|
RESOLUTIONS
The Annual General Conference of the Inkatha Freedom Party met in Ulundi
on October 6-8, 2006 and unanimously adopted the following:
RESOLUTION 1:
To unequivocally state its view that the
socio-economic and political state of the nation, after more than a
decade of rule by the ANC alliance, is perilous with respect to
wide-ranging and well-known factors based on substantiated analyses
which now urgently require the intervention of:
- Effective, competent and accountable
leadership rooted in moral principles and with a common purpose emerging
from the ranks of a broad range of South Africans capable of harnessing
and directing a peaceful and democratic revolution throughout all
spheres of government and civil society in the best interests of all of
the country's citizens;
- People-centred and managed policies and
programmes devoid of dangerous ideological cant and freed from the
hegemony and brutal manipulation of the ANC alliance which has
continuously shown its intolerance to opposition of any kind;
- Courageous combatants willing to speak
out, for example, against the current maladministration in all levels of
Government, lack of political accountability, corruption and all manner
of criminal behaviour, the obscene and rapid accumulation of great
wealth by the politically-connected via in some instances the sale of
State assets and the gross misdirection and manipulation of the worthy
original concept of Black Economic Empowerment, the indolence and
arrogance of many so-called "public servants", the ongoing suffering of
millions who are dying of myriad preventable diseases and the need for
them to tirelessly work to ease the plight of many more millions who
endure the hardships and indignity of poverty and unemployment;
- International forces, both political and
social, capable of evaluating the need to lend their authority and all
manner of support to forces correctly calling for drastic change within
the country before the current crisis becomes uncontrollable and
incalculable damage is further wreaked upon the land and its people;
We therefore:
Commit the Inkatha Freedom Party to the attainment of these and other
noble objectives in an effort to ensure and entrench meaningful
political, social and economic security in a non-violent South Africa.
RESOLUTION 2:
To support leadership of the Party in its quest
to:
- Reorganize and revitalise existing Party
structures and encourage new branch membership and support bases so
as to empower and upgrade cadres in all Provinces in order to
effectively provide the calibre of leadership required to face and
offer visible alternatives to the current political and social
challenges and crises destabilizing the country and disempowering
its citizens;
- Democratically elect new leadership as and
when required by our IFP Constitution and to continually focus the
Party on its core mandates as articulated in its founding principles
and in all manner of party policies.
We therefore:
Wholeheartedly congratulate all newly-elected members of our
reconstituted National Council and offer them our solidarity in our
combined, multi-strategy, quest to build a new South Africa in which
decency, the rule of law and democratic principles are respected as
paramount.
RESOLUTION 3:
Noting the Party's less than satisfactory
performance in the March 2006 Local Government elections and, in
particular, the loss of a number of councils in KwaZulu Natal;
Conference resolves to:
- Congratulate all those constituencies and
districts which succeeded in retaining or gaining power in local and
district municipalities and to also applaud all councillors on their
election or re-election;
- Note with dismay that in most municipalities in
which the party performed poorly, party structures ranged from weak or
non-existent while the converse is equally true - that strong party
structures invariably resulted in strong electoral performances;
- Therefore ensure in all constituencies and
districts that party structures are the foundation from which the party
is able to successfully contest for and thereby secure governmental
power;
- Re-affirm that IFP councillors are not free
agents and that IFP councillors do not operate autonomously in municipal
institutions and that they are subject to oversight by party structures
but to affirm likewise that a balance needs to be struck in allowing
councillors to do their work free from unnecessary interference;
- Call upon all councillors to put the interests of
the communities they serve first, by working diligently, honestly and in
consultation with their communities and that the party's 2006 Councillor
Pledge is respected at all times;
- Require of all councillors in their individual
behaviour as well as their behaviour as local government functionaries
(such as members of caucuses, of executive committees and as office
bearers) that they comply with party requirements governing their
behaviour, and in particular though not exclusively, with directives
emanating from (a) the Political Oversight Committee and (b) the Local
Government Directorate;
- Call on all councillors to avoid doing anything
which damages the image of the party and conversely, to do everything in
their power to advance the interests of the party, especially in light
of the impending 2009 national and provincial elections.
