President Jacob Zuma, Opening Address to 5th ANC National Policy Conference

 

NASREC Expo Centre, Johannesburg, 30 June 2017

 

Comrade Chairperson, Cde Baleka Mbete

Deputy President, Cde Cyril Ramaphosa,

National Officials of the ANC,

Members of the National Executive Committee,

Leadership of the Leagues of the ANC,

Leadership of the SACP, COSATU and SANCO,

Leadership of MKMVA

Stalwarts and Veterans of our Movement,

Leadership of all structures of the Mass Democratic Movement, Traditional,
Religious and Business leaders,

Esteemed delegates from all ANC Structures, especially the branches

International guests,

 

Comrades and friends,

 

Fellow South Africans,

 

We convey warm greetings to all of you at 5th National Policy Conference of
the African National congress.

 

Over the next few days we shall scrutinise the health of the organisation in
pursuit of organisational renewal, and also discuss our policy proposals for
the country ahead of the national conference in December.

 

Our discussions must be informed by unity, which is the rock upon which the
ANC was founded. We were taught this by the founding leaders of the
movement.

 

In 1911 when he announced the founding conference of the ANC, Pixley ka
Isaka Seme made an appeal for unity, stating that

 

"The demon of racialism, the aberrations of the Xhosa-Fingo feud, the
animosity that exists between the Zulus and the Tongaas, between the Basutos
and every other Native must be buried and forgotten; it has shed among us
sufficient blood! We are one people. 

 

"These divisions, these jealousies, are the cause of all our woes and of all
our backwardness and ignorance to-day".

 

Unity must be the thread that keeps this movement and our country together.

 

Comrades and compatriots,

 

The policy conference takes place during a difficult period economically in
our country. The economy has entered into a technical recession. At the time
of the Budget in February, the economy was expected to grow at a low 1.3 per
cent in 2017.

 

Given the current difficulties, even this low grow rate may now not be
achieved. 

 

Our deliberations in this conference on the economy will need to look at
what needs to be done to reignite growth over the next five years.

 

This conference also takes place against the background of good progress
that has been made in the country in the past 23 years in consolidating
democracy and also in expanding access to a better life.

 

We have over the past two decades developed a functional democratic State,
with an executive, parliament and judiciary that continue to execute their
tasks, informed by the Constitution, serving the people of our country.

 

The ANC affirms the independence of the judiciary and the rule of law and we
promote respect for our courts as final arbiters in disputes in society.

 

Our constitutional democracy is also characterised by freedom of the media
which is enshrined in the Constitution. The ANC promotes the rights of
journalists to work freely, safely and without hindrance in our country. We
also promote media independence from various interests, professionalism as
well as balanced and accurate reporting at all times.

 

The ANC government has worked consistently to expand basic services that
improve the quality of life to the poor and the working class. These include
improved education and health care, housing for the poor, electricity, water
and infrastructure in areas that were neglected by the previous apartheid
regimes.

 

Social security has been expanded to reach 18 million people made up of
vulnerable children including orphans under the age of eighteen, senior
citizens, persons living with disability and military veterans.

 

This has contributed immensely to the alleviation of extreme poverty.

 

This is in addition to other social security covers like unemployment
insurance, compensation for injury or duty and road accident cover. These
have also been made accessible to all our people.

 

The ANC has increased access to economic opportunities for black people who
were excluded before through various economic programmes.

 

The ANC prides itself on the growth of the black middle class through its
policies and programmes, including affirmative action and broad based black
economic empowerment. These need to be broadened to reach even more people
in the next five years.

 

The huge expansion of basic services has been achieved in spite of an
economy that had been gutted by the Apartheid system.

 

Much more still needs to be done to reach more communities who are still
waiting for services across the country.

 

Conference will thus need to reflect on the pace and quality of the
implementation of ANC programmes and how this can be improved further to
improve the lives of more people in our country, as we reverse the legacy of
apartheid colonialism.

 

Comrades and compatriots,

 

The ANC is a national liberation movement which is now in government.

 

The movement has also faced several challenges over the past few years in
the changing terrain of struggle, which have impacted on the character of
the organisation. 

 

There has been a development of some very negative tendencies which have
caused frustration and disillusionment amongst the membership and population
at large.

 

This policy conference is called upon to seriously look into these
developments and emerge with recommendations that will help redirect the
movement to its core business and its core mission and character.

