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R E S O L U T I O N S
EMANDLENI-MATLENG, ULUNDI : NOVEMBER 1, 1998
The Annual General Conference of the Women's Brigade met from
October 30 to November 1, 1998 and unanimously adopted the following:
RESOLUTION 1
To record our appreciation to the President of the IFP, Prince
Mangosuthu Buthelezi, for his ongoing championship of the rights of women in South Africa
and the need for their liberation from the burdens of poverty, ignorance and problems
associated with poor health.
We therefore call on all party structures to honour our leader's
example by:
- continuing to identify, found and support projects and all activities
which uphold the Party tenets of self-help and self-reliance which promote the notion of
equality and partnership between men and women at all levels in our society and;
- leading efforts to extend a culture of equality and respect for women
and their empowerment throughout South Africa and the continent of Africa.
RESOLUTION 2
Recognising that the critically important developmental needs of
women and the actual fulfillment of the aims and aspirations of our Party are inextricably
linked to electoral success in the 1999 general election, we call on all members and
supporters to:
- pledge and offer their support to leadership mandated to co-ordinate
our election programme;
- actively and constructively co-operate in all Party election
programmes;
- assist in ensuring that all eligible voters have the correct bar
coded identity document and employ network activities at community level to identify
people whose still do not have an ID with a bar code;
- train, if required, to become IFP agents in all voting stations.
RESOLUTION 3
In offering our political policies and programmes to all the people
of South Africa during the forthcoming election campaign, we accept that it is essential
that we show by example the calibre of our leadership and the depth of our commitment.
All leaders of the Brigade and members are therefore:
- instructed to ensure that they are totally conversant with the entire
range of Party policy documents;
- requested to make themselves available to speak to all interested
individuals and/or groups and that they do so in a manner befitting the honour and
integrity of the Party and its leadership;
- urged to seek new audiences where the quality of our message can be
further disseminated.
RESOLUTION 4
In promoting the participation of women in politics and encouraging
their involvement in the forthcoming election process, conference requests women
throughout South Africa to:
- exercise their right to freely participate in politics and at all
levels of government;
- question whether they are personally, at present, fully translating
their rights and responsibilities as citizens by becoming more involved in community and
political activities;
- motivate themselves and encourage other women to work together in
support of the achievement of partnership and parity between men and women in politics.
RESOLUTION 5
In our quest to protect and enhance our environment, achieve
national and personal growth and development, gender equality, non-violence, health,
happiness and the establishment of values in which individuals, families and institutions
are cherished throughout South Africa, we call on all levels of government and the people
of our land to:
- rethink goals and priorities so that they appropriately reflect the
hopes, aspirations and needs of the majority of men, women and children;
- protect our places of education, hospitals, clinics, libraries and
other public amenities from vandalism and theft and promote a culture of intolerance
towards the selfish acts of criminals who smash and steal the possessions of the people;
- clean up our cities, towns and villages in a united effort to inject
and instill pride in ourselves and in our environment;
- encourage voluntary work within hospitals, clinics, schools and other
public institutions.
RESOLUTION 6
Conference expresses its outrage at the burgeoning forms of violence
directed against women throughout our country and recognises that this is now a staggering
social problem with far-reaching consequences for every sector of South African life.
We believe that this is a community problem which now needs a
community response coupled with integrated measures by the State to prevent and eliminate
violence against women.
Members and supporters are urged to:
- establish focal points within their communities to assist victims;
- develop community participation in assisting the police to identify
and arrest perpetrators and to support the country's justice system processes in general;
- mobilise both men and women to formulate plans of action;
- transform their communities into zones of safety by collective
socially responsible action and by changing attitudes within those communities;.
- inculcate moral and spiritual values within their homes and
communities;
- recognise that strategies to involve youth must be integral to all
crime prevention initiatives;
- call for well-trained and trusted police officers to be visible in
all local communities and for provincial, metropolitan and municipal police forces to be
established and well resourced.
