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Outcomes of the Special Meeting between the Traditional Leadership and Inter‑Ministerial Committee on Migration Management
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Deputy President Shipokosa Paulus Mashatile, today Wednesday, 17 June 2026, convened a special meeting with the National House of Traditional and Khoi-San Leaders, led by Kgosi Seathlolo, together with the Inter‑Ministerial Committee on Migration, chaired by the Minister of Justice and Constitutional Development, Mmamoloko Kubayi.

The meeting reaffirmed Government’s commitment to the Comprehensive Approach for Migration Management, introduced by President Cyril Ramaphosa. 

This five‑pillar plan seeks to curb irregular migration, strengthen border security, and enforce labour and immigration laws, while upholding constitutional values and human dignity.

A detailed presentation was delivered by the Director‑General in the Presidency, Ms Phindile Baleni, outlining the work being undertaken to resolve the challenges posed by undocumented migrants. The presentation emphasized coordinated government action, improved border management, and lawful enforcement measures that respect both sovereignty and human rights.

Traditional leaders highlighted their critical role as custodians of heritage and guardians of community integrity, particularly in rural and borderland communities. 

In this regard, they have pledged to continue supporting efforts to register businesses, keep records of foreign nationals, and mediate tensions in communities affected by migration pressures.

The meeting expressed strong support for the President’s call to implement the five‑pillar plan, noting that migration must be managed in a way that protects South Africa’s sovereignty while strengthening democracy and fostering social cohesion.

Deputy President Mashatile underscored that migration is part of South Africa’s historical and contemporary story, and must be addressed with firmness, fairness, and compassion. Guided by the spirit of Ubuntu, he emphasized that migration should unite rather than divide communities, contributing to a South Africa that is safe, inclusive, and prosperous.


Media enquiries: Mr Keith Khoza, Acting Spokesperson to the Deputy President on 066 195 8840

Issued by: The Presidency
Pretoria
 

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Remarks by President Cyril Ramaphosa at the special meeting with faith-based organisations, Union Buildings
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Ministers,
Religious leaders,
Colleagues and Friends,

It is my honour to welcome you to this meeting, which gives us an opportunity to reflect on matters that are important to the life of our country and the progress of our people. 

The faith community in our country has always been more than a place of worship. It has provided moral guidance and spiritual sustenance to our people. 

Over many decades, our faith community has shown deep care about the conditions in which our people live and has worked for peace, justice and equality.

It is in that spirit that we meet today, to reflect together upon two matters: the challenge of migration and our National Dialogue.

Although they may appear to be distinct issues, they both touch on the values that bind us together as a nation and the shared responsibility we have to build a better future for the people of South Africa.

Allow me to begin with migration. 

Over recent months, South Africans from every walk of life have raised concerns about migration, and illegal immigration in particular. 

These concerns are real. They need to be heard and to be addressed. 

These concerns arise in conditions of persistently high unemployment, poverty and hardship. They arise in communities that are plagued by crime, violence and corruption – and where there is increasing pressure on public services.

Yet illegal immigration is not the cause of our social and economic difficulties. 

To tackle the challenges our country faces, we need faster and more inclusive growth, investment and the creation of jobs. 

We need to strengthen our efforts to tackle poverty and hunger. 

We must build safer communities by addressing the causes of crime, improving policing and ending corruption.

Migration is not the cause of our problems, but it is something that we must manage constructively and collectively, always holding firm to our Constitutional principles and shared values.

That is why I addressed the nation on Sunday, the 7th of June, to outline the Comprehensive Approach to Migration Management that Cabinet has adopted.

In that address, I noted that our nation is itself a product of migration. 

Yet every person within our borders must be here lawfully.

I said that responsibility for enforcing our laws rests with the state, and that no individual may stop another to demand documentation or proof of nationality.

I said that no matter how frustrated people may be, there is no place for racism, sexism, xenophobia, Afrophobia or any other form of intolerance.

The comprehensive approach adopted by Cabinet rests upon five pillars.

Firstly, we are cracking down on violations of immigration, labour and other laws.

Secondly, we are securing our borders.

Thirdly, we are strengthening our immigration system by rooting out corruption and deploying advanced technology.

Fourthly, we are closing the gaps in our laws and policies.

