|
RESOLUTION 1
: The way forward
Conference notes media reports and the
views of certain commentators with regard to the possible future responses
of the Inkatha Freedom Party to a range of political scenarios which may
or may not eventuate in the near future as a result of the so-called
"crossing of the floor crisis". The IFP states therefore that:
1. we will not have others determine our
agenda;
2. we intend to continue in our current
role as a viable, credible, national opposition party determined to
serve our members and supporters and all our constituents;
3. our intention, until lawfully decreed
otherwise, is to retain the premiership of KwaZulu Natal in accordance
with the electoral mandate of the voters of this Province;
4. we will at all times respect the
democratic mandate given to us by voters and as such we will not
co-operate in any changes to that mandate which are beyond our control
or that are the creation of party-political manipulation, personal
ambition and treachery;
5. we are resolute in our determination
to continue our struggle for the attainment of a vibrant multi-party
democracy in South Africa;
6. we will stand firm against those
forces intent on creating a one-party State in South Africa;
7. we will not serve under any condition
in an ANC-led KwaZulu Natal Cabinet which usurps the mandate which the
IFP received from the people; and
8. we stand resolute in our long-held
commitment to non-violence and negotiation in all circumstances; and
9. we give a full mandate to the
President of the IFP and the National Council to assess the changing
political landscape and to determine the extent and conditions under
which the IFP serves in the national government.
RESOLUTION 2: Strengthening
internal democracy
Conference:
1. praises the President of the IFP for
having raised the issue of strengthening internal democracy within the
Party and for having stated that he has heard the cry of those who feel
that many of our political representatives are not genuine leaders of
people and have not been selected in accordance with the IFP
constitution adopted last year; and
2. fully supports the President of the
IFP in his stated intention to formulate a plan which he will submit to
National Council and present to the forthcoming Annual General
Conference of the Youth Brigade, to ensure that the IFP constitution is
fully implemented, that representatives are selected through internal
elections and that the IFP no longer carries dead wood or those who have
no real constituency.
RESOLUTION 3:
Traditional leadership
Conference:
1. notes that in spite of many years of
promises and alleged processes aimed at addressing the concerns of
traditional leaders, nothing whatsoever has yet been done, concretely
proposed or even planned by the national Government to solve the
conflict between the powers and functions of traditional leadership and
those of municipalities;
2. deplores that once again false
promises have been utilised to string along one of South Africa's most
important constituencies when there was clearly no intention of
addressing its concerns;
3. urges all traditional leaders to seek
a solution to their concerns through the political process, joining
forces on a national basis to ensure that the next government of South
Africa will be more sensitive to their aspirations and more honest and
forthcoming in its dealings with them;
4. urges the Government of KwaZulu Natal
to regularise the position of Traditional Authorities by ensuring that
they may be brought into compliance with the relevant financial
regulations through the KwaZulu Natal House of Traditional Leaders,
thereby ensuring that no technical obstacle exists to Traditional
Authorities exercising the full measure of their developmental role as
part of the overall structure of government; and
5. calls on the people of South Africa,
irrespective of their social, cultural or ethnic background to recognise
that traditional leadership is an important element in the overall
equation of development, stability and progress of South Africa; and
6. calls on all structures and
councillors to play an active role in promoting and upholding the status
of traditional leadership.
RESOLUTION 4:
Racism and national identities
Throughout its history the Inkatha Freedom
Party has championed, first and foremost, the noble quest of equality for
all before the law and for all South Africans to live free from the evils
of racism and sexism.
Conference:
1. notes with alarm, and unreservedly
condemns, the recent hate speech articulated by prominent South Africans
against fellow South Africans of Indian descent, one of whom shamefully
includes a person professing to support our own Party;
2. further recognizes the growing and
pervasive tendency of certain black persons in positions of power and
influence to attempt to silence critics, particularly those of other
race groups, by accusing them of "racism" when they attempt to
express themselves;
3. congratulates the President of our
Party for his ongoing and public initiatives to build strong and lasting
bridges of common humanity between South Africans of diverse backgrounds
and cultures;
4. particularly supports his promotion
of, and involvement in, the recent initiative to create an Inter-Ethnic
Institute in the Province of KwaZulu Natal which will, in part, attempt
to explore and constructively develop ways and means in which we can all
learn about each other, build knowledge and friendships and celebrate
our diversity;
5. assures all persons of Indian descent
living in the Province of KwaZulu Natal and elsewhere throughout South
Africa, that the IFP will not tolerate racism within its ranks;
6. categorically states that we will
actively and effectively discipline any IFP member who publicly
expresses personal viewpoints which fly in the face of our cherished
principles of non-racism and reconciliation and, furthermore, that we
intend to take a more vigilant approach at all levels within the Party
and elsewhere towards the written and verbal expressions of others,
whomsoever they may be; and
7. recommits the Party to its
longstanding philosophy of cultural and social pluralism, recognising
the right to mother-tongue education and the need to preserve in South
Africa existing mother-tongue institutes of higher education at all
levels, such as Stellenbosch University, so as to ensure the long-term
survival and evolution of a language.
