President Cyril Ramaphosa: Human Rights Day 2023

Address by President Cyril Ramaphosa on Human Rights Day at De Aar West Sports Ground, Northern Cape

Programme Directors:

Minister of Sports, Arts and Culture, Mr Zizi Kodwa, and,

MEC for Arts, Culture, Sport and

Recreation, Ms Desery Fienies,

Minister of Justice and Correctional Services, Mr Ronald Lamola,

Ministers and Deputy Ministers,

Premier of the Northern Cape, Dr Zamani Saul,

Premier of the Free State, Mr Mxolisi Dukwana,

Chairperson of the South African Human Rights Commission, Prof Bongani Majola,

Executive Mayor of Pixley Ka Seme District Municipality, Cllr Rhoode Itumeleng,

Mayor of Emthanjeni Local Municipality, Cllr Lulamile Nkumbi,

Community leaders,

Fellow South Africans,

Today is a day on which we celebrate the great progress we have made as a nation in building a democracy that is founded on equal human rights for all people.

It is a day on which we remember and pay tribute to the many people who fought for these rights and for the great sacrifices that they made.

It is also a day on which we look to the future. We reaffirm our pledge not only to safeguard and uphold these rights at all times, but to strive to ensure that all people may exercise these rights to their fullest.

This is a significant year for the celebration of Human Rights Day.

This year is the one hundredth anniversary of the adoption of the first bill of rights in South Africa’s history.

This was an act of remarkable vision at a time when the majority of South Africans were by law denied the most basic of human rights.

The adoption of the bill of rights, which had no legal standing at the time, took place just a decade after the Native Land Act had resulted in the mass dispossession of Africans of their land.

It took place 13 years after the Union of South Africa confirmed that black South Africans would have no say in the running of their country.

Today, as we mark Human Rights Day, we pay tribute to those men and women who had the foresight to proclaim that all people in this country have inalienable human rights.

The theme for Human Rights Day this year is: ‘Consolidating and Sustaining Human Rights Culture into the Future.’

As we look to the future, let us reflect on the past.

As we learn the lessons of the past, let us work together confront its devastating legacy.

One of the defining features of the Bill of Rights contained in our Constitution is the inclusion of social and economic rights.

In addition to the right to life, equality and human dignity, our Constitution also says that everyone has the right to housing, health care, food, water, social security and education.

The Constitution says that the state must take reasonable measures, within its available resources, to achieve the progressive realisation of each of these rights.

The Bill of Rights also guarantees the right to property and says the state must work to ensure that citizens have equitable access to land. This property clause makes provision for land reform, restitution and security of tenure to redress the results of past racial discrimination.

This clause would no doubt be welcome by the people who drafted the 1923 Bill of Rights, who declared: “That all Africans have, as the sons of this soil, the God-given right to unrestricted ownership of the land in this, the land of their birth.”

Since the advent of democracy, successive administrations have done much to ensure the progressive realisation of these rights for all South Africans.

The expanding provision of basic services to households has been one of the most important interventions to improve the lives of all South Africans.

According to Statistics South Africa, access to water and sanitation, electricity, housing and other services like waste removal has increased steadily over the last three decades.

Around two million indigent households receive free basic water, free basic electricity and free solid waste removal.

Yet, despite this progress, there are still many people who do not have access to all of these services. Many people live in informal settlements without adequate housing, water or sanitation.

In some municipalities, the provision of these services is unreliable. There are times when water is not provided or is of poor quality, or where refuse is not collected.

The failure to provide adequate services consistently is a human rights issue.

That is why we are working to improve the functioning of local government, which carries the greatest responsibility for the provision of these services.

Through changes to legislation and support programmes, we are working to improve the capacity of public representatives and officials and direct more resources towards maintaining and upgrading local infrastructure.

Government recently re-introduced what are known as the ‘Green Drop’ and ‘Blue Drop’ reports, which detail the state of water provision in municipalities throughout the country. On the basis of these reports, we are undertaking interventions to fix the problems.