Fifthly, we are working with our sister countries through SADC and the African Union to address the conditions that compel people to migrate.

Through these actions, we will demonstrate that we can protect our borders while protecting human dignity. 

We can enforce our laws while upholding our Constitution. 

We can secure our communities while preserving the values of Ubuntu. 

This is a responsibility that falls to all of us. And the faith community has a particularly important role to play.

When fear and anger rise, it is so often the voice of the pulpit, the mosque, the temple and the synagogue that can call our people back to compassion. 

Together, we must work to ensure that frustration is never turned into hatred, and that the stranger among us is met with the dignity that all our faith traditions demand.

We must demonstrate that there is a better way to manage these genuine concerns – a way that builds cohesion in communities and strengthens the bonds between us.

The second issue I would like to address is the National Dialogue. 

The National Dialogue continues our proud tradition of coming together to confront our challenges, to build consensus and to chart a course for the future.
 
At every defining moment in our history, we have found our way forward through dialogue with one another. 

The National Dialogue is a people-led process that unfolds from local dialogue to national gatherings, through which all South Africans are able to define a vision and plan for our country.

For this Dialogue to carry legitimacy, it must be genuinely inclusive. 

It must be a place where every voice is heard and real solutions are found. 

Faith communities are vital to this endeavour, for you reach into every village, township and suburb. 

You speak to conscience and to values in a manner that many others cannot. 

The National Dialogue will inevitably touch the wounds of our nation, and the faith community is ideally placed to help heal these wounds through prayer and practical service.

I therefore invite you to be partners, participants and guarantors of the National Dialogue process.

There are many challenges facing our nation. But we can address them together.

Together, we can build a South Africa that is secure, lawful, compassionate and prosperous, one that upholds the dignity of every person and fulfils the promise of our democracy.

Thank you again for your attendance and I look forward to our discussion.

I thank you.
 

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Deputy President Mashatile to respond to Oral Questions in the National Council of Provinces
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Deputy President Shipokosa Paulus Mashatile will on Thursday, 18 June 2026 respond to Questions for Oral Reply in the National Council of Provinces (NCOP) in Parliament, Cape Town.

In his capacity as Chairperson of the Justice, Crime Prevention and Security (JCPS) Cabinet Committee and Leader of Government Business in Parliament, the Deputy President will apprise the NCOP on measures in place to detect and prevent corruption in the South African Police Service (SAPS) as well as corrective actions by the Directorate for Priority Crime Investigation (DPCI) and the National Prosecuting Authority (NPA) in light of the proceedings in the Madlanga Commission.

The Deputy President will further update the House on mechanisms in place to  assess progress of One Plans of the District Development Model in 16 District and Metropolitan Municipalities, monitoring the top five catalytic projects in each One Plan.

Other questions to the Deputy President raised by Delegates to the NCOP include his recent oversight visit to the Cape Flats to assess progress on the implementation of Operation Prosper; Government’s response to the escalating challenge of illegal migration; land reform programme, and the National Water Security Plan.

Details of the sitting are as follows:

Date: Thursday, 18 June 2026
Time: 14h00
Venue: NCOP Old Assembly Chamber, Parliament, Cape Town

The Q&A Session will be streamed live on the Parliamentary Channel 408 and Parliamentary YouTube channel.

 

Media enquiries: Mr Keith Khoza, Acting Spokesperson to the Deputy President, on 066 195 8840

Issued by: The Presidency
Pretoria

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Statement by President Cyril Ramaphosa, President of South Africa and AU Champion on Pandemic Prevention, Preparedness and Response, to the High-Level Meeting of African Heads of State, Governments and Partners on the Bundibugyo Ebola outbreak
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Your Excellency, Chair of the African Union, President Évariste Ndayishimiye,
Your Excellencies Heads of State and Government,
Secretary-General of the United Nations, Mr António Guterres,
Chairperson of the AU Commission, Mr Mahamoud Ali Youssouf,
Your Excellencies Prime Ministers and Ministers,
Director-General of the WHO, Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus,
Director General of the Africa CDC, Dr Jean Kaseya,
Developmental partners, 
Philanthropists, 
Global health institutions, 
Friends,

I thank the Chairperson of the African Union for convening this important meeting at a critical moment for our continent. 