RESOLUTION 5: Crossing
the floor legislation
Conference noting:
1. the paralysis reached in the dispute
on the constitutionality of the floor crossing by members of the Western
Cape and KwaZulu Natal Legislatures;
2. that all MPs and MPPs were elected
through a strict proportional representation list system in which voters
vote for political parties and not individuals;
3. the recent formation of the Electoral
Task Team specifically designated to draft a new electoral system and
related draft legislation; and
4. that the immoral and repugnant
crossing of the floor legislation has been adopted for pure political
expediency as a bilateral accommodation between the NNP and the ANC
We therefore:
1. condemn the crossing of the floor
legislation as a way of trampling over the democratic voice of tens of
thousands of citizens;
2. deplore the timing of the ANC's
decision clearly aimed at enticing members to cross the floor to secure
its political control of KwaZulu Natal and the Western Cape and
undermine the work of the Cabinet-approved Electoral Task Team, chaired
by Dr F van Zyl Slabbert;
3. condemn and deplore the crossing of
the floor legislation as a display of scant regard for the sovereign
will of the people of KwaZulu Natal, the Western Cape and the whole of
South Africa;
4. express total dismay at the reported
financial incentives and other lures allegedly utilised to entice
members to cross the floor;
5. express our utmost contempt for those
who betrayed the IFP and the sovereign will of the people of KwaZulu
Natal by defecting from our Party and by abusing the mandate given by
the voters to the IFP and not to them by crossing the floor; and
6. reaffirm the decision of National
Council to expel Mr MM Mackenzie and Mr MA Tarr from the Party.
RESOLUTION 6: Defending
democracy
Conference:
1. recognises that democracy in South
Africa is under attack and is threatened by the spectre of a one-party
State;
2. sees the symptom of a one-party State
developing when the central government wishes to take control of all
major social, economic and political activities creating a society in
which a single centre of power decides potentially everything for
everybody; and
3. commits the IFP to defending a
pluralist and open society in which no one entity can take decisions for
everybody and in which today's opposition forces may become tomorrow's
ruling majority through the democratic process.
RESOLUTION 7:
Provincial autonomy
Conference:
1. recognises that the issue of
federalism is more relevant and important than ever before because only
autonomous provinces may provide checks and balances to the increasingly
centralistic and autocratic nature of the ANC-led national government;
2. calls on all provinces to recognise
that they have a critical role to play, and urges them to fulfil the
full measure of the powers and functions to which they are entitled
under the constitution, because it is their inactivity and timidity
which is allowing a centralistic and possibly one-party state to come
into being;
3. urges provinces to apply their minds
to the problems affecting their citizens and developing their own
solutions through the strength of their own convictions in the same
fashion as the Premier of KwaZulu Natal did when he took the initiative
to break ranks with the national government and begin saving lives by
adopting policies on HIV/AIDS that differed from those of the national
government; and
4. supports the call by the President of
the IFP for the formation of a national alliance to promote growth,
prosperity and development.
RESOLUTION 8: HIV/AIDS
Conference notes that the scourge of the
HIV/AIDS pandemic is causing untold suffering to the people of South
Africa in general and to many millions of victims and their families in
KwaZulu Natal in particular. For many years the Inkatha Freedom Party has
urged the national and provincial governments and citizens generally to
adopt a multi-strategy approach to this crisis. Conference therefore:
1. acknowledges the efforts of our
President, Prince Mangosuthu Buthelezi, to refocus the attention and
attitudes of members of National Cabinet with regard to this issue;
2. thanks the Premier of KwaZulu Natal,
Dr L P H M Mtshali, for his courage and determination in attempting to
ensure that HIV/AIDS patients receive the best possible medical
treatment available and in so doing successfully taking the issue on
their behalf to the highest court in our land;
3. applauds the clear vision and
unequivocal direction of IFP leadership in moving to put an end to
elements of obvious confusion within the Ministry of Health and within
the central government on HIV/AIDS-related issues;
4. calls for national and provincial
Governments to adopt the approach that both treatment and prevention
must be seen as equally critical components in the war we must wage
against this insidious disease;
5. congratulates all concerned at the
Nelson Mandela Medical School in KwaZulu Natal for their outstanding
achievement in successfully putting forward a proposal to an agency of
the United Nations which subsequently resulted in this Province being
awarded an amount reported to be approximately R600 million for specific
HIV-AIDS-related projects;
6. pleads that the National Minister of
Health ensures that this excellent initiative by the Nelson Mandela
Medical School is not jeopardised in any way and calls for IFP
leadership to closely monitor this matter and to try to protect this
initiative from inappropriate interference;
7. implores fellow South Africans to look
to themselves for protection from the reach of HIV/AIDS and to
understand that responsible personal behaviour is a vital element in
this regard;
8. believes that traditional cultural
practices can positively educate and protect individuals and
communities;
9. urges care and compassion for those
afflicted and a recognition of their right to their dignity and to be
treated by all concerned with the utmost professionalism; and
10. recognizes that the plight of
HIV/AIDS orphans must now be placed at the top of the agendas of the
national and all provincial governments.