There are also a number of water infrastructure projects underway to improve the security of supply of water to key areas across the country.

Another significant intervention against poverty is the provision of social grants, which are the main source of income for about a quarter of households.

Just over 2.5 million people were receiving social grants in 1999. Today, over 18 million people are receiving these grants.

To relieve the pressure on poor households during COVID-19, government introduced the special R350 SRD grant. While this grant has been extended to the end of March 2024, work is underway to provide basic income support for the most vulnerable within the country’s fiscal constraints.

The Bill of Rights says that everyone has the right to a basic education and to further education, which the state must make progressively available and accessible.

Over the last three decades, important progress has been made in access to education.

To ensure every child gets a solid foundation for social and educational development, government has prioritised early childhood development.

The Department of Basic Education, which is now responsible for ECD, is streamlining the requirements for ECD centres to access support and enable thousands more to receive subsidies from government.

South Africa has a significantly high level of enrolment in basic education. In 2019, 96% of six-year-old children attended an education institution.

However, the dropout rate from school is unacceptably high, with the result that less than half of children who start school get a grade 12 pass. This is a problem that the education authorities, school leadership, educators and parents need to work together to address.

An important intervention to improve school attendance and alleviate poverty was the introduction of no-fee schools in poor communities.

We have seen the results of our investment in education in the steady improvement in overall matric pass rate since 1994. From the late 1990s, where the pass rate stood at around 50%, the matric pass rate last year was 80%.

Learners from no-fee schools are steadily performing better in matric, achieving a greater number of bachelor passes.

As part of a commitment to expand access to higher education for students from poor and working class backgrounds the number of students funded by NSFAS increased from 580,000 in 2018 to 770,000 in 2021.

Despite this, as we saw in the last few weeks, many students are still experiencing difficulties in funding their studies, accommodation and living expenses. This year, government plans to finalise the Comprehensive Student Funding Model for higher education. Among other things, this aims to reach those who don’t meet the NSFAS criteria but are still unable to afford tertiary education.

The Bill of Rights says that everyone has the right to have access to health care services, including reproductive health care.

Since the advent of democracy, starting with the provision of free health care to children under 5 years of age and pregnant women, government has made substantial progress in the provision of quality health care, especially to the poor.

However, there is still significant inequality in access to health care.

The National Health Insurance Bill, which is currently before Parliament, is meant to correct this state of affairs. The introduction of the National Health Insurance – or NHI – will enable every South African to receive quality health care regardless of their ability to pay.

We are preparing for the implementation of the NHI through the national quality improvement plan and putting in place the necessary staff and funding. We are improving the quality of care in our clinics through the Ideal Clinic programme. Using the experience of the COVID vaccination record system, we will introduce an electronic solution to improve management of health records.

If we are to advance and secure these social and economic rights into the future then we need to tackle poverty and inequality. We need to create employment and economic opportunity.

To achieve this, to give us the means to enable the progressive realisation of all these rights, we need to grow our economy and achieve far greater levels of investment.

The work that is being undertaken to increase investment in both economic and social infrastructure is a vital part of the effort to improve the provision of services to all South Africans. This includes investment in roads and rural bridges, in new housing settlements, in water schemes and in expanding our electricity network.

By the same measure, the work we are doing to improve the efficiency and competitiveness of our telecommunications industry, electricity system, and ports and railways contributes to increasing investment and employment.

Here in the Northern Cape there are several areas that are attracting new investment, mainly due to the province’s natural resources.

The province’s mining industry continues to grow, while there are new opportunities opening up in new fields such as solar energy and green hydrogen. We welcome the province’s effort to ensure that these projects create further work opportunities by investing in industrial parks and special economic zones.

Government has introduced programmes like the Presidential Employment Stimulus to create public and social employment opportunities for young people in particular. This is happening alongside projects with the private sector to provide work experience for young people and funding to small businesses.

The Bill of Rights guarantees the rights of all people to life, human dignity, freedom and security.