RESOLUTION 4:
Resolves to earnestly warn all citizens,
irrespective of current party-political allegiances, of the peril of
complacence in the face of the clear danger of South Africa rapidly
descending into a one-party State and instructs leadership to
consistently expose all instances of what is now being described as
outright "political thuggery".
Conference deplores:
-
The continued intolerance of the ANC alliance to
any form of democratic opposition whether organized or in the form
of constructive criticism;
-
The use of intimidation and other forms of
anti-democratic behaviour against perceived political opponents by
certain leaderships and their supporters within the ANC alliance;
-
Ongoing attempts to destabilize the leadership of
the IFP and to use the treachery of floor-crossing to steal the
people's votes;
-
Legislative assaults intended to diminish the
power and authority of traditional leaderships throughout the land;
-
Brazen moves by Government to dis-empower and
interfere with the power and authority of the judiciary and tamper
with the independence of Chapter 9 institutions contained in the
Constitution of the Republic including the Independent
Communications Authority of South Africa;
-
All manner of attempts to centralize State power
in all spheres including the right of schools and their governing
bodies to appoint the teaching staffs of their first choice;
-
The obvious and deliberate weakening of the
critical oversight role of the National Assembly and the National
Council of Provinces through rules and procedures designed to
inhibit effective debate;
-
The elevation of the Executive far beyond that of
Members of Parliament whose dwindling role is now appallingly
evident and whose ability to function effectively appears to be
increasingly negligible with ruling party members in Parliament now
acting as mere voting fodder for the unquestioned execution of the
legislative mandates required by the Executive/ANC leadership.
-
Moves within the ANC alliance to alter and/or
remove the continuing legislative authority of Provinces which
constitute a direct assault on Chapter 6 of the Constitution of the
Republic and an obvious attempt to direct debate towards the
redefinition of the country's overall form of state.
Therefore Conference:
Calls on all patriots to
be vigilant and to resist the constant and deliberate erosion of our
Constitutional order including many of the agreements reached prior to
1994 during the CODESA/Multi-Party Convention, some of which were
translated immediately into law and others were included in the
subsequent interim Constitution and our existing Constitution thereafter
and which are now subject to increasing amendment or repeal and;
Notes that it should not ever be forgotten and should serve as a warning
that the Agreement for Peace and Reconciliation, signed by both Mr F W
de Klerk and Mr Nelson Mandela in 1994, was immediately dishonoured and
no attempt whatsoever was made to implement its stated intention to
resolve outstanding constitutional issues and that the consequences of
this betrayal may yet haunt South Africa.
RESOLUTION 5:
The Inkatha Freedom Party has, from its inception,
advocated federalism, provinces, pluralism and enterprise-driven
economic policies and programmes with a specific social dimension
designed to assist the poorest of the poor.
These form the bedrock of our political principles.
During the political negotiations at the World Trade Centre at Kempton
Park (CODESA), the IFP fought for and attained for South Africa (in
spite of fierce resistance from the ANC alliance) a central place in the
Constitution for the now 9 Provinces of the Republic. In so doing the
IFP ensured that the country would at least have a quasi-federal system
of government as opposed to the highly centrist form favoured by the ANC
alliance.
The IFP did so at great political cost and only entered the electoral
race one week before the historical April 27, 1994 elections after the
agreement regarding the inclusion of provinces had been made and
assurances given in the Agreement for Peace and Reconciliation
(subsequently dishonoured by both former President F W de Klerk and
President Nelson Mandela) that all outstanding constitutional issues
would thereafter be resolved.