RESOLUTION 9:
Sustainable development
Conference:
1. praises the President of the IFP,
Prince Mangosuthu Buthelezi, for having re-stated once again the
inseparable connection between sustainable developments and true
democracy;
2. notes that the countries of the world
are preparing to discuss sustainable development at the forthcoming UN
high-level conference to be held in Johannesburg next month;
3. notes that almost ten years after
liberation, South Africa has not yet embarked on an accelerated plan of
sustainable development;
4. urges the Government to take heed of
Minister Buthelezi's often repeated appeal to take all possible
measures, even those which may be regarded as drastic, to accelerate
economic growth in a sustainable manner, because only through economic
growth can employment be generated and the scourge of poverty redressed;
and
5. deeply regrets that employment
generation stands out as one of the national Government's major policy
shortcomings and delivery failures, and therefore urges the Government
to change its approach and recognise that the IFP's economic policies
should be implemented, now that the ruling party's poor results show the
inadequacies of its policies.
RESOLUTION 10: NEPAD
Conference takes pride in the leading role
South Africa played in the formation of the New Partnership for Africa's
Development (NEPAD) and the untiring efforts of President TM Mbeki in
continually urging the G8 group of nations to prioritise Africa on their
world economic agenda.
We believe:
1. that a monumental step forward has
been made in bringing together African nations to consider an integrated
plan for common development, growth and future prosperity;
2. urges all countries of the world to
join hands with Africa in bringing about world-wide social justice and
balanced development;
3. that the IFP philosophy of self-help
and self-reliance should be applied on a continental basis as the path
through which Africa can raise itself out of its present
under-development, and as a platform on which on an equal basis and with
equal dignity, Africa can approach the countries of the world to take an
equity interest as partners in Africa's renaissance; and
4. in the inclusive approach adopted in
promoting NEPAD on a continental basis, while cautioning that this
approach should be balanced with practical considerations and a
steadfast commitment to true democracy.
RESOLUTION 11:
The African Union
Conference salutes the formation of the
African Union in Durban, KwaZulu Natal and once again acknowledges the
role played by the Government of South Africa and congratulates President
TM Mbeki on his selection as its first chairperson.
Conference believes:
1. that the formation of the African
Union represents a watershed historical event for our continent;
2. that the notion of an African Union
fulfils long held hopes for economic prosperity, social stability,
democracy and widespread development;
3. that the African Union must work with
and seek partnerships with genuine, advanced and prosperous democracies;
4. that the African Union must be
concerned with democracy and development and must not be hijacked by
leaders who manipulate it for ulterior causes;
5. that the very notion of an African
Union requires it to be forward looking and progressive, rather than
exist as a club in which to gather grievances and apportion blame for
past wrongs;
6. that the African Union should move
from being a mere international organisation which does not yet exercise
any power or perform any functions of its own, to become a centre of
international integration for certain selected matters or policies, as
advocated by the President of the IFP since January 1992; and
7. that the African Union should be
committed to promoting good governance, true democracy and economic
integration amongst its members as the basis for common development and
future prosperity.
RESOLUTION 12:
South Africa needs Prince Mangosuthu Buthelezi
Conference once again records its respect
and gratitude to the President of our Party, Prince Mangosuthu Buthelezi,
for his untiring and arduous service to our nation and to the principles
for which the Inkatha Freedom Party stands.
Throughout his entire adult life, Prince
Mangosuthu Buthelezi has been publicly committed to the attainment of
decency and democracy in our land and to the freedom of all its peoples
from racism, sexism, poverty, hunger, disease, despair and ignorance in
all its forms.
His consistent example of service before
self should be a shining beacon of inspiration to all who profess to
support the aims and aspirations of our Party. We again exhort members and
all who look to the IFP for hope and for guidance, to attempt to emulate
and to propagate, in whatever way they can, the IFP President's words of
wisdom, and character of excellence and honesty.
We thank our President for all he has done
and continues to do for our Party and for South Africa and for the great
personal sacrifice which both he and his family endure in the quest for
the positive human and economic development of our country and its people.
Conference commits the Party to vigorously
support its President in bringing stronger and better leadership to South
Africa.
|