The high levels of violent crime, including crime against women and children, are a direct and brutal violation of these fundamental rights.

Society has come together in different ways to respond to violent crime.

Communities have been working with police through Community Policing Forums. Civil society organisations are working with government to implement the National Strategic Plan on Gender-Based Violence and Femicide. Business is working with law enforcement agencies and state-owned companies to tackle damage to economic infrastructure.

As we increase the presence and the visibility of police, as we strengthen the National Prosecuting Authority and improve the operation of our courts, we need to mobilise everyone in society as part of a national effort to end violent crime.

These are among the most important issues that we need to attend to as a nation if we are to sustain our human rights culture into the future.

We cannot claim to be a country that respects human rights if we do not do everything in our power and within our resources to ensure that all South Africans have access to land, housing, food, water, health care and education.

We cannot claim to respect human rights if we do not do everything we can to ensure all people have access to work and economic opportunity, and to live lives that are comfortable, safe and secure.

There can be no doubt that we have achieved much in securing the rights of all South Africans. But we know from daily experience that we need to do much more.

On this Human Rights Day, let us affirm our determination to realise the rights of all the people who live in this country.

In doing so, we will give effect to the promise of our democratic Constitution, and we will be paying the greatest tribute to the visionary leaders who wrote the first South African bill of rights one hundred years ago.

I wish every South African a happy Human Rights Day.

I thank you.

Source: Government of South Africa

Electricity Minister at Kusile Power Station

Minister in the Presidency responsible for Electricity, Dr Kgosientsho Ramokgopa, has arrived at the Kusile Power Station in Mpumalanga.

The Minister, who is currently being briefed by senior Eskom officials at the Kusile Power Station, kick-started his nationwide tour of the 14 power stations on Monday, to engage with management, workers, and unions. His first stop on Monday, was at the Kriel and Duvha Power Station in Mpumalanga.

“Government has taken steps to improve the performance of Eskom’s existing power stations so that the coal-fired power stations that provide 80% of our electricity produce the amount of electricity for which they were designed,” he said on Monday.

He said he was convinced that through collective efforts, loadshedding can be resolved.

“Job well done to the Duvha power station team for increasing their energy availability factor to 70% in the past month thanks to technical solutions, improved efficiency, agile leadership and hard work,” the Minister said.

The Minister believes that Eskom employees are the heart of resolving the ongoing energy crisis.

“My view has always been the biggest asset for any organisation is its workers and the reason we’re starting from the bottom up is to appreciate and understand the efforts being made at the station level,” he told media.

“I committed to the country that we’ll be at the station level, examining the issues that affect every unit and getting from the station manager, organised labour and workers about what are the interventions, in their opinion, they think are appropriate to help scale up energy availability,” he said.

The Minister said in the next seven days he will continue to talk with workers to understand the nature and scale of the problem and update the Energy Action Plan (EAP), which President Cyril Ramaphosa unveiled last year.

Ramokgopa believes that the EAP’s first pillar, which speaks to improving the availability of existing supply system stability and increasing generation capacity was important.

Meanwhile, Eskom has recently welcomed the decision to exempt it from certain requirements in terms of its application to build temporary stacks at the Kusile Power Station.

The Forestry, Fisheries and Environment Minister, Barbara Creecy, announced recently that Eskom has been granted an exemption from the lengthy process required to amend its Atmospheric Emission License, subject to certain strict conditions.

The application had been brought due to the urgent need to alleviate the electricity crisis in the country.

This follows a failure of the Unit 1 flue gas duct on 22 October 2022, which subsequently affected units 2 and 3 as the ducts for all these three units are welded together.

“The exemption given does not provide Eskom approval to operate the temporary stacks. The exemption allows Eskom to submit its application to operate the stacks based on presently available information and with a reduced public participation process.

“Based on the exemption provided by the Minister, Eskom intends to submit its final application for approval to operate the temporary stacks, to the relevant authorities in April 2023,” Eskom explained at the time.

