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ANC Statement, 16 December 2015

 

 

Reconciliation Day:

 

DA Places Conditions for South Africans to Reconcile

 

 

The African National Congress joins the millions of South Africans marking
National Reconciliation Day today, 16 December 2015. The day occupies a
special place in our nation's quest to foster reconciliation and build
national unity; acknowledging the historical injustices of our past and
honouring our commitment to unity in diversity. We celebrate this
Reconciliation Day cognisant of the long road we have yet to traverse to
build a truly non-racial and united South Africa, at peace with itself and
the world. This is a responsibility that falls upon all South Africans,
black and white and across religious, cultural and political divides. It is
the hallmark of our envisaged peaceful co-existence enshrined in the Freedom
Charter that "South Africa belongs to all who live in it, black and white"

 

It is against this background therefore that the ANC has noted with
disappointment and great dismay, statements by some political leaders,
notably Helen Zille of the DA, who have chosen to use this important day to
engage in partisan politics and trivialise the significance of an important
aspect of our project of nation building which is the promotion of unity and
reconciliation. Zille, a premier in one of our nation's provinces, has
called for "no reconciliation with corruption" and together with her fellow
organizers of this march/picnic belittle the significance of Reconciliation
Day by this partisan posturing. With her statement (no reconciliation with
corruption), Zille sends a message that the DA has no interest in genuine
reconciliation with the masses of our people but will use any opportunity
for political point scoring to the extent of dividing our people instead of
uniting them. Because for them unity and reconciliation is not a fundamental
objective borne out of the scars of our terrible past, they place conditions
for the necessary and long overdue reconciliation between our people to take
place.

 

Zille.jpg

 

No person should place demands for why they or the people they lead should
reconcile over our grave past with other citizens. Stating as Zille did,
that there shall be no reconciliation until one of our challenges, which all
South Africans including the ANC have committed themselves to fight, is
dealt with places our hard won democracy at risk and mocks the suffering of
the South African majority at the hands of the white minority apartheid
state. A state that was inherently corrupt, insulated by some who today
claim to be activists against corruption and whose interests the DA remains
committed to protecting under the guise of fighting corruption and any other
perceived weakness of the democratic government. 

 

Corruption is a fight that will be best won by all citizens combined without
tearing the people apart. To Zille and her ilk it is a pawn in a game where
it is clear that genuine non-racialism, unity and reconciliation are not the
ultimate objectives but rather narrow partisan interests placed first and
above the goal of bringing our people together.

 

This Reconciliation Day must afford our country an opportunity to reflect on
the deeper structural and racial patterns of the past that affect ordinary
South Africans, majority being black people in Soweto, Chatsworth and
Mitchells Plain and elsewhere. These and other challenges should not be used
by political opportunists to further tear our nation apart, but rather as
rallying points around which we must all unite to build a society we can all
be proud of. These structural issues stem from the legacy of colonialism and
apartheid of which the country sorely needs to reconcile.

 

The African National Congress calls on all South Africans to use the day to
reflect on our journey as a nation, reflect on the contribution of
reconciliation and peace to a South Africa that is better today than it was
in 1994 and the journey that we must all travel to move our nation even
further forward.

 

 

Issued by:

Zizi Kodwa

National Spokesperson

African National Congress

 

Enquiries:

Keith Khoza, 082 823 9672

Khusela Sangoni, 072 854 5707

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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