ANC no letters.jpg

 

Birchwood Conference Centre, Ekurhuleni, 12 July 2017

 

 

ANC Deputy President Cyril Ramaphosa

 

Address at the 14th Congress of the South African Communist Party

 

 

Programme Director,

National Chairperson of the SACP, Cde Senzeni Zokwana, 

General Secretary of the SACP, Cde Blade Nzimande,

Members of the SACP Central Committee,

Representatives of Alliance formations,

Delegates,

Comrades and Friends,

 

On behalf of the entire leadership and membership of the African National
Congress, I bring you warm revolutionary greetings on the occasion of the
14th Congress of the South African Communist Party.

We are pleased and honoured as the African National Congress to be given an
opportunity to participate in this most important Congress of the South
African Communist Party.

 

Your Congress is taking place at a critical moment for the country and the
future of its people.

 

There is a lot of restlessness in the country as many of our people are
pondering how we are going to address the many challenges that face us in
relation to our politics; how we are managing the economy particularly in
relation to how we will get the country out of the recession we are in now;
how we are addressing our country's downgraded status; what we will do to
curb rampant corruption that is spilling out in emails; and, more
importantly, what steps and measures we will take to create jobs and rid our
country of the scourge of inequality and poverty.

 

It is in this context that your deliberations and the decisions and
programmes you will adopt here at the 14th Congress of the SACP will have
far-reaching implications for the direction, character and pace of the
struggle for a national democratic society.

 

Given this context, one of the key tasks of your Congress must be the
recognition of the need to weave together the revolutionary democratic,
socialist and trade union strands of the broad liberation movement into a
tight alliance of formations that share a common approach towards the
National Democratic Revolution and its objectives.

 

For as long as we can remember, there are people outside our movement who
have sought to define the relationship between the ANC and the SACP.

 

Twenty-five years ago, in October 1992, the then Minister of Justice Kobie
Coetsee said:

 

"The ANC would be well advised to sever its links with the Communist Party,
and especially one Mr Hani..."

 

A few months later, Chris Hani lay dead in his driveway.

 

By killing him they thought they would divide us.

 

But his death only served to bring us closer together and strengthen our
resolve.

 

While there is much that we do not know about the extent of the right-wing
conspiracy behind Chris Hani's death, what we do know is that the enemies of
our revolution have always seen the alliance between the ANC and SACP as one
of the greatest threats to their efforts to hold on to the privileges they
so long enjoyed.

 

To this day, there are many who seek the end of this alliance.

 

Even within our ranks, there are some who - for whatever reason - question
its value and seek to hasten its demise.

 

As we have done for decades, as we continue to do, we must resist each and
every effort to destroy this alliance.

 

To destroy the alliance between the ANC and SACP would be a grave mistake
for which history will provide no absolution.

 

The people of South Africa would not forgive such a reckless act, because
their well-being and prosperity is inextricably bound to the success of the
National Democratic Revolution that we are both committed to pursue.

 

We know from the lived experience of our struggle that together we are
stronger.

 

This is the time when we should remember what former ANC President Oliver
Tambo said in 1980:

 

'The need for the unity of the patriotic and democratic of our country has
never been greater than it is today. Our unity has to be based on honesty
among ourselves, the courage to face reality, adherence to what has been
agreed upon, to principle.'

 

Your Congress is taking place at a time when our movement is at its weakest.

 

Our alliance is under great strain.

 

At no other point in the history of our movement has factionalism and
division become so brazen, so pronounced, so confident. 

 

There is an African proverb that says: 

 

"When brothers fight to the death, a stranger inherits the home."

 

Today our home is plagued by sibling rivalry, petty jealousies and the sins
of incumbency.

 

We know all too well some of the causes of these ructions within our house.

 

The diagnostic report by the Secretary General to the ANC Policy Conference
- together with the discussion documents on Strategy and Tactics and
Organisational Renewal - describes how our structures and programmes have
been undermined by competition for resources, corruption and the capture of
state institutions by families, individuals and companies.

 

Even as delegates gathered to deliberate on these issues, more and more
information was emerging about the extent to which our state owned
enterprises have been looted, how individuals in positions of responsibility
have benefited from actions that are, at best, unethical and, at worst,
criminal.

 

There is not a day that passes that we do not gain greater insight into a
network of illicit relationships, contracts, deals and appointments designed
to benefit just one family and their associates.

 

We cannot turn a blind eye to these revelations.

 

We cannot, under the weight of ever more disclosures, become numbed to what
this means for the country, for our people and for the National Democratic
Revolution.

 

We now know without any shred of uncertainty that billions of rands of
public resources have been diverted into the pockets of a few.

 

These are resources that rightly belong to the people of South Africa.

 

These are resources with which we were meant to build and maintain energy,
rail and other infrastructure.

 

These are resources with which we were meant to support emerging farmers,
small businesses, black industrialists.

 

These are resources that could have been used to fund higher education for
the poor or to improve the quality of health care.

 

These are resources that could have been used to service our public debt and
reduce the burden on future generations.

 

To many people, state capture may seem far removed from their everyday
lives.

 

Unfortunately, tragically, state capture has already had a profoundly
damaging impact on our economy, on our state and on the well-being of our
people.

 

We need to act now to prevent any further damage.

 

We need an independent judicial commission of inquiry with relevant terms of
reference established without further delay.

 

Our law enforcement agencies must act with speed and purpose to investigate
all these allegations and bring those responsible to book.

 

We need to recover all the funds that have been stolen.

 

State capture, if left unchecked, can undermine the very foundations of our
democracy.

