:
That the term "poverty
alleviation" is a misnomer, believes the correct phrase should be
"empowering the community towards self-help".
RESOLVES:
- That IFP members and supporters
should educate their communities in training and development
workshops pertaining to land usage and governments should be
encouraged to make available to emerging farmers agricultural
equipment for such training and communal use as required;
- That training should also be given
in marketing, managing and financial skills and in establishing and
managing cooperatives and that constructive relationships between
commercial farmers and small farmers must be encouraged and
nurtured;
- To require the Party to establish a
development office with personnel to run development programmes
pertaining to cooperatives and management skills;
- That members and supporters should
reach out into all communities to assist in rehabilitation
programmes pertaining to victims of violence;
- That members and supporters should
become skilled in outreach to the media and other ways and means of
disseminating information and in motivating persons to understand
that self-help and self-reliance is their only means of salvation;
- That self-help projects must be
promoted; and
- That traditional leaders be
requested to assist and advise all persons attempting encourage the
development of self-help projects in rural areas.
RESOLUTION 8
Conference:
NOTING:
The ongoing vilification, over many
years, of the President of the Inkatha Freedom Party in particular by
sectors of the print and electronic media, accepts that little can be
done to reverse the personal political agendas of those who choose to
practice advocacy journalism and to deliberately attempt to wrongfully
malign our Party and its leadership;
RESOLVES:
- To continue to attempt to fully
co-operate with the media and to provide Press representatives and
their organisations with whatever information they require about the
policies and programmes of the Party or, indeed, any other relevant
details of public interest;
- To instruct the Party's
communications directorate to continue to issue rebuttals to each
and every item calculated by the authors and/or their respective
organisations to do harm to the image of the IFP and to denigrate
our leadership, members and supporters;
- To praise the President of the IFP,
Prince Mangosuthu Buthelezi, for the dignified manner in which he
has endured such hurtful and sustained media onslaughts, many of
which were and are ruthless attempts to damage his good name and
reputation in the eyes of the electorate of South Africa;
- To note that we have discerned yet
another trend in this campaign, exemplified recently by the
journalist Farouk Chothia in an article in Business Day, which
purported to portray Prince Mangosuthu Buthelezi as an emerging
elder statesman and yet was a not-so-cleverly disguised hatchet job
attempting to create an image that our President now no longer
occupies a place on the national stage of South African politics;
- To reject such trite contentions
with the contempt they deserve and proclaim that both the IFP and
all South African citizens owe Prince Mangosuthu Buthelezi an
enormous debt of gratitude for the role he has played to date in the
attaining the political liberation of South Africa and in working
then and now for peace and political stability in our post-apartheid
period of transition. Furthermore, for the leadership he is
desperately required to give and selflessly does in directing,
within the most senior Cabinet Committees, the attainment of much-needed
socio-economic development and the moral regeneration of the people
of our land.
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