Rekindling the South African dream
Fellow
South African citizens, I am here today to invite you to join me on a
journey to build the country of our dreams. I ask those of you of my
generation: let us cast our minds back to the run up to 1994 and the
moments immediately following the dawn of our freedom.
Do
you remember our patience and quiet dignity as we waited in long queues
to cast our very first votes as citizens of a free South Africa? Do you
remember how you choked with emotion and had goose bumps as you made
your very first cross on the ballot? Do you remember the tears of joy
and relief when we watched our first President, Rolihlahla Mandela,
being honoured with a fly-past by the air-force that was to have its
first democratically elected commander in chief? Do you remember how
Madiba inspired us to action in these words of his inaugural address?
"Our
daily deeds as ordinary South Africans must produce an actual South
African reality that will reinforce humanity's belief in justice,
strengthen its confidence in the nobility of the human soul and sustain
all our hopes for a glorious life for all."
Do
you remember the dream we embraced to build ours into a great society -
a prosperous constitutional democracy united in its diversity? Do you
remember our commitment to promote human dignity (Ubuntu) and banish
humiliation and disrespect of our apartheid past? Do you remember our
vow to promote transparency and accountability in public life? Do you
remember that we agreed that our democracy would be known for being
responsive to the social and economic needs of all citizens? Do you
remember?
As a daughter of Limpopo, a rural
province, and an adopted resident of the Eastern Cape, another rural
province, I have seen both the high points and low points of our
imagined future. I have had to overcome the high barriers to opportunity
confronting many black people, especially black rural women, to become a
student activist, a medical doctor, a community development activist, a
researcher, a university executive, a global public servant at the
World Bank and now an active citizen in both the public and private
sectors. Key to my success is the support and encouragement I received
from my family, my teachers, my friends and fellow citizens. My journey
is the journey of a searcher who never gives up dreaming of a better
tomorrow.
The country of our dreams has
unfortunately faded for many of my fellow South Africans. The dream has
faded for my sisters and brothers in rural areas who live under the
threat of being again made subjects of traditional chiefs and other
unelected traditional leaders through proposed acts of our own
Parliament. The dream has faded for the many living in poverty and
destitution in our increasingly unequal society. And perhaps worst of
all, my generation has to confess to the young people of our country: we
have failed you. We have failed to build for you an education and
training system to prepare you for life in the 21st century. As a result
the dream has faded for young people in both urban and rural areas.
I
am here today to invite you, young and old, to re-imagine the country
of our dreams and to commit to building it into a reality in the lives
of every
South African. I have said that I
am no messiah. No single individual acting on their own can build our
nation into the country of our dreams. But I am willing to be a bridge
between my generation – those of us who fought for freedom who remember
not only with their minds but also with their hearts – and that of my
children. For us the dream remains alive as a link between those who
sacrificed their lives for freedom to be born and those who live in the
hope of seeing the reality of the dream come alive in their own life
time.
Today I announce that I am working
with a group of fellow citizens to form a party political platform that
will focus on rekindling hope that building the country of our dreams is
possible in our lifetime. Our consultations and conversations across
the lengths and breadths of our country have confirmed a hunger for a
new beginning. Young and old, poor and rich, men and women, urban and
rural people are yearning for a political platform that can put our
country first. A platform that will be open to all South Africans of
good will who want to build the country of our dreams. This will be a
platform that will capture the best in us and enable us to transcend our
divided past and work together as a society united in our diversity. It
is a platform that will seek to work with others to reduce the
fragmentation in the political landscape and to realign politics towards
a focus on putting the country first. We launch this initiative under
the name Agang, or in the Nguni languages of our country, Akhani, which
can be interpreted in English as “Build South Africa”.
The
decision to enter party politics has not come easily. I have never been
a member of a political party nor aspired to political office. I
however feel called to lead the efforts of many South Africans who
increasingly fear that we are missing too many opportunities to become
that which we have the potential to become – a great society. I have no
illusions about the difficult road ahead. Bridges get trampled on. But I
trust my fellow South Africans’ capacity to come together at critical
times to do what others believe is impossible. I believe in our
potential for greatness. I believe that greatness is within our grasp if
only we can reach out across divisions and self-interests and put the
country first.
