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Premier Sylvia Lucas called on men and people of the province as a whole, to take a stand against the scourge of violence against Women and Children, during the official launch the Provincial Men’s forum in Kuruman on 25 August 2017.
MEC Gift Van Staden echoed the message that the provincial Men’s forum is a gathering to end the brutality against the vulnerable people in our communities. He reiterated his desire to see this movement impact the communities in the province in a profound way.
The Premier said that the violence against vulnerable people was about power relations and the struggle of dominance and the perpetual cycle of abuse. She continued by saying, “it is a choice and it is up to us to break the cycle of violence”.
The men at the launch took a pledge to stop the violence against Women and Children. Two men from each of the five districts in the province were chosen to be representatives in the forum and to continue the fight to end abuse against Women, Children and People with disabilities.
Programme Director, Mr Zhang Yinqiao
His Honour, the Executive Vice-Governor of Hunan Province Mr Chen Zhaoxiong
Economic and Commercial Counsellor of Chinese Embassy, Mr Rong Yansong
Members of the Executive Council
Mayors and Councillors
Our esteemed visitors
Distinguished Guests
Ladies and Gentlemen
Ni Hao (hello in chinese)
It is particular pleasing and heart-warming to have the Executive Vice-Governor, Mr Chen Zhaoxiong and the entire delegation in our midst this morning. Let me on behalf of the entire Provincial Government and its people extend our warmest Northern Cape greetings to you.
Huanying (welcome)
We are especially delighted to bring together business and political leaders from the People’s Republic of China and the Northern Cape to deepen our engagement that will unlock mutually beneficial business opportunities.
The Northern Cape is the largest province of South Africa with a landmass of three hundred and sixty two five hundred and ninety one thousand (362 591) square kilometres covering approximately a third of South Africa. The Province consists of Five District Municipalities namely: Frances Baard, Pixley Ka-Seme; Z F Mgcawu; Namakwa and John Taolo Gaetsewe.
Although we are the largest province in terms of land mass, the Northern Cape has the smallest population of just above one million inhabitants with a population density of 3 persons per square km according to the Census report of 2011. This means that the province proportion of the National population is only 2.2%.
As we gather here this morning, we are reminded of the fact that our President, His Excellency Jacob Gedleyihlekisa Zuma, during the state visit to China in December last year, emphasized the importance of South Africa’s relationship with the Peoples’ Republic of China. We share a historical relationship with China that dates as far back as the early 1990’s. However, for the African National Congress (ANC) this relationship dates back to 1993 when the then ANC President Oliver Tambo took a trip to Beijing to cement the party to party relations. This engagement gave way for the South African Communist Party to forge links with the Chinese Communist Party towards the common goal of development in both countries.
We thus value the working relationship that we share with your country and are deeply humbled by the fact that the President of China, His Excellency Xi Jinping and the government of China honoured us last year by declaring 2014 the year of South Africa in China. Through that kind gesture of courtesy and goodwill, we were given the opportunity to promote our South African culture to the Peoples’ Republic of China.
It is therefore in this spirit that we also extend the same gesture to our friends through celebrating the Year of China in South Africa this year. We also look forward to our national government hosting your national government for the 6th Forum of the China-Africa Cooperation (FOCAC) Summit in December this year.
As stated the ANC has a long standing relationship with the Peoples’ Republic of China. China remained our friend even during the difficult days of Apartheid when the Government of the day oppressed its non-White majority and denied them rights to live as humans in their land. Our Chinese friends stood by our side in our quest for liberation and for this reason we cannot and will never forget our friends.
The African nations were also ardent fighters for China’s seat at the United Nations to be restored in 1971 when twenty six countries voted in favour of the Peoples’ Republic of China. To this day, we are witnessing the commitment made by the Chairman Mao Zedong, the founder of the Peoples’ Republic of China in response to that overwhelming support when he stated that “It was the African friends who carried China back to the UN.”
When President Zuma and other political leaders lobbied for Africa to be included in the BRICS grouping, The Peoples’ Republic of China led the campaign to support that motion – our friendship with China is thus real and has stood the test of time.
Today the Peoples’ Republic of China is South Africa’s largest trading partner in Africa. Since 2009, under the leadership of our President Jacob Zuma stern inroads have been made in strengthening the relations between the two countries. The outcome is manifested in bilateral trade which has soared to $60-billion by 2012 from $1.5- billion in the late 1990’s.
Our undertaking to consolidate our relations with the Peoples’ Republic of China and the Hunan Province in particular is mainly influenced by our common agenda of advancing development in countries to eradicate poverty, unemployment and inequality.
As a precursor to this engagement, we had the BRICS Expo last year in order to deepen our engagement aimed at unlocking business opportunities and connecting our business people with their relevant. This friendship week will undoubtedly strengthen relations of equitable and mutually beneficial cooperation amongst all the stakeholders.
