Protea Breakwater Lodge Hotel, Cape Town, 27 March 2015

 

 

Political Overview by

 

President Jacob Zuma

 

to the meeting of the

 

ANC National Executive Committee

 

 

Comrades Officials and members of the NEC

 

Good morning to you all,

 

We meet for the first time as the National Executive Committee since the
tragic and untimely passing of our dear brother and comrade, Collins
Chabane.

 

We laid him to rest last Saturday in his home village of Xikundu in a
dignified and respectable manner, joined by thousands of our people.

 

His contribution to the NEC, in which he has served for many years and also
the organisation and our country, will be sorely missed. Comrade Collins
passed as on as we were bidding farewell to two giants of the liberation
struggle, Malume Moses Kotane and Uncle J.B. Marks, who were repatriated and
were reburied on the 14th and 22nd of March respectively.

 

These reburials were as a result of our successful efforts to repatriate
these icons of our struggle from the Russian Federation as per the request
from their families.

 

The successful repatriation is yet another success story of an ANC
administration and it is indicative of our capacity to work efficiently and
effectively, and achieve results if we commit ourselves. The return of the
remains of JB Marks and Moses Kotane served to mobilise our people and to
remind them of the glorious struggle that brought about the freedom and
democracy we enjoy today.

 

It is important for us to gradually repatriate the remains of all our cadres
who fell on foreign soil, to enable closure and also as part of building our
new heritage. It will be a long and costly process in financial terms, but
our view is that it should be done.

 

Comrades,

 

The year 2015 is indeed a very busy year in the political calendar of our
movement.

 

All our leagues, the Veterans League, the Women's League and the Youth
League will convene their National Conferences. We are also due for the
National General Council of the ANC later this year.

 

The SACP and COSATU will also hold their National Congresses before the end
of this year. It is important to note that some of these conferences are
taking place this year outside of the normal schedule. The reason is either
because of the need to respond to urgent matters which have arisen or to
correct certain things which may have gone wrong.

 

An example of this is the Youth League conference which was supposed to have
taken place last year but was converted into a National Consultative
Congress in order to allow more time to build organisationally cohesive
structures thoroughly steeped in the traditions and discipline of the ANC.

 

In other words, the fact that we are having so many conferences in one year,
some of which are not in line with the ordinary schedule, partly points to
weaknesses and challenges in our movement that we must decisively deal with.

 

It is a reminder that building the organisation remains a critical task that
requires our undivided attention. We call on all ANC leaders to give the
necessary political support to the leagues because these leagues constitute
an integral part of the ANC.

 

However, we must desist at all times from excessive intervention and
interference in the affairs and processes of the leagues. We must see the
conferences of the leagues as natural opportunities of rebirth and renewal;
and allow the leagues to function as autonomous bodies within the confines
of the ANC's organizational discipline.

 

Our task as the NEC in particular, is to support the Leagues so that they
emerge from their conferences more united and stronger than before. The
Veterans League in particular must emerge from its conference with capacity
to effectively play their revolutionary role as torch-bearers and guardians
of our movement.

 

The Women's League conference next month must strengthen and reenergize the
league to relentlessly pursue the struggle for women's emancipation from the
shackles of patriarchy, and with clear programmes to advance the status and
quality of life of women in the country, especially the poor and the working
class in both urban and rural areas.

 

The conference must also come up with creative ways on how to reposition the
Women's League to become the leading voice on women's issues and status in
the country, and which is capable of defending women against any form of
gender discrimination.

 

The League must be heard on issues of basic services such as water,
sanitation, education, health, electricity and others which affect women
directly, alerting government where the delivery of such services is delayed
or poor.

 

Similarly, the Youth League must emerge from its conference as a League of
the ANC which does not have any objectives that are contrary to those of the
ANC.

 

It must be a radical, militant and disciplined ANC Youth League with the
capacity to skilfully execute its twin tasks of mobilising young people and
advancing their interests, while at the same time rallying them behind the
banner and vision of the ANC.

 

It must be a Youth League that will capture the imagination of the youth in
the country. It must articulate its programmes and policies and run
campaigns that make our youth from all walks of life to view it as their
natural political home.

 

It is therefore our responsibility as ANC leaders to ensure that all our
structures and leagues function properly in line with the provisions of our
constitution.

 

Comrades,

 

We meet here less than a week after we marked Human Rights Day and exactly a
month before we celebrate the 21st anniversary of our freedom on April the
27th.

