The Annual General Conference of the Party met in
Ulundi on October 12-14, 2007 and unanimously adopted the following:
The IFP is appalled by reports relating to the contempt with which
some Government employees treat members of the general public. These
complaints range, for example, from the maltreatment and
indifference by some nurses of sick and injured persons to
allegations and proof of corruption within the SAPS and Home
Affairs. Clearly inter-action and clear lines of communication
between affected persons and Government departments and their
leadership are required.
We therefore call for the following proposals to be prioritised by
Government as a matter of urgency:
1.
All public servants at all levels must clearly wear name badges at
all times and it must be enacted that it will be an offence to
conceal this identification at any time;
2.
All public places (police stations, hospitals, clinics, Government
offices etc.) throughout South Africa must have widely and visibly
displayed “hot line” telephone numbers to which all persons can
immediately and without cost to themselves report any action which
they reasonably believe to be unacceptable and/or palpably wrong;
3.
All “hot lines” to be installed using available ICT technology and
linked to national, provincial and local call centres which will
record and thereafter enable investigation and rapid response to all
complaints and/or information received;
4.
All Government departments at all levels must receive regular
reports of all information received, action/response timelines and
ensure appropriate investigation and responses;
5.
All Government departments must widely advertise this service and
institute education programmes as to its use and relevance;
6.
All vexatious behaviour by members of the public must be deemed to
have appropriate and salutary consequences;
RESOLUTION
6:
CRIME AND JUSTICE: A NATIONAL CRISIS:
HOW AND WHY CITIZENS MUST GET INVOLVED IN FIGHTING CRIME
It is an indisputable fact that South African citizens live for the
most part in fear of violent crime and in the knowledge that their
safety and security are in peril each and every day of their lives.
IFP Conferences repeatedly highlight this national crisis and we
continue to lament various national and international research
surveys which purport to show that South Africa is one of the most
violent and dangerous societies in the world.
The damage done to our national economy as a result of all manner of
criminal behaviour -- which is now obviously systemic and endemic
throughout our society -- is incalculable.
The human suffering is a
tragedy of immense proportions.
As far as crime statistics are concerned, we therefore:
-
Continue to urge that
Government provides Parliament with far more accurate and
relevant crime statistics than is currently the case;
As far as the South African Police Service is concerned, we
therefore:
1.
Continue to salute the bravery, hard work and sacrifice of the
majority of law enforcement personnel and encourage increased
remuneration for them;
2.
Continue to urge that Government prioritizes increasing
professionalism and high levels of training throughout the criminal
justice system;
3.
Continue to urge citizens to be proactive in supporting
community/police forums and other self-help community safety
initiatives;
4.
Continue to urge citizens to immediately and factually report
corruption and instances of unprofessional behaviour of police,
correctional service and justice department officers and officials;
5.
Propose that the funds currently allocated to the civilian
secretariat (designed to monitor the work of the SAPS but without
much achievement) in the nine provinces be redirected to finance,
recruit and train more police personnel and build and equip more
police stations;
6.
Intend to actively campaign against the politicization of the SAPS
by appointing to key positions individuals without the required
professional background and expertise.
As far as the criminal justice system is concerned, we therefore:
1.
Propose to reform the
current dual system of attorneys and advocates which raises the cost
of justice for all citizens;
2.
Intend to actively campaign against the politicisation of the
judiciary by exposing the instances of interference by the executive
in judicial matters;
3.
Propose to boost the criminal justice system personnel both
qualitatively and quantitatively in order to radically reduce the
backlogs in litigations which continue to deny justice to citizens;
4.
Propose to empower traditional authorities’ courts in the legal
disputes of civil and communal nature (within their jurisdiction) in
order to reduce the cost of justice and extend its availability
As far as correctional services are concerned, we therefore:
1.
Urge the criminal justice system to respect the judiciary’s
independence by not interfering in sentencing and restricting parole
to exceptional circumstances;
2.
Advocate provision by the Department of Correctional Services of
comprehensive and mandatory training and rehabilitation schemes for
offenders in order to facilitate their social reintegration.
RESOLUTION
7:
SOCIAL WELFARE NEEDS TRANSPARENCY AND ACCOUNTABILITY
About 12 million South Africans currently receive old age,
disability and child support grants and in the current financial
year Government will spend more than R62 billion in paying for
social grants.