RESOLUTION 7
Conference condemns child abuse and the increasing lack of respect
for parenthood evidenced by the fact that (a) millions of women and children are adversely
affected by the non-payment of child maintenance, (b) growing numbers of our children are
being abandoned by one or both parents and (c) large numbers of our youth are leaving
their homes and living without appropriate shelter and adult care.
We therefore call for the State and society in general to prioritise
this issue by:
- enforcing and giving meaning to the constitutional and civil
obligations of both parents to be equally responsible for the nurturing of their children;
- reforming legislation regarding the judicial maintenance system
without delay and thereafter effecting efficient legal process;
- imposing visible social sanctions on parents and guardians who
neglect and abuse children;
- honouring parenthood and elevating and promoting the status of
mothers and fathers as role models to be respected.
- finding ways and means of easing the burdens being placed on
grandparents caring for children as a result of death, unemployment and abandonment.
RESOLUTION 8
With increasing unemployment, family disintegration, criminal
violence, growing indolence, lack of responsibility in sexual relations, alcohol abuse,
and an endemic and destructive culture of entitlement rife throughout South Africa,
Conference reaffirms its belief that women must play a key role in the creation of
self-help schemes and the regeneration of moral and spiritual values in our society.
We call on women to:
- contribute towards inculcating a new culture of disciplined behaviour
and goodwill between men, women and children wherein manners and moral values are
displayed at all times and self-help and self-reliance are understood and recognised to be
a critical means of survival;
- insist that they are treated with respect in all inter-personal
relations, whether within the home or elsewhere throughout society;
- plan their parenthood responsibly and within the reality of their
economic means and within stable family relationships;
- recognise that government cannot provide appropriately for the
financial welfare of children and that this message must focus women and men as to the
control of their fertility;
- educate themselves and others as to the dangers of irresponsible
sexual activity and HIV-AIDS; and
- teach our youth to have pride in their bodies and to value their
virginity.
RESOLUTION 9
- To offer thanks to the resourceful, diligent educators throughout our
country who have brought praise on their profession by skillfully producing successful
students in spite of the difficult circumstances prevailing in the majority of our
schools;
- to deplore the drunken, selfish, indolent behaviour of some other
teachers who have bought disgrace and shame on the teaching profession and have cruelly
damned pupils in their charge to ignorance and the prospect of a lifetime of unemployment.
- We therefore call on all educational authorities to take immediate
steps to identify and expel such persons and other unruly elements from our schools and
educational institutions and implore communities to co-operate with the relevant
authorities in monitoring and reporting on all unacceptable behaviour endangering our
common quest for excellence in education in our country.
- Given South Africa's high level of unemployment and the reality of
the rapid advancement in technology worldwide, urge members to access adult education
programmes in an effort to avail themselves of new skills.
RESOLUTION 10
In view of alarming statistics revealing:
- approximately three million South Africans are affected with
HIV/AIDS;
- 1500 people are newly infected each day;
- 40% of some hospital admissions are HIV positive;
- 27% of women in KwaZulu Natal ante-natal clinics have been tested HIV
positive;
- there will be approximately one million AIDS orphans in South Africa
by the year 2005;
we must recognise the shortage of financial and human resources to
cope with this epidemic.
We therefore urge government to institute policies and programmes to
promote openness and transparency within our society regarding HIV/AIDS and to encourage
greater personal responsibility.
Suggested features of these policies and programmes include:
- introducing group HIV/AIDS counseling on a wide scale at hospitals,
clinics and schools;
- mandatory saturation education in all secondary schools;
- training community health workers to take the HIV/AIDS message into
rural areas and informal settlements in urban areas;
- treating AIDS like any other disease or infection, e.g. TB, and
conducting routine tests throughout communities;
- making HIV/AIDS a notifiable disease;
- legally obliging persons who are HIV positive or who have AIDS to
reveal their condition to sexual partners.
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