 

In doing so we must draw on lessons from the past 100 years, with regards to
how the ANC has survived to become the oldest liberation movement in the
continent.

 

The ANC survived for a century because of amongst others the following
traits: 

.       Its deep roots and connection with the people;

.       Its vibrant internal democracy and collective leadership;

.       Its readiness and willingness of its members to make sacrifices in
pursuit of the cause of the people as a whole;

.       Its readiness to acknowledge its weaknesses and decisively address
them in order to escalate and accelerate the people's struggle;

.       Its ability to adapt to changing conditions and rise to the occasion
at critical moments; and

.       Its ability to uphold and build unity a cross section of South
Africans and progressive forces in the world in pursuit of the cause of
humanity.

 

Importantly, the ANC has succeeded over the past decades due to its capacity
to mobilise other sectors such as business, the faith-based community,
non-governmental organisations, community organisations, the sports
fraternity, students, traditional leaders, the international community and
the intelligentsia amongst others behind the programme of transformation.

 

We need to restore these traits as they have made the ANC a parliament of
the people.

 

It is not the first time that we discuss organisational renewal. We do it
ahead of every national conference of our movement. However, at this
conference, we must be solutions-based.

 

We will discuss the health of the organisation not just for the sake of it,
but because our country needs a united, strong, focused and cohesive ANC.
The ANC belongs to the people of South Africa, and we must fix it so that it
can continue improving the lives of our people.

 

Ahead of the discussions, we need to remind ourselves of the objectives and
mission of the movement.

 

The ANC is guided by the objectives of the National Democratic Revolution. 

 

As outlined in our Strategy and Tactics document, the main content of the
NDR remains the liberation of Africans in particular and Blacks in general
from political and socio-economic bondage. It means uplifting the quality of
life of all South Africans, especially the poor, the majority of whom are
African and female".

 

The NDR seeks to resolve the main and interrelated contradictions of
national oppression based on race, class especially the exploitation of
black workers, and the triple oppression of women. 

 

The ANC also remains committed to the objective of the NDR of uniting South
Africans in building a united, non-racial, non-sexist, democratic and
prosperous South Africa. 

 

The non-racial character of the movement has indeed always been one of the
defining features of the ANC.

 

The ANC also remains a multi-class organisation, with a bias towards the
working class and the poor. 

 

The ANC also seeks to retain and strengthen its position as the strategic
centre of power, the leader of the Alliance, a disciplined force of the
left, a mass movement and an internationalist movement with an
anti-imperialist outlook. 

 

Importantly, our discussions should be geared towards restoring the core
values and principles of our movement.

 

These are unity, selflessness, sacrifice, collective leadership, humility,
honesty, discipline, hard work, internal debates, constructive criticism and
self-criticism and mutual respect. 

 

This is the ANC that our people know and love.

 

We know too, that despite the challenges it faces currently, the ANC still
represents the hopes, dreams and aspirations of millions of our people. Our
people want the ANC to resolve its difficulties and continue with its
mission of transforming South Africa and building a better life for all.

 

To restore and maintain its character the ANC needs to cleanse itself of the
negative tendencies which have crept in over the years.

 

These tendencies, which have been outlined before, include patronage,
corruption, social distance, factionalism, abuse of power and membership
system anomalies such as the reported manipulation of the membership data,
gate keeping and bulk buying of membership. 

 

Factionalism is a cancer that must be rooted out of the ANC.

 

It has caused splits from the ANC which has negatively affected us both
quantitatively and qualitatively. Slate politics, another manifestation of
factionalism, has cost us many good and capable comrades in whom our
movement has invested significantly. 

 

We also need to look at the issue of ill-discipline in various forms,
including public utterances attacking the movement by ANC leaders and
members instead of handling matters within the organization and finding
constructive solutions.

 

Some members and leaders of the ANC have become primary conveyors of
negative information about their own movement.

 

The challenge for the country is that this irresponsible perpetual negative
messaging by our own people has a negative impact on the economy. We need to
discuss how we can balance our valued trait of self-criticism with the need
to protect the ANC and provide it with the space to resolve problems in a
more organized manner. 

 

We also need to be able to differentiate between self-criticism and the
furtherance of certain interests and agendas.