Conference now:
-
Calls on all democrats to defend the federal nature
of the Constitution of the Republic and to heed the dangers of an
emerging ANC alliance debate as to the future of the country's
provinces;
-
Warns of the possible outcomes and consequences of
this debate, including significant changes to the Constitution of the
Republic, the demise of our present quasi-federal State and the removal
of all current provincial powers and functions including health, safety
and security, education and transport;
-
Signals its belief that this may well be the
beginning of moves within the ANC alliance to finally eradicate
provinces or strip them of all significant powers to ensure the
long-held intention of the ANC alliance to centralise all political
power in the Republic in a unitary State;
-
Urges national democratic resistance against all and
every attempt to diminish participatory democracy currently operational
in all provinces which accommodate regional, ethnic, cultural and
linguistic differences and which, crucially, provide checks and balances
over national government.
RESOLUTION 6:
Conference agrees with the
views already expressed by all right-thinking and outraged South
Africans that the current attempt to strip Cape Town Mayor, Ms Helen
Zille, of her power to govern the Mother City and its environs,
dangerously threatens democracy not only in that specific sphere of
government but should also serve as a warning to government structures
and voters throughout South Africa.
The IFP is, however, also alarmed at the silence on this matter
emanating from certain well-known and previously highly profiled and
acclaimed voices representing various organs of national and
international moral authority (in churches, governments abroad, academia
and so on) which helped to bring the ANC alliance to power as the
so-called "sole and authentic voice of the people of South Africa".
We question why they now appear to be strangely quiet when a major
assault on our democratic order is being openly orchestrated against the
wishes of voters who freely demonstrated their democratic choices and
did not give the ANC and its allies an outright majority to rule Cape
Town.
We therefore add the voice of the IFP to the calls of ordinary citizens
for sanity to prevail and endorse fervent requests to the leadership of
the ANC alliance to instruct the ANC MEC for Local Government in the
Western Cape, Mr Richard Dyanti, to desist from his stated objective of
changing the existing mayoral system of governance which will, in
essence, remove Mayor Zille and her current multi-party committee from
power
We furthermore:
- Place on record that the IFP will
support all efforts to test the Constitutionality of this proposed
ruthless power grab as it sets a precedent, strikes at the core of
all principles of democratic governance and crucially exposes
thinking and strategies within the body politic of the ANC alliance
which appear to approve of manipulating the levers of power for
party political advantage;
- Acknowledge that the consequences
for democracy of this thinking within the ANC alliance (which
appears to be supported at the highest levels) are dire and must be
resisted.
RESOLUTION 7:
Conference congratulates its President,
Prince Mangosuthu Buthelezi, on his election as chairman of the KwaZulu
Natal House of Traditional Leaders and on the overwhelming support shown
by Amakhosi for his ongoing leadership.
It is noted however that the leadership of the ANC alliance has time and
again stated and acted on its intention to circumscribe the powers and
functions of traditional leaderships throughout South Africa and has
made every effort to bend their authority to the will of the ANC
alliance. The IFP is therefore grateful that its leader has again been
placed in a position of trust to continue to oppose these overt attempts
to smash the legitimacy of traditional leaders and to further his
long-standing efforts to protect and promote our cherished heritage.
It is therefore resolved to:
-
Respectfully encourage the House
of Traditional Leaders to work together in actively promoting an
understanding of the critical role they must continue to play in the
lives of many millions of South Africans who need their wisdom and
guidance amidst growing suffering caused by poverty, ignorance,
disease, moral decay and political mismanagement;
-
Support Amakhosi in their efforts
and initiatives to bring messages of hope and practical means of
assistance to our communities as they have long done.
RESOLUTION 8:
The IFP continues to reiterate that the criminal
justice system throughout South Africa is failing its citizens and such
failure is, in itself, now a growing threat to our fledgling democracy.
Government's collective inability to effectively identify, combat,
isolate and successfully prosecute and incarcerate huge numbers of
criminals is a national disgrace. It is clear that proper political and
professional leadership is lacking.
It is deplorable and totally unacceptable that tens of thousands of
rapists, murderers, paedophiles, vehicle hijackers, drug dealers and
thieves of all kinds (both sophisticated and unsophisticated) and
national and international criminal syndicates act each in their own way
every hour of every day throughout South Africa -- most often with
impunity.
It is tragic that in our poverty-stricken townships the victims of
apartheid and of white racist brutality now face the constant horror of
acts of black criminal brutality.