Our country is at risk
because self-interest has become the driver of many of those in
positions of authority who should be focussed on serving the public. The
great society to which we committed ourselves following our relatively
peaceful political transition is rapidly unraveling before our eyes. The
impressive achievements of the past eighteen years are being undermined
by poor governance at all levels of society. An unchecked culture of
impunity and the abuse of power as well as public resources rob
children, young people, rural and urban poor people of the fruits of
freedom.
Corruption, nepotism and patronage
have become the hallmarks of the conduct of many in public service.
Corruption is theft. It steals textbooks from our school children. It
steals drugs from sick people. It steals social grants from old people
and poor children. It robs citizens of hope and destroys dreams. This
party political platform will declare war on corruption. It will work
with all those in civil society as well as individual citizens and
dedicated public servants who share our concerns to fight this scourge.
Why has the Dream Faded and What Can We Do Now?
Mind-set Change from Subjects to Citizens
We
have seriously under-estimated what it would take to walk the journey
from being subjects of undemocratic governments, denied the right to
make our own choices, to become citizens of a constitutional democracy,
reclaiming control over our lives. We did not stop and take the time at
the beginning of our journey in 1994 to work on shifting our mind-sets
from those of compliant subjects to those of dignified citizens. It is
not surprising that despair and hopelessness is driving many decent
people to violence in both the domestic and public spaces. The majority
of citizens feel excluded and disrespected at all levels of their daily
lives. Violence is the weapon of those who feel powerless. The risks to
the enormous potential for a great future are becoming obvious to even
the most optimistic amongst us.
We have not
invested adequately in educating for democracy. Civic education, a
cornerstone of all thriving democracies, is absent in our homes,
schools, places of worship, work places and communities. Citizens must
be given the opportunity to share in supportive conversations about the
fears and insecurities that make them prisoners of the past. The most
troubling example of our failure to shift our mindsets and take
ownership of our country is that less than 10% of South Africans – young
and old – self-identify as South Africans first.
Ethnicity,
religion and economic class come first to mind for the majority of
citizens. How can we build the country of our dreams if we do not
identify intimately with it and make it what defines us? How can we
build a country united in its diversity if we do not put the country
first in our souls and hearts?
We must build
a sense of common South African citizenship. We must promote healing
circles across the lengths and breadths of our society to free our souls
from the fear of the unknown and dependencies on authority figures that
undermine our ability to shape our future with confidence. We will work
with those in civil society who are drafting a Citizen Charter to help
guide us on our journey to the country of our dreams.
Empowering the People to Govern
Our
society’s greatness is being fundamentally undermined by a massive
failure of governance. Our rallying cry during the struggle for freedom
was for the people to govern, yet the system of choosing Members of
Parliament from lists drawn up by political parties gives
disproportionate power to party bosses at the expense of ordinary
citizens. We should be able to vote for the person in our own area we
want to represent us in Parliament, so we can hold them accountable for
the electoral promises they make. We want an MP for Marikana, an MP for
De Doorns, and an MP for Sasolburg, so if the people are unhappy and the
MP is not responsive enough, they will be voted out at the next
election. South Africa’s people are effectively being prevented from
governing by the country’s electoral system. We will be working with
fellow citizens to launch a million signature campaign for electoral
reform. Electoral reform must be the first order of business of the
post-2014 election parliament.
Governance
failure is also reflected in the manner in which powerful vested
interests have undermined key decision making and proper management of
assets of the state. This is reflected by the seamless manner in which
the party, the government, the president and the state have merged into a
monolith of impunity. The ANC's Chancellor House investment arm
represents the most blatant example of how the governing party has
abused the state to benefit its loyalists and to sustain itself in
power. The most troubling aspect of Chancellor House investments is the
lack of transparency of its deals. What we do know is that the
participation of Chancellor House as a BEE partner of Hitachi, a
supplier of Eskom’s Medupi Power Station, makes a mockery of the ANC’s
claim to accountable and transparent governance. Poor people are the
biggest losers as a result of the unholy business-government alliances
designed to aggressively pursue commercial interests for political
elites.