 

Days such as these give us the opportunity to reflect on the journey we have
travelled thus far in the struggle for equality, justice and freedom. We
must celebrate the fact that we have successfully entrenched a human rights
culture in our national consciousness.

 

We must continue to develop programmes aimed at teaching our people about
their hard won rights as well as the responsibilities that naturally come
with them.

 

The year 2015 is the year of the Freedom Charter. Therefore, this year's
Freedom Day must necessarily have a much deeper meaning than ever before. We
must use this day to reflect in earnest on the progress we have made since
1994 to meet the demands of the Freedom Charter and to boldly state our
achievements as well as where we could have done better.

 

We need to pay serious attention to the socio-economic rights that the
Freedom Charter envisaged all our people would enjoy once freedom had been
won.

 

The reality in our country is that most of the rights enshrined in the
constitution of the Republic for our people to enjoy are persistently
undermined by the socio-economic conditions under which they live.

 

For example, whilst everyone has the right to freedom of movement, too many
of our people simply do not have the requisite and enabling resources to
move where, when and how they please. The ANC government's infrastructure
development programme is designed to respond to this challenge of either
decent human settlements near places of work or efficient public transport.

 

Freedom Day will also remind us of the anniversary of 25 years since the
release of Comrade Nelson Mandela and 25 years since the unbanning of
political organisations, which unleashed a chain of events leading to where
we are right now, in a free and democratic South Africa.

 

I really wish to emphasise that we should not take our achievements for
granted, nor should we allow others to define how we should celebrate our
freedom. For many years we have allowed others to tell us on Freedom Day
that nothing has been achieved in this country.

 

We must tell the Good Story of this country, the story of a South Africa
that is much better to live in that it ever was before.

 

At the same time we should communicate the work we are doing to implement
ANC resolutions on ensuring economic emancipation, which should involve all
our people.

 

Let me remind ourselves as I did to delegates at the Black Industrialists
Indaba this week that the ANC's approach to economic issues is informed by
the historical principles espoused in the Freedom Charter, Ready to Govern
and the Reconstruction and Development Programme and further elaborated in
conference resolutions.

 

We approach economic transformation guided by the following pillars:

 

(a) Creating decent employment for all South Africans.

(b) Eliminating poverty and dealing decisively with extreme inequalities in
our society.

(c) Democratising the ownership and control of the economy by empowering the
historically oppressed, Africans and the working class in particular to play
a leading role in decision-making.

 

(d) Restructuring the economy so that it meets the basic needs of all South
African and the people of the region, especially the poor.

 

(e) Ensuring equitable and mutually beneficial regional development in
Southern Africa, thereby fostering the progressive integration of the
region, and

 

(f)  Limiting the negative environmental impact of our economic
transformation programme.

 

The vehicle for us to achieve these goals is a mixed economy. We defined the
mixed economy in the ANC's 52nd national conference resolutions as an
economy in which the state, private capital, co-operative and other forms of
social ownership complement each other in an integrated way to eliminate
poverty and to foster economic growth.

 

We have also expressed our belief in a developmental state that is located
at the centre of a mixed economy and which intervenes in the interest of the
people as a whole. 

 

We need to constantly communicate our policies so that people understand the
objectives behind our programmes and action plans.

 

Comrades,

 

We have constantly said in this NEC that the ANC must be a campaigning
organization.

In this year of the Freedom Charter and as part of celebrating twenty one
years of freedom, we should have Freedom Charter Forums in our branches
where our people will learn about the Charter and engage on how far we have
come as a nation as well as ponder about the road ahead.

 

This type of forums will help us draw on the strengths and resilience of our
people as we continue the long walk to the National Democratic Society.

 

We must teach our people that they are their own liberators. They must own
their freedom, be responsible for it and defend it, with the ANC always
leading them.

 

We need to rely on our presence amongst the people as the most potent weapon
at our disposal in the ongoing battle of ideas.

 

Comrades,

 

We have set the vision for this year during the January 8th Statement and
the State of the Nation Address, both of which took place here in Cape Town.

 

We have had the ANC National Lekgotla as well as the Cabinet Lekgotla, both
of which were about concretising our vision into a solid programme of
action. What we are called upon to do now is no longer to plan but to
implement.

 

The work of our NEC Sub-Committees must be geared towards the achievement of
the goals we set for ourselves, especially those related to the nine point
plan to boost the economy.

 

As I indicated earlier, our National General Council will take place later
this year.

 

As a result, Sub-Committees are called upon to do a firm audit of what has
been achieved since December 2012 against the resolutions of the Mangaung
Conference.