We also welcome and convey our sincere appreciation to the leaders from across the world that have joined us in solidarity.

It has been a month since we last met, where we demonstrated political will and mobilised just under 500 million US dollars in pledges from various countries, global health institutions, banks and philanthropic organisations. 

This is a critical opportunity to take stock and renew our commitments.

Our collective resolve remains vested in the health and livelihoods of our people and the brave health workers who fight this terrible threat on the frontlines. 

We mourn the lives that have been lost to this disease, and convey our condolences to the families and communities that have been affected by the spread of Ebola. 

We support the recently launched Continental Preparedness and Response Plan and are determined to ensure it is adequately financed. 

In this regard, I am pleased to announce that South Africa is increasing its pledge to 13.5 million US dollars as our commitment to solidarity and sovereignty for the people of this continent. 

I call upon all leaders to maintain or increase their pledges, and all those who made pledges at the last meeting to convert them in full into cash, medical countermeasures or technical assistance.

With no vaccine or antiviral, every day that transmission continues unchecked, the human cost rises. 

The West Africa Ebola epidemic demonstrated that delayed action can transform a localised outbreak into a regional and global crisis. 

This is why our response must focus on breaking the transmission and stopping Ebola at its source.

However, our public health measures are being thwarted by the volatile environment in which the response is being undertaken. 

As political leaders, we can help by creating safe corridors for the passage of goods and services. 

We must seek a ceasefire to allow the Ebola response to proceed unhindered.

We must continue to strengthen cross-border collaboration.

We must expand rapid diagnostic testing, contact tracing and community awareness. 

We should be concerned that we have no biotechnology in our arsenal against the Bundibugyo strain of Ebola.

While we welcome and unreservedly support the efforts of GAVI, CEPI and others, Africa cannot depend indefinitely on external markets and production systems during health emergencies.

The response to Ebola therefore cannot end when this outbreak ends.

This moment must become a turning point. 

As African leaders, we must accelerate investment in local manufacturing, strengthen the African Medicines Agency and operationalise the African Pooled Procurement Mechanism.

African manufacturers must have predictable markets and African countries must have reliable access to lifesaving products in emergencies.

We must all take heed of Africa CDC’s stance against imposing blanket and unsubstantiated travel bans.

I call upon African financial institutions, development banks, philanthropies and the African private sector to join governments in this effort.

I call upon our international partners to continue to stand with Africa in a spirit of solidarity and mutual responsibility. 

We welcome the bold actions being undertaken by the World Bank to free up capital for the response. 

We call on all financing institutions to be as flexible and understanding in this hour of need.

As countries, as a continent and as a global community, our actions must be evidence-based, scientifically sound and mutually accountable. 

The world will not be safe from Ebola until we have eliminated it everywhere.

And when we do eliminate this threat – which we surely will – we must intensify our efforts to build a resilient global health architecture that will safeguard our people now and into the future.

I thank you.
 

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President Ramaphosa to attend High-Level Meeting on Ebola outbreak
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His Excellency President Cyril Ramaphosa, in his capacity as the African Union Champion for Pandemic Preparedness, Prevention and Response, will this afternoon, 16 June 2026, participate in a High-Level Virtual Meeting of Heads of State, Government and Partners on the Ebola outbreak.

The meeting has been convened by His Excellency Evariste Ndayishimiye, President of the Republic of Burundi and Chairperson of the African Union. 

It aims to mobilise African and international solidarity to contain the Ebola outbreak caused by the Bundibugyo virus strain in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) and Uganda, while strengthening preparedness in countries at risk of regional transmission.

The high-level engagement seeks to align political leadership, financial commitments and technical interventions around the joint response and preparedness plan led by the Africa Centres for Disease Control and Prevention (Africa CDC), which is co-leading the response with the World Health Organization (WHO), supported by various international partners.

Heads of State and Government, financing institutions, donor countries and development partners are expected to confirm concrete financial pledges and commitments, including in-kind contributions, technical assistance, logistical support and security-sensitive operational assistance.

The immediate objective is to mobilise resources towards the USD 518 million response and preparedness package required to contain the outbreak, protect vulnerable populations and strengthen regional health security.