All manner of appalling criminal activity is being currently perpetrated
by a broad cross section of South Africans and foreigners and it is
clear that Government is not winning the war against crime and should
stop trying to pretend that it is.
We salute the bravery, hard work and sacrifice of the majority of our
law enforcement officers imbued with honesty and integrity who most
often operate under appalling conditions and for little reward and who
also suffer the indignity and collective smear of the treachery of
certain of their fellow officers revealed to be corrupt and unworthy of
the uniforms they wear.
Notwithstanding the diligence and commitment of these honourable men and
women, it is clear that many officers and officials throughout the
criminal justice system - as it is presently constituted - often lack
through no fault of their own the requisite skills necessary to
withstand and effectively combat the sheer weight of the forces of evil
in our society.
Conference notes:
- It has once again been made evident in the
latest appalling crime statistics revealed by Government that the
highly centralized system of policing much favoured by the ANC
alliance is an abject failure and should be decentralized as a
matter of urgency with new and competent leadership bolstered where
necessary by requests for international assistance and training
sought to alleviate obvious skills shortages (including DNA analysis
and all manner of specialist detective investigation techniques and
intelligence requirements relating but not inclusive to gangs,
international syndicates and the effective collation of all manner
of evidence required by our courts);
- The need for the structural readjustment of
the entire criminal justice system and the promotion of efficiency
and accountability;
- Unhealthy, unfit, semi-literate police
officers untrained in detective work and forensics must be
identified and where necessary removed from their posts until they
have been assisted to improve their skills and physical ability to
perform their duties;
- Communities must at all times report
indolent, arrogant and corrupt officials to relevant complaints
bodies for investigation and use the media to also highlight proof
of their concerns;
- Regular performance audits on all personnel
must be undertaken and acted upon;
- Continuing efforts by Government to curtail
the independence of the judiciary must be exposed and thwarted;
- That public pressure and mass action is
critical to ensuring that the current state of affairs is not
perpetuated and that visible and tireless policing becomes the norm
in all communities;
- The need for citizens to actively and
constructively cooperate with the police serving in their
communities and report all criminal activity known or observed;
- That the glamorization of crime in our
townships (often epitomized in song and on film) must be condemned
and citizens must accept the truth of the saying that "He who
profits from crime, commits it". The purchase of stolen goods must
be seen for what it is: a crime;
- That role models are needed throughout our
communities to consistently expose the horrors and dangers of
criminal behaviour, drug trafficking and get-rich-quick scams;
- That political leadership daily condemns each
and every act of violence and criminal activity wherever it occurs
and be seen assisting victims of crime.
We therefore urge citizens to demand:
- Mandatory, regular and accurate police crime
statistics which will withstand independent analysis and which will
quickly identify trends in various areas so as to allow communities
to be more vigilant;
- An acknowledgement and identification of all
crime "hot spots" to be regularly reported to all communities;
- Official surveys and analyses of victims of
crimes and jurisprudence as to the rights of victims of crime;
- Tax rebates for the private security measures
many South Africans have been forced to acquire in attempts to
provide for the safety of their families and communities;
- Accountability from police service leadership
who must now be deployed in positions of high authority on the basis
on performance;
- A moratorium on all pardons and early release
programmes for all prisoners convicted of certain categories of
crimes to be stipulated in new legislation to be enacted by
Parliament;
- That MPs and MPLs take a tougher stance on
the actions and performance of Executives, both national and
provincial, in relation to all issues pertaining to Government
responses to crime.
RESOLUTION 9:
Conference recognizes that unemployment remains the
ticking time bomb on which our economy now sits. Our labour markets must
be reformed and government must liberalise those forces in our economy
which are actively hindering the growth of small business development.
The current levels of obscene wealth being accumulated in the hands of a
few and extreme poverty being suffered by the majority cannot be allowed
to perpetuate.