 

This exercise will enable us to know whether we are on course executing the
mandate of conference. It will also help us to know where we need to work
harder or increase capacity.

 

Comrades,

 

The unity of our movement as a whole remains the rock upon which the unity
of the South African people is based. We are deeply troubled by the
occurrences in COSATU. We remain committed to the unity of the Alliance and
all its individual components. We are inspired by Moses Kotane and J.B
Marks, who are the founding fathers of this Alliance and who served all its
components with distinction.

 

JB Marks and Moses Kotane worked for the unity of the Alliance and the
liberation movement.

The ANC is the leader of the Alliance and its leadership must be visible
especially during difficult times. As Madiba said, "Unity is the rock upon
which the ANC was founded."

 

At the reburial service of Comrade JB Marks, I made a call for an urgent
week long Alliance leadership summit where we will tackle issues and discuss
everything that is troubling the Alliance.  We must plan for that Summit and
be ready to contribute toward rebuilding the Alliance and entrenching unity.
Many of our illustrious leaders worked hard to build this alliance; we owe
it to them to make it succeed.

 

Comrades,

 

Next year we will hold local government elections.  All of us must work hard
to secure a resounding victory for the ANC. We must get an overwhelming
majority which will enable us to continue implementing our progressive
policies in all three spheres of government.

 

An election campaign has to be run through a highly organized machine. It
has to have as its defining characteristics a good message, a good
narrative, an impeccable public presentation and most importantly, highest
levels of organizational discipline.

 

We have to take our local government Back to Basics message far and wide, as
it is a message of hope.  It assures our people that we know what is wrong
in some municipalities and we also have solutions. The message also
acknowledges the successes of the past 15 years of democratic local
government.

 

Comrades, 

 

The ANC is a progressive movement with an internationalist outlook. We
continue to play our role to build a better Africa and a better world.

 

Nigerians are going to the polls this weekend. A stable and peaceful Nigeria
is in our national interest and in the interest of the African continent. We
need Nigeria as a partner for our progressive agenda on the continent and
wish the Nigerians all the best during the elections.  

 

Lesotho has just concluded its own election. Constitutional and security
sector reforms must happen as recommended by SADC if Lesotho is to avert
another crisis.

 

We will be handing over our chairmanship of the SADC Organ later in the
year, satisfied with the modest contribution we have made to the region. We
congratulate Comrade Deputy President on the successful mission in the
Lesotho.

 

Our intervention in that Kingdom ensured peace and stability and culminated
in peace, free and fair elections truly reflecting the will of the Basotho
people.

 

As we prepare for Africa Month and the hosting the Summit of the African
Union in June, we should continue to mobilise our people behind our
continent for a better Africa.  Overall, Africa is changing in the right
direction, but peace remains elusive in some parts of the continent and we
should work for peace relentlessly.

 

In June we will also host Africa and the world here in Cape Town, for the
World Economic Forum African meeting. We look forward to a successful
gathering building on the Davos meeting which began to tackle inequality and
inclusive growth more meaningfully.

 

Comrades,

 

The smooth leadership transition recently witnessed in Mozambique and
Namibia is the way to go. The former liberation movements are setting a good
example and we congratulate them in this regard.

 

Comrades, this year we celebrate the 50th anniversary of the Bandung
Conference which to this day remains a historic milestone in South-South
solidarity and the Non Aligned Movement. 

 

We will attend the Celebration of Bandung in memory of Moses Kotane and
Indian Congress leader Maulvi Cachalia who attended that historic
conference.

 

We should be more resolute in our struggle for a better world on all fronts
- from the G77 that we currently chair, to the entire United Nations.  

 

We must use the 70th anniversary of the UN as Africa to give traction to the
reform of the UN organisation, especially its Security Council whose
composition is outdated and not geared to tackling challenges facing
humanity today. 

 

The Post 2015 Development Agenda that is being negotiated in New York to
replace the Millennium Development Goals must be transformative and place
our respective countries on the path towards sustainable development and the
eradication of poverty and underdevelopment.

 

Comrades,

 

The Freedom Charter says there shall be peace and friendship. But we never
said that this peace and friendship will be delivered to humanity on a
silver platter.  

 

We must work for these ideals, individually as the ANC, and collectively as
part of the global movement of progressive forces. A better Africa and a
better world will enable South Africa to prosper and realise its full
potential.

 

We have a lot of work ahead this year. We should remain focused on
implementing ANC resolutions and ANC policies in general, and continue the
meaningful socio-economic transformation of our country.

I Thank You.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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