It comes as no coincidence that the Northern Cape is known as the province of opportunity and has tremendous economic potential. It offers investors opportunities in virtually every economic field, from agriculture to mining, from manufacturing to tourism, from infrastructure to fishing, from aquaculture to mariculture and we holds enormous potential in renewable energy resources.
The Northern Cape is dedicated to promoting direct investment and we offer business abundant opportunities to earn handsome returns on their investments. The National Development Plan (NDP) is the blue print of our development agenda. The goals and objectives of the National Development Plan remain at the core of all our policies and programme to address the challenges of inequality, poverty and unemployment.
Ladies and Gentlemen, the fight against unemployment, job creation and economic growth is our central challenge; we want to have sustainable jobs for all our people. For this reason we constantly seek to propel the economy of our province into one which is innovative, inclusive and labour absorbing. With the newly established university of Sol Plaatjie and our urban and rural Technical Vocational and Education Training Colleges we are raising the skills base of especially our youth to respond effectively to the social needs of our community.
It is clear Ladies and Gentlemen, that though we still face enormous challenges, but our province has undoubtedly laid a solid foundation to advance the course of the reconstruction and development of our country in meeting the needs of our society with a special focus on the needs of the previously disadvantaged.
Our ANC led Government is working hard to provide the soundest possible operating environment for business, allowing it to continue to innovate and succeed in a way that will make this possible
I need to mention to this collective that South Africa has South Africa has solid bilateral and diplomatic policies and strategies that guide our cooperation with the Peoples’ Republic of China and other countries, including Africa. In areas where the utilization of natural resources is required, the task will be carried out by both parties in an open and transparent way based on commonly acknowledged rules.
I want to urge you to use this opportunity as an important and vital platform to network with other like-minded people as you endeavour to set up business opportunities. During the course of this engagement we will be signing Memorandums of Understanding with Hunan Province as a recommitment and dedication of our desire to work together in areas of cooperation, benefits and implementation strategies.
The celebration of the Year of China in the Northern Cape in the same year that we celebrate 21 years since the dawn of our democracy and commemorate 60 years since the development of the Freedom Charter, should signal a turning point in the China-South Africa trade relations or Hunan-Northern Cape trade relations as we bring it closer to home. Let us make a conscious decision to move from just talks to actual implementation being cognisant of the fact that Rome was not built in one day.
I want to conclude honourable guests, by expressing the hope that our discussions over the next few days will be fruitful, that we will seize the opportunity to exchange best practices in mining, tourism, infrastructure, agro-processing, and other sectors. Our goal is a common one and that is the development of our Provinces and ultimately our countries. Let us therefore come up with innovative ways that will positively impact on investment in our respective provinces. As our esteemed guests and partners in development I trust that you will enjoy the hospitality of our Province and that all of you will have a chance to savour the beauty, warmth and splendour that is Northern Cape.
Our home is your home.
Thank you
XieXie (pronounced She Shay).
Address by the Honourable Premier, Ms Sylvia Lucas, on the occasion of the 2014 Heritage Day, celebrations, Victoria West, 24 September 2014.
Programme Director
Honourable Mayor
Esteemed Guests
Members of the Community
Ladies and Gentlemen
Thank you for joining us on this important occasion to celebrate our National Heritage Day.
Today we connect with South Africans from all walks of life, wherever they may be gathered to mark this special day of tribute to our heritage as South Africans.
It is during a month such as this when we value the symbols and the historic landmarks which define the essence of who we are. Heritage month serves to remind us of the importance of our past as well as our present.
Programme Director, the National Heritage Day intends to unite all of us to embrace our diverse cultures. It also enables us to celebrate the common heritage we all share. This day is also utilized to educate the younger ones (youth) of their heritage, culture and tradition and that all these needs to be respected.
This year Ladies and Gentlemen, we celebrate the month under a theme “Celebrating 20 Years of Democracy: Tell Your Story that Moves South Africa Forward”.
It is important to remind South Africans that we should embrace our diversity and that we all have a role to play in creating a united South African nation with common identity.
As we celebrate 20 Years of Freedom and democracy, this day provides an ideal platform for South Africans from all walks of life to share their experiences. By doing so South Africans will develop a deeper understanding of themselves and others so that we all can live, work and play together in harmony.
For centuries the country’s history was biased and served the apartheid regime's ideals. The advent of democracy has brought about profound changes and in the process liberated voices that have been silenced for centuries. Our heritage and legacy celebrations seek to bring this history to the people.
South Africans are now able to tell their stories about the trials and tribulations they experienced during the dark days of apartheid.