Conference notes government's renewed objective to achieve a 7%+ annual
economic growth required for African countries by the International
Monetary Fund to reach the target of halving poverty by 2015 through the
Accelerated and Shared Growth Initiative for South Africa (ASGISA) and;
This initiative acknowledges our volatile currency, deficiencies in
leadership and state capacity, over-regulation in the economy, an
institutionalized lack of competition and many and various persistent
burdens on small and medium enterprises as obstacles to achieving such
levels on economic growth.
It is therefore resolved to urge government::
- To translate the new growth diagnostics of ASGISA
into a more coherent and responsive set of economic policies tailored
for the immediate and long-term needs of South Africa;
- To strike a more creative balance between public
and private endeavours in pursuing higher economic growth; and
- To use the golden opportunity afforded by South
Africa's hosting the 2010 Soccer World Cup to streamline these dual
endeavours to materialize high growth and fast-track development and job
creation.
RESOLUTION 10:
Noting the emergence of a new strain of
drug-resistant TB, known as XDR TB, government's failure to cope
effectively with TB or HIV-AIDS in the past and government's lack of
preparedness to cope with the latest form of TB, Conference resolves:
1. To encourage government to:
- Decentralise authority and accountability to
provincial governments;
- Require government or the SA National Aids
Council (SANAC) as a matter of urgency to apply to the World Health
Organisation's Green Light Committee for help in obtaining free
medication to treat persons with the infection, namely caprimycin
and cyclosterine;
- Require urgent restructuring of SANAC so that
it becomes independent and transparent;
- Approach SANAC to con-ordinate a network of
NGO's to help government deal with the latest strain of TB;
- Make more funds available for TB NGO's;
- Re-evaluate labour laws dealing with testing
of employees for TB;
- Require all hospitals to designate special
wards for patients with extremely resistant TB and introduce
quarantine and intense infection control provisions for persons with
the illness.
2. To encourage members to:
- Conduct active campaigns to test for TB in
all health facilities and in the work place;
- Inform people that the current form of TB
does not respond to previously used medication such as isoniazid,
rifampicin, ciprofloxacin, ethambutol, streptomycin or kanamycin;
- Educate people to understand that the best
ways to avoid contracting extremely drug resistant TB are to
encourage persons with conventional TB to take their medicines
diligently and to encourage sick persons to cough into handkerchiefs
or tissues;
- Requests that masks be made freely available
to persons at Post Offices, pension outlets, colleges and schools.
In the meantime the IFP will urge all branches to:
- Appoint HIV - AIDS and TB coordinators;
- Require these persons to attend Ward
Committee meetings and to make relevant inputs to local councils;
- Educate their constituencies as to all of the
above
- Advise all members to encourage family
members to be tested for TB;
- Make members aware that the test required to
confirm the latest form of TB is a laboratory sputum culture;
- Document circumstances in which they are
aware of unfair discrimination or poor treatment of patients in
health facilities;
- Bring these factual issues to the attention
of IFP leadership in writing;
- Use their collective voices to bring these
cases to the attention of the media.
:
RESOLUTION 11:
Noting that the government's strategy to combat HIV
- AIDS is failing, resulting in at least 900 persons dying from AIDS and
more than 1 000 persons becoming newly-infected with HIV each day.
Conference again continues to advocate the IFP's strategy to cope with
the AIDS pandemic as regards persons affected, prevention of infection
and support for vulnerable children as follows:
- Those affected should be treated as if they
have any other infectious disease with special secrecy provisions
relating to HIV removed;
- Testing and counselling should be provided
widely at hospital outpatients, clinics, schools and colleges;
- Pre-marital testing for HIV must become
mandatory;
- Nevirapine must be made freely available at
all clinics and hospitals for all mothers giving birth;
- Treatment for HIV must be streamlined and
made more widely available through actively pursuing partnerships
with international donor organizations and decentralizing authority
to provincial governments and health districts;
- The many laws that obstruct access by
vulnerable children and child-headed households to grants and
housing must be changed;
- Doctors treating HIV and TB must be
encouraged to work with traditional healers;
- Good nutrition must be promoted for better
health but not as a substitute for anti-retrovirals;
- The most important right for persons with HIV
- AIDS should be the right to non-discrimination;
- All leaders must speak with one voice about
the cause of HIV - AIDS being a virus and point out that HIV is now
treatable as any other disease.