The President is expected to deliver a statement at 14h15 (SAST) and we will live stream


Media enquiries: Vincent Magwenya, Spokesperson to President Ramaphosa on media@presidency.gov.za

Issued by: The Presidency
Pretoria
 

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Address by President Ramaphosa on Youth Day, FNB Stadium, Johannesburg
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Programme Director,
Minister for Women, Youth and Persons with Disabilities, Ms Sindisiwe Chikunga,
Minister of Sport, Arts and Culture, Mr Gayton McKenzie,
Acting Premier of Gauteng, Ms Faith Mazibuko,
Executive Mayor of Johannesburg, Councillor Dada Morero,
Ministers and Deputy Ministers,
Members of Parliament and Provincial Legislatures,
Executive Chairperson and Board of the National Youth Development Agency,
Co-Founder and CEO of One Young World, Ms Kate Robertson,
Managing Director of One Young World, Ms Ella Robertson McKay, 
Representatives of youth formations,
Veterans of our liberation struggle,
Distinguished Guests,
And the youth of our beloved nation,
Sanibonani. Dumelang. Avuxeni. Molweni. Ndi matsheloni. Lotjhani. Goeie môre. Good morning.

Fifty years ago, not far from where we stand today, thousands of young South Africans marched carrying nothing but their schoolbooks, their courage and their dreams.

They faced bullets with bare hands. They confronted injustice with extraordinary bravery.

And through their sacrifice, they changed the course of our nation's history.

On the 16th of June the children of Soweto walked out of their classrooms and into history. 

They were told they could not learn in their own language, in their own country, on equal terms. 

They refused that limit. And many of them paid for that refusal with their lives.

We gather here to mark 50 years since the uprising of South Africa’s youth on the 16th June 1976. 

Half a century later, we remember, celebrate and honour a generation of young people whose courage, organisation and hunger for freedom marked a turning point in the struggle against apartheid.

The question before us today is not whether young people have the courage to change South Africa. The youth of 1976 answered that question.

The question before us is whether South Africa is doing enough to create opportunities worthy of their sacrifice.

Speaking on the 20th anniversary of the uprising, President Nelson Mandela addressed the youth of our country. He said:
“On that fateful day 20 years ago, you jolted this nation from its slumber, and rejected the slave education that the apartheid regime had implemented… You changed the course of history, and accelerated the downfall of the apartheid system.”

It was here that thousands of learners left their classrooms to protest against the imposition of Afrikaans as a medium of instruction in their schools. 
But their protest was about more than language. 

It was a rejection of Bantu Education, which was designed to limit the aspirations of black children and prepare them for lives of servitude.

It was a protest against the injustice, impoverishment, denigration and daily hardship imposed upon the black child by the cruel system of apartheid.

From the streets of Soweto issued a powerful cry for justice, for dignity, for equality.

The struggle of young people did not begin with the class of 1976. 

They stood on the shoulders of earlier generations — leaders such as Anton Lembede, Nelson Mandela, Walter Sisulu, Oliver Tambo, Albertina Sisulu, Lilian Ngoyi and Robert Sobukwe — who moved the liberation struggle towards mass mobilisation and direct action.

They were shaped, too, by a wider current of liberation. Across the continent, the struggles of Ghana, Algeria, Mozambique, Angola and the Congo showed that colonialism could be defeated.

Across the diaspora, the Civil Rights and Black Power movements affirmed the dignity of black people. 

By the early 1970s, the Black Consciousness Movement was teaching a new generation to reject notions of inferiority, to recover their dignity, to reclaim their identity and to forge their own future.

By the time the learners of 1976 took to the streets, they were part of a powerful river of youth resistance. 

Many students were killed. 

Many young people were injured, detained or forced into exile.

The image of Mbuyisa Makhubu carrying Hector Pieterson, with his sister, Antoinette Sithole, running alongside, conveyed to the world the brutality of apartheid. 

Their contribution belongs in the centre of our national memory.

The young people of 1976 did not stand alone. 

They were supported by parents, teachers, health workers, religious leaders and community structures. 

They were supported by leaders such as Mama Albertina Sisulu and Mama Winnie Madikizela-Mandela, the Black Parents Association and the Soweto Committee of Ten. 

We remember in particular the mothers who searched for their children, the mothers who mourned and the women who expressed the pain of the nation when apartheid expected them to be silent.

The uprising began in Soweto, but it did not remain there. 