Workers and poor people are also the
victims of the interests of privileged union leaders becoming too
closely tied to those of government. We will defend the right of workers
to unionize and protect their rights at all times. We also work to
enable unions and other worker representatives to participate fully in
the promotion of opportunities for workers to be trained and enjoy
modern quality of life benefits. The distance that has developed between
workers and union leaders undermines not only good labour relations but
also productivity that comes from job satisfaction and a sense of
fulfillment by all workers. Our platform will promote full engagement of
workers in shaping a prosperous society for all, and the strengthening
of the role of government in serving all citizens equally.
Building a Competent Public Service
The
poor performance of our public service is a major obstacle to providing
citizens with quality public services. Lack of competence in public
service seriously undermines competitiveness, economic growth, job
creation and the general improvement of living standards in South
Africa. Our failure to create a competent, professional and non-partisan
public service undermines the quality of governance at all levels.
Public service failures and corruption hurt poor people most.
We
are committed to establishing a competent, performance managed and
professional state bureaucracy that serves the public. Co-ordination and
collaboration must be at the heart of the culture of public service to
ensure efficiency and effectiveness at all levels of government. Public
service must become a desirable career option for committed patriots.
South
Africa has the necessary depth of expertise and experience to run a
modern democracy. We need to depoliticize the public service beyond
agreed levels where political deployment of competent dedicated
professionals is desirable. We are determined to promote the development
of technical and specialist professional skills among public servants,
improving relations between national, provincial and local government.
We do have good and competent public servants who try their best to
serve with integrity. But too many of us are not treated with the
dignity we expect and
deserve. We need to build a humane, caring public service.
Building a Restructured Economy
Our
nation’s progress is hampered by an economy that does not work for
every South African. There is no justification for so much poverty in
the midst of so much opulence in our society. The tragic events at
Marikana and the revolt by farm workers in the Western Cape Boland area
have underscored the urgent need for restructuring the foundations of
our economy. The legacy of the exclusionary economic and political
systems that continue to characterise the primary sectors of mining and
agriculture undermines our present and future economic prospects.
It
is appalling to learn that an estimated 71 percent of South Africans in
the 15-34 age group who make up 60 percent of our population, are not
participating in the economy, and are instead forced to accept the
humiliating substitute of social grants. How can we build the country of
our dreams when the most energetic and innovative segment of the
population is unable to participate in the economy of their own country?
We
have failed to transform our economy to become one that gives everyone
opportunities to live in dignity as contributors to building our
country. We must create an environment that creates incentives for job
creation and opportunities for livelihoods for all. The mining sector’s
business model based on reliance on the migrant labour system and large
numbers of low-cost, low-skilled labour is unsustainable. The mining and
agricultural industries have to migrate to a business model that
invests in skills of its workers, uses innovative technologies to remain
competitive and create new type of jobs and opportunities for all.
Another important test for our country is how to improve the skills of
the rapidly increasing pool of unskilled and semi-skilled labour to give
them jobs in an economy that is dominated by the services sector. We
have to become much more focused on productivity and competitiveness in
our areas of strength and become a desirable investment destination and
supplier of choice internationally.
Building Education and Training Systems for the 21 st century
The
alarming collapse of education in our public schools represents a grave
threat to our future. It is woeful, shameful that we should have such
low expectations of young South Africans that we are prepared to accept
thirty percent as a pass mark for school leavers. What nation can expect
to succeed in the 21st century with such low levels of standards of
education?
Restructuring our economy to meet
today’s challenges requires a concerted focus on turning around the
public education and training system that is failing the majority of
young South Africans. The fight against poverty and inequality cannot be
won without radical transformation of our education and training system
into one that promotes and rewards excellence at all levels. Teaching
should once again become a proud profession for all teachers who are
entrusted with the future of our children. Investment in adequate
infrastructure including access to information technology teaching and
learning support should be the entitlement of every child and teacher.