It is entirely controllable by following a sensible lifestyle. This
means practicing abstention pre-marriage and having unprotected sex
only with a partner whose HIV status is known;
- Greater attention must be given to education
about STI's (sexually transmitted infections) other than HIV and to
actively treat them, as this would reduce the incidence of HIV by
more than half;
- Call on government to change the medicines
currently used to treat gonorrhoea in clinics and hospitals due to
the high rate of resistance to these medicines.
Conference furthermore calls on IFP leadership to
continue to lobby to transform the policies of the ANC alliance on HIV -
AIDS and to take steps to curb the spread of HIV -AIDS and TB.
Members are urged to:
- Appoint HIV - AIDS coordinators in every
branch;
- Ensure that these HIV - AIDS coordinators are
active in all Ward committees as health representatives and that
they make relevant inputs into the Integrated Development Plans
(IDPs) of local councils;
- Submit details of all IFP HIV - AIDS
coordinators to IFP Head Office;
- Identify persons for training in Community
Health Worker training programmes offered by government and NGOs;
- Work with youth members if IFP branches in
all wards to produce educational dramas based on information
available from the IFP Head Offices;
- Work together with the Women's Brigade to
assist every member of every family to tend a vegetable garden so as
to provide essential food elements to families;
- Compile lists of persons (name, ID, address
contact details) who are unable to access grants for vulnerable
children or unable to access homes for child-headed households and
submit these to Head Office (Durban or Ulundi);
- Draft Private Member's legislation to deal
with problems affecting vulnerable children and child-headed
households;
- Work with teams comprising government, NGOs,
private sector and donors to provide mobile units to reach deep
rural areas and assist with all aspects of STI's, HIV - AIDS and TB
prevention and care;
- Have all leaders follow the example of the
President of the IFP by speaking openly and HIV - AIDS and TB
whenever possible and encourage persons to abstain, be tested, seek
treatment and support.
RESOLUTION 12:
Conference applauds the indispensable leadership of
its President, Prince Mangosuthu Buthelezi, and thanks him for the hope
and wisdom he gives to his Party and the people of South Africa in his
quest to first and foremost imbue in all our citizens the noble cause of
self-help and self-reliance, inner peace and the security and well-being
which comes from lives led with dignity, moral integrity and purpose
leading to goodwill and charity towards to all persons.
We wish him strength as he leads us to continue to struggle for the
cause of the true political, social and economic liberation of South
Africa: from the threat of an emerging one-party state and from the
emerging turbulent consequences of rampant poverty, ignorance and
disease which ever-increasingly blight our land and it citizens.
We offer him, as always, our gratitude, unconditional respect and
support.
RESOLUTION 13:
:The scourge of
Africa has been the death and destruction that has been caused by
combinations of ethnic nationalism, ethnic rivalries and absurd beliefs
and posturing that certain cultures are superior to others.
Countless lives have been lost, communities shattered and nations
rendered corrupt and bankrupt by populist voices exhorting calls for
ethnic cohesion and primacy for its own sake and/or as cynical ploys to
gain political power and access to state resources for their own ends
and those of their cohorts.
Conference thanks the President for his continuous warnings of the
dangers of ethnic entrepreneurialism. Whilst the IFP has always believed
that it is acceptable for all South Africans to be proud of and cherish,
promote and protect their constituent cultures, we unequivocally state,
once again, that we are all first and foremost South Africans and that
each cultural identity is of equal worth.
Conference therefore notes:
- Evidence of certain
persons and groups attempting to use the ethnic origin of Mr JG Zuma
as a means to rally support and sympathy relating to his recent
plight and warns of the extreme danger in so doing;
- It is unacceptable that
there may be a belief in certain quarters that politics can in
future be organised and contested in South Africa along ethnic
lines; and therefore;
- Calls on all members to be
vigilant in relation to allegations that Mr Zuma was prosecuted and,
by inference, persecuted because he is Zulu.
|