Approval of the final application, according to Eskom, means it will be able to operate the three units without the use of the flue gas desulphurisation (FDG) mechanism, which is an emission-abatement technology, for 13 months while the flue gas ducts are being repaired.

“The repair of the damaged stacks will be completed by December 2024 and during this time the necessary steps will be implemented to mitigate the impact of sulfur dioxide emissions on air quality.”

According to Eskom, the temporary structure will be completed by the end of November 2023, which will enable the return of 2 100MW.

This will further alleviate pressure on the power system and reduce load shedding by almost two stages.

“Eskom will comply with the conditions of the exemption.”

Source: South African Government News Agency

South African corruption investigator Cloete Murray and son shot dead

A South African accountant who was investigating high-level corruption cases has been shot dead along with his son.

Cloete Murray, 50, was the liquidator for Bosasa, a company implicated in numerous government contract scandals.

He also worked as a liquidator for firms linked to the wealthy Gupta brothers, who deny bribery accusations.

Police will see if there is a link between Murray’s murder and these corruption investigations.

Murray was shot by unknown gunmen while driving in Johannesburg with his 28-year-old son Thomas, a legal adviser, on Saturday.

His son died at the scene while Murray was taken to hospital and later died of his injuries, local media reported, citing a police spokesperson.

The pair were driving their white Toyota Prado towards their home in Pretoria, South African media reported.

Murray’s job as a court-appointed company liquidator was to look into the accounts of firms that had folded, recover assets, and report any criminality.

One of those companies was Bosasa, a government contractor specialising in prison services.

The landmark Zondo commission into corruption concluded the company extensively bribed politicians and government officials to get government contracts during the nine-year presidency of Jacob Zuma, from 2009 to 2018.

Zuma refused to co-operate with the inquiry but has denied accusations of corruption.

In 2018, current South African President Cyril Ramaphosa said he would repay a $35,000 donation from Bosasa.

An anti-corruption investigator found he had misled parliament over the donation, but that finding was dismissed by the country’s High Court.

Ramaphosa has also faced other corruption allegations, which he denies.

Bosasa went into voluntary liquidation after banks closed its accounts.

Murray was also working as a liquidator for firms linked to the Gupta brothers. The Zondo commission found that the brothers – Ajay, Rajesh and Atul – tried to influence political and economic decisions during Zuma’s presidency in a process known as “state capture”.

The Guptas moved from India to South Africa in 1993 and owned a wide-ranging portfolio of companies that enjoyed lucrative contracts with South African government departments and state-owned companies.

The South African authorities are currently working on having the Gupta brothers extradited from the UAE, where they have been arrested, to stand trial.

They have denied accusations of paying financial bribes to win contracts.

Source: Nam News Network (NNN)

Minister confident load shedding will be resolved

Minister in the Presidency responsible for Electricity, Kgosientsho Ramokgopa, says he is confident that the country’s problems with load shedding will be resolved.

“We are in this together, the problems with load shedding will be resolved,” Ramokgopa said.

Speaking at the Kusile power station in Mpumalanga during his visit earlier today, Ramokgopa said his ultimate aim is to end load shedding.

“The problem of load shedding will be resolved. Ultimately, the problem of electricity in this country will also be resolved,” Ramokgopa said.

Ramokgopa told Kusile power station senior management that government will assist where possible to end load shedding.

“We are all in this together, the problem of load shedding must end,” he said.

Ramokgopa has embarked on a two-week visit to Eskom power stations. This is to get first-hand experience on how the stations operate and what problems or challenges the management are experiencing in the running of the power stations.

Ramokgopa started the visits on Monday at the Kriel and Duvha power stations and today visited Kusile and Kendal power stations.

Kusile Power Station is designed to consist of six 800 megawatt coal-fired generating units for a total generating capacity of 4 800 megawatts.

The station is located about 15 kilometres north of Kendal Power Station near Witbank, in Mpumalanga.

“I am confident that we are going to resolve the electricity problem. We will be honest and transparent about where we are now in as far as resolving the problem.

