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RESOLUTIONS
RESOLUTION
1: HIV/AIDS
Conference notes that the IFP is the largest black
opposition party in South Africa led by a statesman with a proven and
consistent track record on this issue.
Due to government indifference and its failure to
fulfil its electoral promise to roll out antiretroviral drugs coupled with
pharmaceutical greed and deepening gender inequalities, the HIV/Aids
pandemic continues to flourish without an end in sight.
Two and a half times more young women are
HIV-positive than their male counterparts, and rape is a significant
factor in the transmission of the deadly virus.
We therefore resolve:
- to heed the call of the President of the IFP,
Prince Mangosuthu Buthelezi, to ensure that moral renewal is the central
plank of the strategy to deal with the pandemic of HIV/Aids, which can be
achieved by following the African moral code, and adhering to the
teachings of the Church and all faith-based organisations;
- to urge fathers to fulfil their role in educating
their sons about sexuality and the value of abstinence and fidelity;
- to instil in our children an environment of trust
and openness so that they can talk about sexuality freely with their
parents;
- to smash the walls of stigma and silence by
embracing people living with HIV/Aids with love, compassion and support;
- to call upon the President of South Africa to
provide political leadership to root out the malaise in the Department of
Health to ensure that the missed targets of providing antiretroviral
treatment to 53,000 patients by March 2005 are met by the department;
- to call upon our HIV/Aids spokespersons in the
National Assembly, the KwaZulu-Natal and Gauteng Provincial Parliaments to
construct a co-ordinated approach with a monitoring mechanism to hold the
government to account for its failure to combat HIV/Aids by, inter alia,
tabling questions, motions and Private Member's Bills.
RESOLUTION 2:
UNEMPLOYMENT AND POVERTY
Conference notes that despite our progressive
Constitution, the women of South Africa still face glaring gender
discrimination on the ground.
The gender aspect of service delivery has been
conspicuously lacking in the public policy arena and the latest statistics
show that there is a huge overweighting of black women in the lowest paid
jobs, and gender is still a major issue in unemployment and rural poverty.
The Black Economic Empowerment (BEE) has, thus far,
only benefited the elite few.
We therefore resolve:
- to use our political leverage to ensure that the
needs of women in rural areas are prioritised by decision-makers;
- to exhort all IFP public representatives in all
three spheres of government to fulfil their opposition oversight role by
desegregating achievements and challenges in terms of gender in all public
debates;
- to urge all three spheres of the government to
make their tendering processes more user-friendly for women, in terms of
the language and format utilised;
- to call on mothers to instil the virtues of
self-help and self-reliance in their daughters and to motivate them to
obtain as much education and training as their personal circumstances
allow;
- to call upon the government to roll out
Adult-Based Education and Training (ABET) focused on women's needs in the
deepest rural areas, utilising all available infrastructure such as
schools, crèches and churches;
- to call upon the government to establish
programmes that enable women to move from the informal to the formal
economy, and to develop income-generating skills;
- to call upon the IFP Women's Brigade leadership
to establish a programme in which collectives of women apply for training,
and, after assessment, women would linked up with training programmes;
- to call upon the government to recognise that a
broad-based black ownership is vital, and that conflicts of interest must
be avoided, and that the government should offer opportunities to
companies which comply with the requirements of social transformation;
- to call upon the Economic spokespersons in the
National Assembly, and the KwaZulu-Natal and Gauteng Provincial
Parliaments to design and unveil alternative models of BEE consortia, for
example in the public parastatals, in line with IFP policy.
RESOLUTION 3:
CORRUPTION
Conference notes that corruption leads to poorer
public services, infrastructure and reduced spending on health and
education, and thereby affects the women who depend on them.
Endemic corruption erodes public confidence in state
institutions and undermines democracy and good governance.
We therefore resolve:
- to inculcate in our youth from the earliest age
shared moral and cultural values, norms and beliefs;
- that IFP women in leadership positions adhere to a
strict code of conduct in line of the IFP code of conduct;
- to call upon the government to demonstrate political
will to eradicate the causes and effects of corruption at all levels of
public service;
- to call upon the government to ensure that
'whistle-blowers' receive the protection they need from the state when
they expose corruption.
RESOLUTION 4:
VIOLENCE ON WOMEN
Conference laments that South Africa has the world's
highest incidence of rape and that domestic violence legislation
introduced in 1998 has done little to reduce violence against women.
For too long, the women of Africa have had to endure
senseless and heart-stopping fear of domestic violence and abuse.
We therefore resolve:
- that our country needs moral renewal which must
be led primarily by the women in the family;
- to call upon the IFP Women's Brigade leadership
to establish programmes to educate and empower men to have positive
attitudes towards women and their roles in society;
- to call upon our female Members in the National
Assembly to table a Private Member's Bill to give legislative expression
to independent research on the causes and remedies of domestic violence;
- to call upon the women representatives of the IFP
in the National Assembly, the KwaZulu-Natal and Gauteng Provincial
Parliaments, and the Pan African Parliament to design and implement an
issue-based campaign to eliminate domestic violence, and to report back on
the outcome of the campaign at the 2005 Women's Brigade Conference.
RESOLUTION 5:
POLITICAL PARTICIPATION
Conference notes that, in a participatory
democracy, women are the best advocates of their own aspirations, needs
and dreams.
We therefore resolve:
- to train our women leaders in people skills and
conflict management, and equip them with communication and public conduct
skills;
- to call upon the women leaders of the IFP to
refrain from engaging in negative debates which undermine the unity of the
Party, and learn to criticise each other in a constructive manner;
- to call upon the women of the IFP to become the
ambassadors of the Party by crisply articulating the beliefs and
principles of the Party in public, and to ensure that these are not
misrepresented by our political opponents;
- to call upon the women representatives of the IFP
in the National Assembly, the KwaZulu-Natal and Gauteng Provincial
Parliaments, and our women councillors to identify their constituencies on
the basis of origin and expertise, and to design and implement,
accordingly, issue-based campaigns to mobilise support for the IFP among
women and to report back on the outcome of these initiatives at the 2005
IFP Women's Brigade Conference.
RESOLUTION
6:
INFORMATION
Conference notes that access to information and the
development of the mind are the most powerful tools for the empowerment of
women.
We therefore resolve:
- that programmes should be implemented to span the
digital divide so that women have access to information superhighway so
they can move into mainstream of the modern economy;
- the IFP Women's Brigade must identify NGOs and
government-sponsored computer literacy programmes to provide women with
the most effective information sources available.
RESOLUTION
7:
PRINCE MANGOSUTHU
BUTHELEZI
The IFP Women's Brigade salutes the leadership of
the highest calibre which His Excellency the President, Prince Mangosuthu
Buthelezi, provides to advance the role of women in our country.
The Women's Brigade resolves to stand behind His
Excellency's constructive and moral leadership and wishes to request His
Excellency to continue to lead the mothers and daughters of the IFP.
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