It spread to Alexandra, Tembisa and KwaThema, and later to Langa, Gugulethu, Nyanga and townships across the country, giving new momentum to the struggle against apartheid.

The cries of these young people reverberated across the world, galvanising the international movement to condemn and isolate apartheid South Africa.

This year, Youth Day takes place at the intersection of important milestones of freedom. 

In addition to the 50th anniversary of the Soweto uprising, we also mark 70 years since the Women's March of 1956 and 30 years since the adoption of our democratic Constitution in 1996. 

Together, these milestones remind us that freedom was built across generations: by the women who resisted pass laws, by the young people who rose against Bantu Education, and by a Constitution that reflects the views and aspirations of all the people of South Africa.

As we mark the 50th anniversary of the Soweto uprising, we are called on to ensure that freedom lives in every generation, and to reflect honestly on the work that must still be done so that freedom is felt in the lives of young people today. 

The South Africa of today is not the South Africa of 1976. 

We are no longer governed by laws that decide what a black child may learn, where they may live, what work they may do and what future they may imagine. 

That change did not come by chance. It was won through struggle, protected through our Constitution and advanced through the policies and programmes of our democratic governments.

The youth of 1976 were not the last generation to organise for change. 

We remember young freedom fighters such as Solomon Mahlangu, the Cradock Four and Nokuthula Simelane, and the youth and student formations that helped make apartheid ungovernable. 

In the democratic era, that same spirit continued through the Rhodes Must Fall and Fees Must Fall movements.

Because of these generations of struggle, South Africa has changed fundamentally. 

The Constitution of 1996 guarantees the right to basic education. 

Through legislation such as the South African Schools Act and the Higher Education Act, we dismantled the legal architecture of apartheid education and began building a system founded on equality, access and redress.

Since 1994, access to schooling has been significantly expanded. 

No-fee schools now support children from poor households. 

The School Nutrition Programme feeds more than nine million learners every school day. 

Last year, South Africa recorded the highest matric pass rate in our history, with more than two-thirds of bachelor passes coming from schools in disadvantaged communities. 

We have opened the doors of post-school education and training. 

This year, the National Student Financial Aid Scheme approved funding for more than a million students at universities and colleges. 

Today, our country produces four times the number of African graduates than it did in 1994. These are doctors, teachers, engineers, nurses, scientists, entrepreneurs and leaders in many fields. 

Young people are taking their place in public leadership. Today, more than 80 Members of the National Assembly are aged 40 or younger.

These gains show that democracy has opened doors that apartheid deliberately kept closed. 

But opening doors is not enough. The task now is to ensure that those doors lead to skills, work, enterprise, ownership and dignity.

We must be honest about the challenge before us. 

More than 4.7 million young people are unemployed. 

The youth unemployment rate stands at 46 percent. 

Behind every statistic is a young person who wants to work, wants to contribute and wants to build a future.

It is the graduate who sends out dozens of applications and receives no response.

It is the young entrepreneur with an idea but no access to capital.

It is the skilled artisan who cannot find an opportunity to demonstrate their talents.

We cannot accept this as normal.

Young people are among the most affected by violent crime and theft.

These are some of the greatest threats to our country's prosperity and social stability.

Faced with these challenges, there are some who blame the problems of unemployment, crime and poor service delivery on foreign nationals.

Even as we recognise the challenge of illegal immigration – which we are taking decisive action to address – our problems are our own. And which we have a responsibility to fix ourselves.

We recognise that many communities are frustrated by crime, unemployment and pressure on public services.

These frustrations are real and must never be dismissed.

But we must also be honest about their causes.

The roots of these challenges lie primarily in inequality, slow economic growth and weaknesses in service delivery.

Addressing these challenges requires practical solutions, not the scapegoating of vulnerable people.

The challenges facing young people are grave and their concerns are real.

That is why our response to these challenges must be comprehensive and urgent.
 
In this regard, government is acting on three fronts.

First, we are expanding public employment, youth service and workplace experience. 

More than 5.7 million young people are now registered on the SA Youth.mobi platform. Of these, more than 2 million young people have gained access to earning opportunities. 

The Presidential Employment Stimulus has created work and livelihood opportunities for more than 2.5 million unemployed South Africans. 

Of these, 82 percent were young people and 66 percent were women.