They can also speak out freely about the many heroes and heroines of the liberation movement and different watershed moments in our struggle history.
We are proud of ushering in a new non-racial and non-sexist democracy. South Africans can see the tangible benefits of the first twenty years of freedom, and moving forward, should embrace the agenda for radical economic transformation. This requires an active citizenry who know where they are coming from but also where they are going.
Ladies and Gentlemen, it is through talking about our good and bad experiences, which will allow us to address the social divisions in our communities that still persist today. Our stories will create an understanding that while our respective journeys to freedom might have been different, we are united in our love for the country and share the passion to move the country forward. Through sharing our stories, we will realise that we all subscribe to the same basic set of values such as mutual respect, democracy, freedom, equality and justice.
Ladies and Gentlemen, our country comes a long way. We come from an era where your skin pigmentation determined the quality of your life. We come from an era where one’s skin pigmentation could determine the kind of company you could keep, where your pigmentation could determine the area you live in and even your destiny.
We salute our former President Nelson Mandela, who steadfastly proclaimed that “Never, never and never again shall it be that this beautiful land will again experience the oppression of one by another”.
Oliver Regional Tambo, one of the most outstanding leaders of the biggest liberation movement in the African continent namely the African National Congress, once said:
“It is our responsibility to break down the barriers of division and create a country where there will be neither whites nor blacks, just South Africans, free and united in diversity”
Ladies and Gentlemen, indeed we have a good story to tell. Today we can proudly report that the ANC led government has allowed us to collectively participate in the building of a non-racial, democratic and free South Africa in which we all have the freedom to prosper. Our country continues to be a beacon of hope for many other countries in the African continent and the world. Our country is indeed a better place to live in.
Ladies and Gentlemen,
South Africa has made significant progress in transforming the apartheid state into a democratic one founded on the values of human dignity, non-racialism and non-sexism, the rule of law, and universal adult suffrage, as enshrined in the Constitution.
South Africa Twenty Year Review 1994–2014 states unequivocally that millions of our people have been lifted out of poverty. Millions now have access to water, healthcare, education, housing and many other basic needs which they did not have before 1994.
The economy enjoyed a real recovery in growth and investment post-1994, with far more robust and stable growth than in the previous 30 years.
Ladies and Gentlemen, when looking back over the past twenty years, all South Africans can be proud of the progress we have made as a young nation.
We take pride in our world class constitution, a very important document governing this country. The document remains the foundation of our democracy seeking to tie us together as one; the very essence of what freedom means as defined in the Constitution.
The Preamble of the Constitution refers to a democratic and open society in which government is based on the will of the people and every citizen is equally protected by law. The Bill of Rights reaffirms that everyone has inherent dignity and the right to have their dignity respected and protected.
It refers to the right to freedom of conscience, religion, thought, belief and opinion. It includes the right of freedom of expression and of association.
We must continue to strengthen the freedoms and protections we enjoy under our Constitution.
Ladies and Gentlemen, although South Africa is a better place to live in now, we however do acknowledge that our efforts to build a cohesive society will remain just a dream until we defeat the triple challenges of poverty, inequality and unemployment.
More work remains to ensure that we create healthier lives for all South Africans and create an education system that meets our future needs.
Again, the Twenty Year Review states that crime and corruption continues to have a negative impact on investment, growth and employment, as well as the wellbeing of citizens. Collectively we must do more to remove the scourge of crime and corruption.
The National Development Plan (NDP) is our future roadmap and identifies what needs to be done to address outstanding challenges by 2030. All sectors of society should partner with government to implement the NDP so that all South Africans can benefit from our hard fought freedom.
To all of you who are gathered here, I am delighted that we can share the importance of this day together. In a society, which for many generations, was divided and separated, we need to use Heritage Day to meet and learn from one another the values that our ancestors bequeathed to us. Together we can preserve and conserve that wisdom for prosperity.
It is my personal hope that the legacy of our political and cultural icons will continue to inform and inspire us as South Africa tackles its challenges and continues its road to success, prosperity and a better life for all.
I would like to wish all South Africans a happy Heritage Day.
Lets’ all be proudly South African, let’s all be proudly African.
I Thank You!
Baie Dankie!
Ndiyabulela!
Northern Cape Office of the Premier
Physical address of Head Office
T&I Building
69 Memorial Road
Monuments Heights
Private Bag x5016
Kimberley
8300
Contact Telephone Numbers
053 030 0800
Email Addresses
ZLangeveldt@ncpg.gov.za
cynthiaJoseph@ncpg.gov.za
pmathakgane@ncpg.gov.za(Ministry)
VISION
A Modern, Growing and Succesful Province.
MISSION
Improving government’s performance through coordination, strategic leadership, and integrated planning and monitoring and evaluation.