PUBLIC RESOLUTIONS
1.
ESKOM
Noting Eskom's ongoing load-shedding programme
and the recently proposed drastic 53-percent hike in the price
of electricity despite the considerable (R2-billion) increase in
state funding for the parastatal as announced in the budget;
the IFP National Council resolves to voice the
party's concerns about the effect of these measures on South
Africa's growth potential, on the lives of the country's poor
and on the worsened inflation outlook for the economy.
2.
THE ARMS DEAL
Noting the mooted amnesty for government
officials who may have benefited from the controversial arms
deal;
the IFP National Council resolves to distance
the party from any attempt at any level of governance for an
arms deal cover-up.
3.
THE ZIMBABWEAN ELECTION
Noting the concerns of the political
opposition and human rights organisations about the prospect of
a free and fair poll in Zimbabwe and the statements by
Zimbabwe's top security personnel to the effect that they would
not accept an alternative to President Robert Mugabe;
the IFP National Council resolves to express
the party's concern about the context within which the elections
were held and to urge the Zimbabwean authorities to honour the
outcome of the election.
4.
UGANDA
Noting the progress in reconciliation talks
between the Lord's Resistance Army and the government of Uganda
which has paved the way for a peace deal;
the IFP National Council resolves to applaud
this development which will effectively end a decades old
conflict that has hampered all socio-economic development in
Uganda.
5.
KENYA
Noting the long-awaited agreement to form a
Government of National Unity reached between Kenya's President
Mwai Kibaki and the opposition leader Raila Odinga;
the IFP National Council resolves to
congratulate the leaders involved on this solid move towards
political stability in Kenya and the wider region.
6.
DARFUR
Noting the lack of progress towards a
resolution of the shameful Darfur conflict;
the IFP National Council resolves to call on
the South African government and other influential stakeholders
to maximise their efforts in bringing pressure on the Sudanese
government to end the conflict.
7.
BAFANA-BAFANA
Noting Bafana-Bafana's recent victory against
Paraguay;
the IFP National Council resolves to
congratulate our National Team and call on South African soccer
administration to do everything in their power to improve the
prospects of Bafana-Bafana ahead of the 2010 Soccer World Cup.
8.
TIBET
Noting the escalating confrontation between
the Chinese government and Tibetans in Lhasa and in exile in the
run-up to the 2008 Olympic Games in Beijing;
the IFP National Council resolves to call on
the government of People's Republic of China to take bold steps
towards the peaceful resolution of the Tibetan question, to
allow the Dalai Lama to return safely to the country of his
birth, and to cultivate a neglected culture of human rights
across China.
9.
THE MIDDLE EAST
Noting the latest set-back in the progress
towards lasting peace in the Middle East;
the IFP National Council resolves to encourage
the Israeli government, the Palestinian representatives, and the
superpowers to intensify their efforts towards a speedy
resolution to this decades long conflict.
10.
THE FREE STATE UNIVERSITY VIDEO
Noting the despicable incident of naked racism
at the University of the Free State;
the IFP National Council resolves to condemn
the incident in the strongest language and to urge the
university authorities and the Ministry of Education to do
everything in their respective powers to prevent manifestations
of racism in schools and in the academia which threaten to take South Africa backwards.
11.
INDEPENDENT ELECTORAL COMMISSION (IEC)
The IFP National Council resolves
to express its concerns regarding perceptions
of bias and lack of true independence on the part of the IEC
from the palpable influence of the ruling party; to urge the IEC
to seriously consider the manual method of counting and tallying
votes at the IEC headquarters if the 2009 and future elections
are to be accepted without dispute as a reliable and true
outcome of the people's will given the real risk of the
possibility of the manipulation of results in the currently used
electronic method of capturing votes; and to voice its objection
to the deployment by the IEC of teachers who are members of
SADTU, a political ally of the ruling party.