Through the pilot phase of the Jobs Boost Outcomes Fund, over 9,000 young people have been enrolled and more than 7,200 successfully placed into employment.

This shows the potential of training that is linked to employment opportunities.

The revitalised National Youth Service has placed more than 130,000 young people in paid service opportunities to date, with an additional 100,000 community service youth employment opportunities currently available.

These interventions give young people a foothold in the world of work, but they are not the final destination. 

That is why our overarching priority at the moment is to grow an inclusive economy that creates sustainable jobs at scale.

Second, we are reshaping the skills system so that qualifications lead more directly to work and enterprise. 

We are moving away from training for training's sake.

That is why we are strengthening TVET colleges as engines of occupational skills and linking colleges, employers and SETAs to the needs of local economies. 

Skills are not formed in classrooms alone. They are formed in workplaces, industries, communities and enterprises.

Third, we are opening the productive economy to young people. 

Over the next three years, the state is investing R1 trillion in infrastructure. 

We are building and maintaining roads, dams, schools, hospitals, clinics, electricity lines, railway lines and port infrastructure. 

This investment will create apprenticeships, artisan development, skills transfer and enterprise development for young people. 

Our growth strategy is focused on sectors that create jobs at scale: manufacturing, mining beneficiation, digital infrastructure, agriculture, green industrialisation, energy, logistics, critical minerals, tourism and the creative economy. 

Young people must be an integral part of these industries. 

They must be trained for these industries, work in them, build businesses in them and own a part of them.

The small business portfolio will provide support to one million micro, small and medium-sized enterprises over this term of government. 

The Public Procurement Act gives us the opportunity to use the buying power of the state to support enterprises owned by young people, women and persons with disabilities. 

Unemployment must be seen as a societal problem. All stakeholders in our country must work together to provide sustainable solutions to reduce unemployment among young people.

Government has a responsibility and is continuously taking action to address this problem. The private sector has a responsibility too to address the challenge of unemployment.

I want to speak directly to the employers of South Africa – to every business owner, every manager, every person who holds in their hands the power to hire. 

The young person in front of you does not lack ability. They lack only the chance to prove it. 

I am asking you to open the door. Hire for potential, not only for experience. 

Take the chance on the young person who has never been given one.

And I say to you: government will not ask you to carry that risk alone. 

Through the Employment Tax Incentive, we already share the cost of bringing a young person into their first job. We will strengthen that support, because the first job is the hardest to get and the most important a person ever has.

We must change how we prepare young people from the beginning. We therefore call upon employers to hire a young person and not require them to have experience before you hire them.

As the country prepares for the next local government elections, we must place young people at the centre of building municipalities that work.

Young people must not only be councillors. They must be the engineers, planners, artisans, water technicians, electricians, data specialists and entrepreneurs who build sustainable cities, towns and villages.

Our progress as a nation must be measured by whether young people are moving from school to skills, from skills to work, and from enterprise support to markets, scale and ownership. 

This is how we honour the youth of 1976: by building a South Africa in which every young person has a fair chance to learn, work, serve, build, create, own and live with dignity.

Across South Africa there are over 37 million young people under the age of 35. 

This is our country’s greatest strength.

The youthfulness of our population provides our country with a dynamism, innovativeness and potential productivity that few other countries outside our continent can match.

This generation must take its place in every part of our national life: in the economy, in public institutions, in communities, in innovation, in culture and in the work of building our democracy.

The young people of 1976 remind us that freedom is not protected by memory alone. 

It is protected by active citizenship, by organisation, by discipline, by service and by responsibility. 

Today's generation has tools that the youth of 1976 did not have. 

They have technology, information and platforms that can connect communities, expose injustice and build enterprises. 

Technology must be matched by purpose, organisation and commitment to the common good.

As we look to the future, young people must be at the centre of democratic participation. 

They must register to vote, vote in elections, engage municipalities and hold public representatives accountable. 

Democracy is not only what happens in Parliament and council chambers. 

It is also built in schools, campuses, workplaces, churches, sports fields, community halls, streets and homes.

President Nelson Mandela said at the birth of our democracy that “the time to build is upon us”. 

This is the responsibility of our lifetime: to ensure that young people have the opportunity, support and confidence to build their lives and shape the future of our country.