 

Comrades,

 

Our movement suffered a serious setback in the August 3, 2016 local
government elections and experienced a decline of about eight percent of the
national vote.

 

Our discussions here will reflect on these elections for lessons to be drawn
and solutions to be found.

 

We lost control of some key metropolitan municipalities including
Johannesburg, Tshwane and Nelson Mandela Bay. 

 

In Ekurhuleni we managed to form a coalition to retain control of the
Council. 

Opposition parties formed coalitions to wrest control from our party. Part
of the focus on renewal is aimed at enabling the ANC to regain that lost
ground. 

 

The good news is that this week we managed to win Mogale City back as the
ANC.

 

Since the announcement of the election results, members and supporters of
the ANC have, out of pain and genuine concern, been engaged in varying
degrees in robust discussions about what has gone wrong with their beloved
movement, and how we lost the metros.

 

The National Executive Committee meeting in the immediate aftermath of the
announcement of the results attributed our loss of support to perceptions in
society that we are soft on corruption, we are self-serving and that the ANC
is arrogant. These are based on research findings we had undertaken before
the elections, which proved to be correct.

 

We also visit many parts of the country and people tell us what the problems
are. They do complain about ANC leaders and deployees who fail to make time
to talk to them and listen to their problems. 

 

This does not apply to all deployees or government officials but one
dismissive and arrogant ANC leader or official implementing ANC policies is
one too many.

 

The NEC has also referred to social restlessness, which manifests itself
through the increasing number of community protest actions and what appears
to be a growing tendency for these to turn violent. 

 

However we do not condone violent protests as people can make their voices
heard in a peaceful manner, protected by the Constitution.

 

In fact, the view of the ANC is that damage to state property in particular,
must be categorised as a serious offence punishable by a long-term sentence.
However, we should take these protests seriously as part of the diagnosis of
what has gone wrong. Why do people now communicate with us through protests?

 

This conference must diagnose the real problems that led to the decline in
electoral support, and propose effective remedial action.

 

We must not be emotional in our discussions about what caused our electoral
loss. We must be open minded and use the facts before us combined with our
revolutionary theory as the framework for analysis and interpretation.     

 

Importantly, we must also be prepared to discuss the South African political
economy as the overall context under which our electoral support has
declined. 

 

In addition to the weak capacity of the state and internal organisational
problems, the unfavourable global economic environment has put a strain on
our own economic development and potential for job creation which causes
frustration.

 

As stated by Amilcar Cabral once, people want a better life. 

 

He said; "Always bear in mind that the people are not fighting for ideas,
for the things in anyone's head. They are fighting to win material benefits,
to live better and in peace, to see their lives go forward and to guarantee
the future of their children."

 

Comrades,

 

We must unite around promoting integrity and curbing possible abuse of power
and corruption among ANC members.

 

In this regard, it is critical for us to discuss the impact on the
organization, of the ANC being in government and our cadres having access to
state power and resources.

 

The access to state power and resources has led to perceptions and
allegations that the ANC is a corrupt organization, given allegations of
wrongdoing in certain cases with regards to state tenders.

 

The failure to respond adequately and timeously to allegations and the
length of time that it takes for investigations to be concluded, cause
immense damage to the image of government and the ANC.

 

There is also talk in the country currently about the capture of the state
or government in the main, by business interests.

 

We support the establishment of a judicial commission of inquiry to look
into the matter.

 

At a political level, this debate requires a thoroughgoing analysis of the
South African political economy so that we can understand what is meant by
the State Capture. We need to know which business interests have sought to
influence the ANC and its government over the years, with what impact, and
what must be done to end the said capture.

 

Such discussion is important because the ANC as the leader of society must
be at the forefront of fighting corruption both in the public and private
sector. 

 

We have introduced important pieces of legislation and have created very
powerful institutions specifically to deal with corruption.  

 

At the last Conference in Mangaung in 2012 we established the Integrity
Committee as an internal mechanism.  This Policy Conference will have
occasion to review the efficacy of this measure based on the experience of
the past five years or so.

 

Comrades,

 

We also need to assess if our problems lie with the manner in which ANC
leadership is selected.

 

The most significant contribution that the ANC has given to our country over
many years is tried and tested leaders who inspire confidence and trust
among the masses of our people. 

 

The ANC produced Oliver Tambo, Walter Sisulu, Helen Joseph, Yusuf Dadoo,
Lillian Ngoyi and many others. 