 

It is critical that the institutions we established in the Constitution to
safeguard democracy hold firm.

 

We call on all South Africans to support and respect these institutions and
to defend and advance our democracy.

 

Importantly, as the revolutionary democratic movement, as the Alliance, we
need to draw a line in the sand.

 

We need to mobilise our structures and our supporters to oppose state
capture and corruption in whatever form it takes.

 

We need to send a clear message that we will not protect those within our
ranks who are involved in such activity.

 

We will not tolerate those who use our structures to defend these interests
and misappropriate revolutionary slogans as a shield against critical
scrutiny.

 

It is a matter of grave concern that a public relations company from outside
our country was able to so effectively poison our political discourse to
advance their clients' narrow interests.

 

It says much about our lack of political cohesion and ideological clarity
that this company, Bell Pottinger, was able to manipulate some of our own
political concepts to fuel division and confusion.

 

Herein lies a challenge to the Alliance, but particularly to the Communist
Party, which has throughout its existence been at the forefront of deepening
and sharpening the political understanding and ideological approach of the
members our movement.

 

We look to the SACP - and to this Congress - to once again take the lead in
building a cadre with the analytical tools needed to understand the
prevailing environment and the political consciousness to effect fundamental
change.

 

This is necessary because our people are watching in fear, wondering if we
are still capable of leading them.

 

They hear in our language, in our ideas, a hankering after past victories
and past glory - yet they long most of all to hear about the future.

 

They want to hear how the ANC and the broader liberation movement will heal
itself, how it will revive and transform the economy, how it will improve
their lives.

 

We dare not fail our people.

 

Although the proverbial brothers appear to be at each other's throats, we
have reason to be optimistic.

 

Our people have grounds for hope.

 

For we have embarked, as a movement and as a country, on a journey of
renewal.

 

We have been set upon this journey by the rank and file of our movement, by
our members and supporters, who seek a renewal of the values, organisational
integrity and revolutionary programme of the ANC and Alliance.

 

The ANC National Policy Conference was a crucial milestone in this journey.

 

It has established a platform for the renewal and unity of the ANC and
Alliance.

 

The delegates to the Conference were forthright in identifying the
challenges facing the movement and determined in their efforts to find
solutions.

 

This 14th Congress provides an opportunity to build on that platform.

 

It provides an opportunity for the Communist Party to provide leadership in
developing a programme to build the Alliance.

 

It must be a programme founded on shared values and a common strategic
objective.

 

It must be underpinned by a commitment to serve, first and foremost, the
interests of the working class and poor.

 

We expect that this Congress will clearly define the role of the SACP in the
National Democratic Revolution, helping to shape an Alliance programme for
the next decade and beyond.

 

We expect that this Congress will look beyond the challenges of the present
towards the strategic decisions that will determine the future of the
country and the Alliance.

 

We need to look beyond the immediate towards the society we all seek to
achieve and, with precision and clarity, to chart the actions that we will
undertake to build that society.

 

The ANC Policy Conference has placed economic growth, job creation and
transformation at centre of policy.

 

We look to this Congress to deliberate on the outcomes of the ANC policy
conference, to complement the policy proposals, and to sharpen the measures
identified to accelerate inclusive growth.

 

The SACP needs to support and enrich the discussions that will now take
place in ANC branches on these policy proposals before they are adopted at
the 54th National Conference in December.

 

We look to this 14th Congress to provide crisp, clear direction on the
urgent measures we need to take to reignite growth and create jobs.

 

We know that we cannot advance transformation to any meaningful extent
unless we create employment on a massive scale, particularly for the youth.

 

For as long as one third of working age South Africans are outside of the
productive economy, then all our other efforts to redress the injustices of
the past will be of limited value.

 

But we cannot create these jobs if the economy is not growing, and the
economy will not grow unless we achieve far higher levels of fixed
investment.

 

The idea, articulated in the ANC's Strategy and Tactics, that the ANC's
approach to monopoly capital in particular and capital in general is one of
'unity and struggle, cooperation and contestation', is therefore not a mere
theoretical construct.

 

It is rooted in our actual experience of an economy in which wealth, power
and control are concentrated in a few - mainly white - hands.

 

It is rooted in our actual experience of seeking to stimulate growth and
investment while at the same time undertaking a programme of radical
economic transformation.

 

We look to this Congress to produce practical proposals on critical issues
like land and agrarian reform, industrialisation and beneficiation,
deconcentration of ownership and control, and education and skills
development.

 

These need to be part of defining for the Alliance an unambiguous,
unapologetic and ambitious programme of social and economic change.

 

Let us use the outcomes of this Congress, the proposals from the ANC Policy
Conference and the decisions of the Cosatu Central Committee to articulate a
clear economic agenda for the Alliance.

 

Let us use the months leading up to the ANC's 54th National Conference to
craft a programme that all members of the Alliance will support and mobilise
their members to advance.

 

We must place the poor and the working class at the centre of that
programme.

 

It must address the working conditions of the industrial worker, just as it
must improve the wage and job security of the farm worker.

 

It must prepare graduates for the workplace and it must find training
opportunities for school leavers.

 

It must enable a proliferation of successful small businesses and support a
new generation of black industrialists.

 

It must create jobs suitable for the skills our people have today and
develop the skills our people will need for the jobs of tomorrow.

 

Though our challenges are many and complex, we must act decisively and with
urgency to defend our revolution and advance the interests of our people.

 

We must act now to unite, strengthen and renew the Alliance.

 

We must act now to revive, grow and transform our economy.

 

We are confident that this 14th Congress of the South African Communist
Party will, once again, rise to this challenge.

 

I thank you.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 



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