Let us honour the youth of 1976 not only by remembering their courage, but by continuing the work for which they sacrificed so much. 

Let us build a South Africa in which freedom lives in every generation.

Fifty years ago, the youth of 1976 marched for the right to learn. They faced down bullets armed with nothing but the conviction that their minds mattered.

Today's generation inherits that courage, but the battle has changed. 

The youth of 1976 fought exclusion. Ours must fight unemployment, poverty and inequality.

Theirs was the struggle to enter the classroom. Ours is the struggle to ensure that what begins in the classroom does not end in the unemployment queue.

Just as they refused the limits imposed upon them, we too must refuse a future of diminished possibilities.

Let us build a South Africa where every young person can realise their potential.

Let us build a South Africa in which freedom lives in every generation.

So let us honour them not in words alone, but in deeds. 

Let us build a South Africa where every young person can realise their potential.

Where opportunity is not the privilege of a few, but the birthright of all. 

A South Africa in which freedom lives anew in every generation.

I thank you.
 

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President Ramaphosa mourns passing of cultural activist and jazz icon Abdullah Ibrahim
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President Cyril Ramaphosa has expressed his profound sadness at the passing of cultural activist, global jazz icon and Esteemed Member of the Order of Ikhamanga, Abdullah Ibrahim.

Abdullah Ibrahim has passed away at the age of 91, at the end of a life in music that spanned jazz genres and geographies.

President Ramaphosa offers his deep condolences to Mr Ibrahim’s children, pianist Tsakwe and hip-hop artist Jean Grae. Their mother, Sathima Bea Benjamin, a performer and recording artist herself, passed away in 2013, nine years after she received the Order of Ikhamanga.

As a pianist, composer, arranger and mentor, Abdullah Ibrahim campaigned against apartheid and drew audiences to his highly curated performances that showcased his accomplishment as a soloist and his collaboration with established and emerging talent.

His music also projected his spirituality and contemplative practice of martial arts.

In 2009, he was awarded the Order of Ikhamanga in Silver, in recognition of his excellent contribution to the arts, his success in putting South African music on the international map, and his lifelong fight against racism and apartheid.

President Ramaphosa said: “Today our nation mourns the passing of an international icon and global citizen whose profound creations honoured the South Africa that shaped his political commitment and musical brilliance.

“As we commemorate the 50th anniversary of the Youth Uprising, the passing of Abdullah Ibrahim reminds us of the then illegal benefit concert he organised in support of the liberation movement following the Uprising, as a demonstration of his commitment to our struggle.

“We give thanks for the many decades of his life that he devoted to his personal passion which he shared with humanity through his recordings and his appearances in clubs and concert halls throughout the globe.

“He has enriched our lives with his musical gifts and his involvement in making the world a better place.

“May his soul rest in peace.”


Media enquiries: Vincent Magwenya, Spokesperson to the President – media@presidency.gov.za

Issued by: The Presidency
Pretoria

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Message by President Cyril Ramaphosa to the Red Meat Abattoir Association
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Chairman of the Red Meat Abattoir Association, Mr Niel Venter, 
Board members, 
Abattoir owners and industry representatives, 
Government Officials,
Distinguished Guests,

Thank you for inviting me to address the Annual Conference and Congress of the Red Meat Abattoir Association.

Please accept my apologies for not being able to join you in person.

The focus of this conference on meat safety amidst evolving production systems reflects the changing production landscape within the industry and the pressures of animal diseases such as Foot and Mouth Disease.

This underscores the need for continued collaboration between Government and the industry to ensure that South Africa remains competitive and compliant in both domestic and international trade.

South Africa continues to play an important role in global agricultural trade.

In 2025, South Africa’s agricultural exports reached a record $15 billion, up 10 percent from the previous year. 

We have started this year on a sound footing, with farm product exports increasing by 11 percent year-on-year.

South Africa is an active member of the World Trade Organization and the World Organisation for Animal Health. 

Together, these organisations play a critical role in enabling safe and fair global trade in animals and animal products. 

While the science-based standards set by the World Organisation for Animal Health provide the foundation for international trade, market access often extends beyond these guidelines. 

Bilateral negotiations with importing countries are often required to establish mutually acceptable guarantees and risk-mitigation measures. 