 

The leadership election processes must be democratic and free from
manipulation and external influences. In this way we can protect the
movement from abuse. We must therefore ensure that leaders are selected in
line with the requirements outlined in our blueprint, Through the Eye of the
Needle.

 

Political education also remains paramount for both new and existing
members. 

 

Without schooling members in the traditions of the ANC, we cannot criticize
them when they make mistakes.

 

This is all important as we head towards our elective conference in
December. 

 

Comrades,

 

The renewal of the organization also relates to the functioning of our
Leagues and other structures, and also strengthening the Tripartite
Alliance.

 

The Alliance was formed out of struggle and out of a shared vision as
articulated in the Freedom Charter. It is based on the understanding that
each Alliance component enjoys political independence from the others. 

 

Our discussions about the renewal of the ANC must reflect on the
relationship with the Alliance partners and how this can be strengthened so
that it continues its role of advancing the goals of the NDR.

 

The unity of the Alliance is sacrosanct and must be protected at all times.
It must not be undermined by sectarian agendas and personal hatred. 

 

Comrades and compatriots,

 

Organizational renewal discussions must also include the role of women in
the ANC and society, and what else the ANC must do to advance the vision of
a non-sexist society and gender equality. A lot of progress has already been
made in advancing the status of women, and the ANC Women's League has played
a key role in this regard. We need to reflect on what else needs to be done
to promote gender equality.

 

Comrades,

 

There is clearly a need for a strong Veterans League and uMkhonto Wesizwe
Military Veterans Association, in order to provide a platform for more
veterans and stalwarts to participate in the work and life of the
organisation.

 

Comrades,

 

The South African population is becoming increasingly youthful. 

 

These young people have very little to no real experience of the brutality
of apartheid. The ANC needs to adapt and become responsive to the needs of
our youth today. It must talk to their interests, from access to education,
jobs, the need to reduce data costs, entrepreneurship to general social
issues of concern to them. 

One of the key issues affecting our youth is funding for higher education
and jobs. 

 

The Freedom Charter emphasises that: "Education shall be free, compulsory,
universal and equal for all children; Higher education and technical
training shall be opened to all by means of state allowances and
scholarships awarded on the basis of merit." 

 

The Constitution takes forward this promise, declaring that: "Everyone has
the right (a) to a basic education, including adult basic education; and (b)
to further education, which the state, through reasonable measures, must
make progressively available and accessible."

 

In 2007, the ANC Policy conference resolved that "free higher education for
the poor up to undergraduate level" must be progressively implemented and
this was reiterated at the Mangaung policy conference.  

 

The funds allocated to the National Students Financial Aid Scheme for loans
and bursaries to students at public universities and Technical and
Vocational Education and Training colleges have increased substantially from
more than two billion rand in 2009 to more than twelve billion rand in 2017.


 

This policy conference will provide for robust discussion of the
possibilities for providing quality affordable higher education to as many
South Africans as possible and free education for the poor.

 

This policy conference comes at an opportune time as we eagerly await the
report of the Presidential Commission into the feasibility of fee-free
higher education and training.  

 

The deadline for the Commission to complete its work is today, 30 June 2017
and we await the report.

 

Comrades and friends,

 

I would now like to reflect briefly on some of the policy imperatives before
conference this week.

 

We recall the instructive words of our President OR Tambo whose centenary we
will be celebrating in October this year. 

 

He said:

 

"Comrades, you might think it is very difficult to wage a liberation
struggle. Wait until you are in power. I might be dead by then. 

 

At that stage you will realize that it is actually more difficult to keep
the power than to wage a liberation war. 

 

People will be expecting a lot of services from you. You will have to
satisfy the various demands of the masses of our people''. 

 

Indeed OR was so right! We have a duty to sharpen our policies and ensure
their effective implementation in order to meet the needs of our people and
push back poverty, inequality and unemployment.

 

While all our programmes are important, the economy remains our apex
priority. 

 

Over the last seven years the ANC placed the creation of decent jobs through
inclusive growth as a key strategic outcome. We adopted the National
Development Plan as a broad framework to achieve this and other strategic
outcomes. 

 

The National Development Plan (NDP) and the Nine Point Plan to reignite
growth remain relevant towards achieving radical economic transformation. 