We note, however:
-
The payment system
for grants is continuously wracked with inefficiency and
corruption;
-
Some 44 percent of
children that are eligible for child support grants are
estimated not to be receiving them due to the absence of
official identity documents;
-
Children’s
organizations have taken the Government to court to force it to
accept other forms of identification to enable children to
access child support grants;
Conference therefore:
-
Registers its support
for the ongoing court case against Government to enable children
to provide other forms of identity to access the support grants;
-
Urges Government to
speed up its anti-corruption drive throughout the social welfare
system by employing the full range of law enforcement agencies
to expose and prosecute fraudsters;
RESOLUTION
8:
EDUCATION:
VIOLENCE IN OUR SCHOOLS
Increasing levels of violence in our schools is cause for
considerable alarm. It is clear that increasing numbers of parents
take too little responsibility for the actions of their children and
this has invariably led to a lack of discipline in homes, in public
and in a lack of respect for all types of authority.
We therefore:
-
Continue to promote a
culture of respect in our homes, churches, schools and in all
other walks of life;
-
Request that members
and supporters partner with community and religious
organizations to advance the “respect for all” agenda;
-
Insist that the
party’s public representatives at all levels and on a constant
basis promote and publicise the party’s stance on morality and
societal values of respect, discipline and ubuntu botho.
RESOLUTION
9:
HIV/AIDS CRISIS CONTINUES
Conference records that Government has achieved little progress in
tackling the HIV/Aids epidemic resulting in increasing numbers of
persons dying from Aids and estimates that more than 1000 persons
become newly infected with HIV every day.
We therefore note with concern:
-
That the Department
of Health is obviously in turmoil following the long period of
ill-health of the Minister and the unfortunate dismissal of her
deputy;
-
That the
re-structuring of the South African National Aids Council (SANAC)
has not produced the required results anticipated.
We therefore propose:
-
That “dual therapy”
treatments must be made freely available at all clinics and
hospitals for all mothers giving birth should they be required;
-
That treatment for
HIV/Aids 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;
-
That the most
important right for persons with HIV/Aids should be the right to
non-discrimination;
-
That all leaders must
speak with one voice about the cause of HIV/Aids being a virus
and point out that HIV is now as treatable as any other disease
and is entirely controllable by following a sensible lifestyle –
which means practicing abstention pre-marriage and having
unprotected sex only with a partner whose HIV status is known;
-
That greater
attention must be given to education about sexually transmitted
infections (STIs) other than HIV and that these must be actively
treated as research indicates it will halve HIV rates of
infection;
-
That good nutrition
must be promoted for better health but not as a substitute for
anti-retrovirals;
-
That provincial
health departments must be given more autonomy and more
flexibility to enable appropriate local interventions;
-
To expose attempts by
Government to use the HIV/Aids epidemic as a political tool of
patronage by the co-option of certain civil society
organizations;
-
That greater
attention should be paid to the funding and monitoring of
ethical trials using alternative and traditional medicines and
that these medicines should be patented/registered to enable
complete transparency as to their general substance, specific
ingredients, efficacy and appropriate use.
As far as the IFP’s specific role in the fight against HIV/Aids is
concerned, we therefore:
-
Propose to form
support groups on a voluntary basis within our party
branches to assist people infected and/or affected with
HIV/Aids;
-
Intend to actively
campaign for the benefits of general HIV/Aids awareness,
parental (safer) sex education, regular testing for HIV and
STI’s, abstinence and virginity testing, HIV-related dangers
of substance abuse;
-
Motivate communities to revive the African tradition of
embracing Aids orphans as well as persons who have been
socially ostracised because of their HIV status.
RESOLUTION
10:
SOUTH AFRICA’S ROLE IN PROMOTING AND PROTECTING A CULTURE OF HUMAN RIGHTS THROUGHOUT AFRICA
The pivotal role that South Africa must continue to play in
promoting human rights, democratic governance, an end to bloodshed
and the eradication of endemic corruption throughout the Continent
of Africa must be acknowledged. The right of all the nations of
Africa to assert themselves globally with honesty, integrity and
solidarity as equal partners with all other of the world’s nation
states is long overdue.
We therefore:
-
Fully support the
role that South Africa must continue to play in Africa in
facilitating conflict resolution, peace and socio-economic
development;
-
Encourage the rapid
integration of regional economies as the first step towards the
economic integration of Africa as a whole;
-
Urge that the
harmonization of all relevant laws and treaties be effected so
as to assist with all matters relating to regional and
continental integration;
-
Acknowledge that
without such integration and collective strength enabling the
Continent to compete fairly, Africa will continue to be
disadvantaged globally in relation to a wide range of critical
matters, with trade being an obvious and paramount issue;
-
Continue to recognise
that there will be no development within Africa without peace
and that peace is a pre-requisite to economic development;
-
Accept, with the
knowledge of our own experience in South Africa since 1994, that
elections by and of themselves are not the complete panacea to
the problems of the citizens of any country whatever they may
be;
-
Condemn violations of
human rights wherever they take place anywhere in the world.