These negotiated agreements provide the necessary assurances to trading partners and play a critical role in enabling and sustaining export opportunities. 

In a landmark achievement for our country, South Africa successfully negotiated a Veterinary Health Certificate in early 2026 that now allows the export of red meat and meat products derived from livestock vaccinated against foot and mouth disease. 

This includes animals that were vaccinated and are clinically healthy at the time of slaughter. 

This development represents a major advancement for the sector. 

It demonstrates strong confidence among international trading partners in the robustness of South Africa’s veterinary control systems.

This progress reinforces the strong global demand for South African red meat and affirms the value and credibility of our products in international markets. 

Most importantly, it demonstrates that when appropriate risk mitigation measures are in place, South African red meat remains a safe and trusted commodity. 

This development underscores the importance of continued engagement with trading partners to expand and safeguard market access opportunities. 

We welcome the commitment of the Red Meat Abattoir Association, together with the rest of the red meat value chain, to supporting the industry's growth, sustainability, and global competitiveness.

For its part, Government remains committed to providing an enabling environment for safe and equitable market access for our red meat industry. 

We know that abattoirs face many risks, and margins are always under pressure. 

Ensuring sufficient throughput and improving operational efficiency are therefore critical.  

At the same time, abattoirs play a vital role in food quality, food safety and the protection of South Africa’s food heritage.

I am convinced that even in an evolving production landscape, with both long-standing and emerging challenges, our red meat industry is more than capable of adapting, growing and thriving.

I wish you an excellent conference.

I thank you.
 

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Presidency cautions against the spread of misinformation about South Africa’s migration challenges
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The Presidency deeply regrets the tragic loss of life in these recent incidents, as one life lost is simply one too many. We extend our deepest sympathies to the families and communities affected.

To clarify the facts surrounding these events, the Department of International Relations and Cooperation will engage the World Health Organization (WHO) to ensure that the information before them is both accurate and reliable. The engagements will outline in detail how this complex matter is being addressed by the South African government.

Most notably, the WHO's characterization of the deaths of the Ethiopian nationals is, unfortunately, incorrect. The events that led to the deaths of these Ethiopian nationals fall within the realm of organized crime, as has already been publicly reported, and are being actively investigated by law enforcement agencies.

With regard to the Mozambican nationals, the South African Police Service (SAPS) has stated that this matter is also currently under active investigation.

President Ramaphosa and the Inter-Ministerial Committee on Migration have been unequivocal in their stance: only duly authorized law enforcement officials have the mandate to enforce the law.


Media inquiries: Vincent Magwenya Spokesperson to the President media@presidency.gov.za

Issued by: The Presidency
Pretoria
 

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President Ramaphosa to launch the Milestones of Freedom campaign
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President Cyril Ramaphosa will on Thursday, 18 June 2026, officially launch the Milestones of Freedom campaign at the Union Buildings in Tshwane.

The national programme is intended to commemorate key milestones in South Africa’s democratic journey, while also strengthening service delivery and promoting social cohesion.

The campaign will be held under the theme “Honouring the Past. Delivering the Future.”

This year marks several significant and defining milestones in South Africa’s democratic journey, including the 30th anniversary of the adoption of the Constitution; the 50th anniversary of the 1976 youth uprisings; the 70th anniversary of the anti-pass campaign; and the 60th anniversary of the forced removals from District Six.

These landmark events reflect the long struggle for democracy and freedom, while also underscoring the journey toward a more inclusive and equitable society. The campaign further signals the government's commitment to building on democratic gains and accelerating service delivery to communities.

The event will bring together leaders from Government, business, civil society and Youth organisations.

The launch will take place as follows:

Date: Thursday, 18 June 2026
Time: 11h30 (Accredited Media arrival at 08h00)
Venue: The Union Buildings, Tshwane

NOTE TO MEDIA: Government Communications (GCIS) has completed the accreditation process. Access will only be granted to accredited media.

 

Media enquiries:

The Presidency: Vincent Magwenya, Spokesperson to the President, on media@gcis.gov.za

Government Communications (GCIS): Nomonde Mnukwa, Acting Government Spokesperson, on 083 653 7485, and William Baloyi, Deputy Government Spokesperson, on 083 390 7147.

Issued by: The Presidency
Pretoria

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