 

However, some extra-ordinary measures are necessary to move the NDP forward
faster. 

 

At the last national conference in Mangaung, we resolved to embark on the
Second More Radical Phase of Transition to a National Democratic Society.

 

We said that this phase would be characterised by more radical policies and
decisive action in order to achievesocio-economic and continued democratic
transformation.

 

Radical socio-economic transformation, as defined by the ANC NEC in January
this year, refers to a fundamental change in the structure, systems,
institutions and patterns of ownership and control of the economy in favour
of all South Africans, especially the poor, the majority of whom are African
and female. 

 

Its components include the creation of jobs, accelerating shared and
inclusive growth, transforming the structure of production and ownership of
the means of production and enabling the talents and productive potential of
our people to flourish. 

 

The instruments that government must use to advance radical socio-economic
transformation have also been identified.

 

These are the Constitution, legislation and regulations, licensing, Broad
based black economic empowerment and transformation charters, the national
budget and procurement, State Owned Companies and Development Finance
Institutions, as well as government programmes.

 

Conference will discuss a number of interventions needed to advance radical
socio-economic transformation.

 

Some of the measures must include accelerated land redistribution, land
reform and huge support for agriculture and agro-processing on a large
scale. Land in particular remains one of the most contentious and emotive
issues in our society.

 

The pace of land restoration and redistribution remains a sore point for
millions of our people who were shunted to a small portion often of the
lowest quality of land and even denied the right to purchase land in areas
that were reserved for a minority of citizens.

 

We believe it is possible to find radical solutions to land hunger, working
within the ambit of the law and the Constitution.

 

We also need to discuss ways of sustaining commercial agriculture and to
increase agricultural contribution to the Gross Domestic Product.

 

We need to pursue industrialization strategies, instead of depending on
export of natural resources or raw materials, with declining commodity
prices. 

 

We must increase investment into infrastructure projects, prioritise
townships and rural areas and provide generous subsidies to black
industrialists and entrepreneurs to build new factories and businesses.

 

We also need to consider the transformation and de-racialisation of the
highly concentrated financial sector in the interest of vast majority of the
country. 

 

The licensing of Post Bank is also important, and to give it capacity so
that it can distribute social grants. 

 

Government must drive local procurement and supplier development and ensure
that black owned companies benefit from government procurement. 

 

The mining licence regime and charter must be utilised to facilitate BBEEE,
local procurement, the development of black industrialists and SMMEs.

 

These are all programmes that we must use to drive economic transformation.

 

The State-Owned Enterprises are a strategic instrument for the developmental
state. 

 

But as experience indicates we have to get them to the right level of
performance and governance for them to achieve their mission. 

 

The improvement of governance at these SOEs is of utmost importance.
Challenges in SOEs such as the SABC, SAA and Eskom have been a subject of
public debates and finding solutions is critical for the ANC.

 

Building partnerships with business is also important for the country to
achieve much needed growth. Government will need to proactively engage all
sectors of business to encourage their participation in industrial
expansion, economic growth and job creation. 

 

Other key programmes forming part of the radical socio-economic
transformation programme include National Health Insurance and the
Comprehensive Social Security.

 

The transformation programme also talks to the eradication of social ills
including violence against women and children. 

 

The ANC government has made the killings of women a priority crime and the
police have been directed to treat such cases with seriousness and urgency. 

 

Also key is the need to eradicate the abuse of drugs and substance abuse
which are tearing communities apart, from the Cape Flats to Umlazi,
Soshanguve or Eldorado Park. 

 

We reiterate the call for the ANC branches to establish street committees to
support the police in dealing with this problem. 

 

The ANC government has also begun to take a visible and aggressive stance
against crime generally in our communities and to ensure that criminal gangs
are put behind bars where they belong. Our communities should not be made to
co-exist with criminals. 

 

All these programmes and others require the existence of a capable state.
The public service must be professionalised and Government will need to
teach public servants the philosophy and ethics of the development state and
also of caring for citizens and being responsive to their needs.

 

Government must also develop capacity to communicate better with citizens.

 

The capacity to monitor and evaluate government programmes and planning
ahead is also critical. 

 

Comrades,

 

The delegates here come from the branches of the ANC. You know best the
conditions in which the people live. You know better than anyone else if the
most pressing need is for a clinic or a school. 