RESOLUTION
11:
PROTECT SOUTH AFRICA’S PROVINCES:
REJECT ANC ATTEMPTS TO IMPOSE A UNITARY STATE THROUGH THE BACK DOOR
We record with pride the central role the IFP played in the
establishment of Provinces in South Africa and place on record our
alarm at the threat emanating from within the ANC to review the
present system with a view to possibly even abolishing Provinces.
We therefore resolve:
1.
To acknowledge the pivotal
role the IFP must play in the defence of provinces;
2.
To call on all South
Africans to rise to the challenge of resisting the ANC’s attempts at
centralising even more power in the national government and within
the Presidency of this government;
3.
To recognise subsidiarity
as the founding principle upon which to devolve and share power
nationally, provincially and locally;
4.
To resist any
gerrymandering ostensibly proposed under the guise of rational
government such as the proposed merger of the Western Cape and
Eastern Cape which is nothing but a naked attempt by the ANC to
seize power in the “new” province and to hold it indefinitely;
5.
To recognise that good
governance is not promoted by ANC centralisation, and that in the
fields of law and order, education, health and many others,
centralisation is associated with failure, amounting to a crisis of
delivery;
6.
To urge all South Africans
to do everything possible to enable the strengthening of the
provincial system rather than weakening it, to push for strong
municipalities, strong provinces and a strong national government in
which each does what it does best and to strenuously reject all
notions the ANC might have of reintroducing a unitary state through
the back door.
RESOLUTION
12:
NATIONAL PRIORITIES AND ISSUES WHICH MUST NOW BE EFFECTIVELY ADDRESSED:
RIGID LABOUR LEGISLATION AND THE SKILLS SHORTAGE
Conference recommends that rigid labour legislation affecting
business development and issues exacerbating the country’s skills
shortage must be urgently reviewed by Government and industry.
We therefore state that:
-
Continued assertions
that our labour laws are inflexible and that they are seriously
inhibiting economic growth and business development can no
longer be ignored;
-
A balance must be
struck between promoting and protecting the rights of workers
and ensuring the growth and survival of job creation and
business enterprises;
-
South Africa’s skills
shortage is of national concern and that over-regulation by
Government is now recognized as severely impeding the ability of
foreign skilled workers to enter the country and contribute to
our socio-economic development.
RESOLUTION
13:
MAXIMUM GAIN FROM THE 2010 WORLD CUP
Noting that the 2010 World Cup has the potential to put South Africa
on the map as a top destination and that the “beautiful game” has
the power to draw people together from diverse backgrounds.
However, we must not forget a world cup is a once-off opportunity
and may not provide the level of sustainable employment now
envisaged beyond the tournament.
We therefore resolve:
-
To urge government
and the mass media not to over-estimate the economic benefits
that will derive from hosting the event;
-
To encourage
government to prioritise projects whose lifetime span will long
outlast the tournament;
-
To give full Party political support to the tournament’s
success.
RESOLUTION
14:
THE IFP SALUTES ITS PRESIDENT PRINCE MANGOSUTHU BUTHELEZI
Conference continues to be thankful for the leadership and wisdom it
receives from the President of the party, Prince Mangosuthu
Buthelezi.
We therefore express:
-
Our gratitude for his
commitment to us all and to the people of South Africa;
-
Our thanks for God’s
great gift in ensuring his ability to serve us and the nation
with dedication, stamina, honesty and integrity.
At the same time, the conference has noted:
-
the media speculation about alleged demands for a
constitutional amendment to establish the position of IFP
deputy president from the IFP Youth Brigade;
-
that the IFPYB has unequivocally distanced itself from such
demands and dismissed them formally as an attempt by the
party’s detractors to divert our attention from the
pertinent issues ahead of the 32nd Annual General
Conference;
-
the speculations, fuelled by the media with apparent
references to internal IFP “sources”, that Prince Mangosuthu
Buthelezi is too old to lead the IFP.
We therefore resolve:
-
not to deliberate on the subject of IFP deputy president
at the conference since the issue has never been put on
the conference agenda through regular channels
guaranteed both by the party’s constitution and
convention;
-
to treat the suggestions that Prince Mangosuthu
Buthelezi is too old to lead a political party with the
contempt they deserve given his vast political
experience, international credentials and unsurpassed
personal integrity. We view his age and wisdom as our
best asset;
-
not to be dictated to by some media commentators
regarding the mandate of the IFP President who was
unanimously elected in 2004 and had his mandate
bolstered by a special conference in 2006. It cannot be
said that Prince Buthelezi is clinging to power as he
resigned after the 2004 election and again in 2006 and
was re-instated unopposed by popular demand on both
occasions despite not seeking re-election;
-
to affirm our unwavering confidence in his continued
leadership and to exhort him to carry on providing his
immense contribution to our party and our country.