“We have committed men and women with skills at Eskom. From the discussions we are having with Eskom, it is clear that the problem of load shedding will be resolved,” Ramokgopa said.

Ramokgopa said the problem is not with corruption but more on a technical side.

“The problems and challenges that we have here are technical problems, they have nothing to do with so-called corruption,” he said.

Ramokgopa said he intends taking the public into his confidence about resolving the country’s energy crisis.

“We will be honest and transparent on where we are in relation to the resolution of this problem. We will communicate that to the general public,” Ramokgopa said.

During his visits at the power stations, Ramokgopa interacted with senior management and the workers.

During the briefing sessions, Ramokgopa was briefed about Kusile’s operations, challenges and programmes put in place to address the challenges.

Kusile power station is the second largest coal-fired power station in the world.

Source: South African Government News Agency

South Africa power crisis: Eskom will resolve power crisis – Electricity Minister

South Africa’s Minister in the Presidency responsible for Electricity, Dr Kgosientsho Ramokgopa, believes that Eskom employees are the heart of resolving the ongoing energy crisis.

“My view has always been the biggest asset for any organisation is its workers and the reason we’re starting from the bottom up is to appreciate and understand the efforts being made at the station level,” he told media on Monday.

The Minister said this during a tour of the Duvha Power Station in Mpumalanga, where he kick-started his engagements with management, workers, and unions at Eskom’s 14 power stations nationwide.

“I committed to the country that we’ll be at the station level, examining the issues that affect every unit and getting from the station manager, organised labour and workers about what are the interventions, in their opinion, they think are appropriate to help scale up energy availability,” he told media.

He shot down the view that his fact-finding exercise was sparked by the national shutdown that has been called by the Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF).

However, he said he will, in the next seven days continue to talk with workers to understand the nature and scale of the problem and update the Energy Action Plan (EAP), which President Cyril Ramaphosa unveiled last year.

Ramokgopa believes that the EAP’s first pillar, which speaks to improving the availability of existing supply system stability and increasing generation capacity was important.

He said this would enable Eskom to address the 6 000 MW deficit in the energy ecosystem, which according to the Minister, will be derived from the 81 Eskom existing units across the country.

“It’s important that we have an appreciation that the people who live and breathe these units are the people from Eskom. Some of them have accumulated experience of 25 years,” he said.

“We’re joined at the hip and it’s them who are in the cold face of the day-to-day interaction of these units. But I’m the public face of how we’re going to resolve load shedding.”

South Africans have been experiencing lower stages of load shedding for the first time in a long while this past weekend, with some citizens quipping that “they do not know what to do with so much power”.

“To get to a stage where people find it very strange to have electricity for a day or two days in succession… underscores the gravity of the problem.”

However, he said government’s interventions did not start with the Minister of Electricity.

“The Energy Action Plan has been there and all we’re doing [is] accelerating [the action] and of course, we can see that six power stations are beginning to pick up and the energy availability factor is going up,” he said.

Ramaphosa appointed Ramokgopa to the post on 6 March.

Ramokgopa’s primary goal, according to the President, will be to drive government’s programme of significantly reducing the “severity and frequency of load shedding as a matter of urgency” and to expedite government’s work to ensure the full implementation of the EAP.

“I am confident about our ability to address the crisis,” he said.

Source: Nam News Network (NNN)

Nikkiso Clean Energy & Industrial Gases Group Announces Expansion of Sales, Service and Engineering Facility in South Africa

Nikkiso Clean Energy & Industrial Gases Group (“Group”), a part of the Nikkiso Co., Ltd (Japan) and operating under Cryogenic Industries, Inc. (USA) is proud to announce yet another expansion of their sales, service and engineering capabilities for the African market. From their facility they will be providing support for all the Group’s products.

Located in Waterfall, KZN, South Africa, the facility was established to provide a stronger footprint in Africa and support South Africa’s engineering hub and economic center. Local engineers and field service support will bring specific knowledge of the region and local markets, allowing highly customized solutions.

Source: Nam News Network (NNN)