 

That is why branches determine the policy of the ANC. Amandla asemasebeni.

 

What we are here for is ultimately to find a common understanding on how
best to address those needs in the shortest and most satisfactory manner.

 

Comrades and friends,

 

Conference will also need to look at the balance of forces and the
resistance to socio-economic transformation that will continue to hinder the
implementation of our policies and programmes.

 

Such resistance comes in different forms. The ANC will continue to
experience resistance to its progressive policies relating to employment
equity, broad-based black economic empowerment, labour market regulation and
land reform. 

 

The use of the courts to oppose our policies and programmes will also
continue and is something we need to reflect on at this conference.

 

At the same time, it should concern us that the ANC-led Government should
have to be directed by the court to implement its own policies better.  

 

We should improve our capacity to implement our programmes without the
courts having to direct us to do so.

 

In parliament we have politics of spectacle and grandstanding, drama and
manipulation. 

 

We have to ask ourselves whether we have honed the skills to manage this and
the growing attempts to draw a wedge between the executive and the
parliamentary caucus of the governing party.  

 

Another form of resistance takes the form of traditional lobbying where
vested economic interests seek to derail transformational policies through
different forms of persuasion.

 

We should also be alive to the dynamics globally and the changing balance of
forces.

 

All our positions in the global village must first and foremost serve the
national interest. 

 

By definition the national democratic revolution is an internationalist
project. 

 

Our revolution is an integral part of the anti-colonial and anti-imperialist
movement for a new world order.

 

Africa is part of us as we are part of Africa first and foremost. Our
struggle is inextricably linked with the struggle against neo-colonialism
and imperialism on our continent. 

 

Our pan-African and internationalist position informs our support for the
struggles of the people of Western Sahara and Palestine for
self-determination.

 

It informs our solidarity with the people of Cuba and against the economic
embargo on this revolutionary nation by the US, and our demands for
institutional reform of the United Nations. 

 

We remain steadfast in our demand for the representation of Africa among the
permanent members of the UN Security Council.

 

Comrades will recall the ANC decision for the country to withdraw from the
International Criminal Court and subsequent government action to effect this
decision. 

 

The government has begun to rectify the procedural challenges that have
arisen. 

 

We have also taken note of the latest reluctance of other member states to
withdraw en bloc. 

 

The current Government position is that the decision to withdraw was a
principle matter and the principle still stands. 

 

As already indicated the ANC is part of the global anti-imperialist
movement.

 

We are historically connected with the countries of the South and therefore
South-South cooperation such as BRICS is primary for our movement. 

 

At the same time we are historically connected with the countries of the
north with whom we have strong economic ties.

 

Comrades we also need to reflect on other developments in the global
environment such as the resurgence of neo-conservatism. 

 

This manifests itself in the victory of centre-right parties in elections in
some of the advanced societies.

 

Other manifestations include the unilateralism on trade and diplomatic
issues, and a retreat to protectionist trade policies.

 

We must reflect on all these positions in the next few days as we discuss
our international relations policy.

 

Comrades,

 

As we begin this very important dialogue on organizational renewal, let us
be reminded of the words of Isithwalandwe Walter Sisulu who said:

 

"It is a law of life that problems arise when conditions are there for their
solution."

 

The ANC is one hundred and five years old because it has always been able to
rise to the occasion to deal decisively with problems that threatened its
very existence. 

 

When we say the ANC can self-correct we mean that when the challenges are
daunting, its cadres are able to go back to what brought them together in
the first place.

 

Let us find what brought us together, and find solutions to the challenges
facing the movement and our country. 

 

Let us not be defeatist in our discussions. Solutions can be found, and must
be found to the challenges facing our movement. 

 

The ANC must and will emerge from this policy conference stronger.

 

Concluding his political report to the 1991 National Conference, President
Oliver Tambo made the following remarks:

 

"We did not tear ourselves apart because of lack of progress at times. We
were always ready to accept our mistakes and to correct them. Above all we
succeeded to foster and defend the unity of the ANC and the unity of our
people in general. 

 

"Even in bleak moments, we were never in doubt regarding the winning of
freedom. We have never been in doubt that the people`s cause shall triumph."

 

We honour our forebears and our martyrs today and in their memory, let us
make this 5th National Policy Conference a success.

 

I thank you.

Amandla!

Matla!

All Power!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 



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