Our children deserve better. Our teachers deserve better.
The
time has come for us to work together to establish an education and
training system that re-ignites the self-confidence and hopes of young
South
Africans to be part of the shaping of the country of our dreams. This
requires a bold national leadership that can unite South Africans in
the
promotion of excellent education for all citizens. Ours must be a
society in which every child matters and their talents are nurtured to
enable them to become the best that they can be.
Raising South Africa’s Standing in the World.
Our
country has lost the moral authority and international respect it
enjoyed when it became a democracy. This has largely to do with our
failure to understand the complexity of formulating foreign policy
positions in our inter-connected world. We have also not utilized the
expertise that resides amongst South Africans of goodwill beyond those
in government. The most serious flaw in our foreign policy stances is
our failure to consistently align our policies with the human rights
principles of our Constitution. We have taken positions in the
multilateral arena in recent years on vexed issues such as Zimbabwe,
Darfur and Myanmar that are at variance with our human rights
principles.
South Africa’s global standing
has also been diminished by the surrender of our country’s national
sovereignty to appease foreign powers such as China, as the case of the
Dalai Lama’s unsuccessful visa application to visit our shores showed.
Moreover, South Africa’s international influence has been undercut by a
foreign policy that has failed to define a coherent strategy for our
country’s external engagements.
We need to
provide greater clarity on our foreign policy objectives and ensure that
these are in tune with our economic diplomacy efforts. The structural
shifts in the global economy – reflected in the rapid rise of developing
and emerging economies and a redirection of trade and investment
towards Asia, Latin America and Africa – present our country with
abundant opportunities to advance its national economic interests.
We
have not exploited these opportunities adequately. We have also not
sufficiently used our strong position as an African country to provide
leadership,
especially on regional integration processes, and to forge strong
mutually beneficial relationships in a continent that is set to
outperform others in a struggling global economy.
The
lack of a strategic approach to migration and our failure to articulate
policies that attract and retain skills for our competitiveness has
left us in a situation where we have the worst of all sides of
migration. Our failure to protect our borders has created a huge burden
of uncontrolled economic and political refugees. This burden has
generated a virulent xenophobic response from poor people who are forced
to compete with much more determined migrants and refugees. We should
be the magnet for Africa’s most talented skilled people and be able to
respond systematically to deserving political refugees.
Restoring
our country’s standing in the global arena and articulating a clear
strategy for international political, diplomatic and economic
engagements, in an increasingly complex global environment, must become
an overarching priority of our foreign policy.
Rekindling the dream
We
are here to invite people of my generation to rekindle the South Africa
of our dreams. We are here to invite people of my sons' generation to
experience for themselves the thrill of living in an age of excitement
and possibility. We are here to mobilize to build a world-beating 21st
century democracy. We are here to invite you all to rediscover and live
the values that made us a great nation. We are here to make sure that
Ubuntu becomes again a way of life and ensure that every South African
feels valued because they are human. We are here to ensure that being
human must again become the most important status. We are here to invite
all citizens to help turn our country away from the road to ruin that
it seems to be set on.
We have been here
before. We managed to pull ourselves from the brink of disaster before
and surprised those who under-estimated our resolve as a people. The
political party platform we are working on forming is an opportunity for
all citizens to join hands in shaping it to ensure that it responds to
the yearnings of citizens who have largely stood on the sidelines for
lack of an appropriate political home. This is an opportunity for
citizens to take ownership of their own country’s destiny and shape it.
We need to have the courage of our convictions and not let fear imprison
us.
I invite all compatriots to work with
us to build a South Africa we can all be proud of. We owe it to you, our
children, and your children to leave
them a
legacy of a great country. I have put up my hand. I ask you all to join
this effort. Our children and grandchildren deserve nothing less.
Our mothers and grandmothers deserve nothing less. All South Africans deserve nothing less.
Thank you.
Mamphela Ramphele
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