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Virtual Keynote address by H.E. Deputy President Shipokosa Paulus Mashatile, Eastern Cape Traditional Leaders’ Summit, East London ICC
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Programme Directors, Nkosi Dalisizwe Dudumayo and COGTA HOD Vuyo Mlokothi;
Premier of the Eastern Cape, Mr Oscar Mabuyane; 
Your Majesties, Kings and Queens present here today;
Deputy Minister for Cooperative Governance and Traditional Affairs, Prince Zolile Burns-Ncamashe;
Deputy Minister for Agriculture, Ms Zoleka Capa;
MEC for Cooperative Governance and Traditional Affairs, Mr Zolile Williams;
Chairperson of the National House of Traditional and Khoisan Leaders, Kgosi Thabo Seathlolo; 
Chairperson of the Provincial House of Traditional and Khoisan Leaders, Nkosi Mpumalanga Gwadiso;
Members of the Executive Council;
Mayors and other Councillors present;
Esteemed Traditional Leaders; 
Distinguished Guests;

Ladies and Gentlemen,

When I received the invitation to address this Summit, I immediately recognised the importance of this gathering.

Not only because the President has tasked me with promoting social cohesion initiatives with Traditional and Khoi-San Leaders, but because you, as Royalty, occupy positions of profound importance in our communities.

You are entrusted by our ancestors to lead with honour, dignity, and wisdom. You are the custodians of our heritage, the guardians of our values, and the weavers of the social fabric that binds our nation together.

Although pressing commitments prevent me from joining you in person today, I address you with deep respect and humility.

My purpose today is to reflect on government’s progress in supporting traditional leadership and to consider how traditional institutions can continue to play a significant role in development and social cohesion within our constitutional democracy.
Let me state clearly: Government will never render traditional leaders irrelevant.

On the contrary, we recognise that traditional leadership remains a vital pillar of governance, particularly in rural communities.

Long before colonial powers arrived on our shores, traditional leaders were the heartbeat of governance in African societies. Councils convened under your leadership resolved disputes, upheld justice, and ensured the collective will of communities was respected.

Your authority was not imposed. It was earned through service, lineage, and trust by the people.

History also reminds us that when colonialism sought to dismantle indigenous systems, traditional leaders became both targets of manipulation and symbols of resistance.

Some were co-opted into structures designed to divide our people. Others remained steadfast, preserving languages, customs, and cultural identity in the face of oppression.

This resilience helped lay the foundation for the democratic society we enjoy today. The transition to democracy, however, also brought new complexities. Traditional leaders have had to navigate the important task of preserving cultural traditions while operating within a modern constitutional state.

Our Constitution recognises this reality. It affirms the institution, status, and role of traditional leadership according to customary law and acknowledges its significance within our democratic order.

This recognition reflects an important principle: our democracy must remain rooted in the lived realities of our people.

Across the country, we have witnessed traditional leaders adapting in meaningful ways to strengthen governance and development.

Legislative frameworks such as the Traditional Leadership and Governance Framework Acthave aligned traditional leadership with democratic principles.

Traditional Councils now work alongside municipalities within the system of cooperative governance. These councils include elected members and ensure the participation of women in leadership structures.
Through these changes, traditional leadership continues to evolve while preserving the heritage and legitimacy that communities place in these institutions.

However, challenges remain.

This Summit therefore provides an opportunity to reflect honestly on the support provided to traditional leadership since 1994, the obstacles traditional leaders face in fulfilling their responsibilities, and the practical steps required to strengthen cooperation between government and traditional institutions.

Ladies and Gentlemen,

The government has taken deliberate steps to restore the dignity and recognition of traditional leadership.
Platforms such as the National House of Traditional and Khoi-San Leaders, as well as Provincial and Local Houses, ensure that traditional leaders participate in shaping policies that affect rural communities.

Through these structures, traditional leaders have consistently raised critical issues including land rights, socio-economic development, institutional capacity, infrastructure support, policy reforms, and social cohesion.

In response, the President established the Inter-Ministerial Task Team on Matters of Traditional Leadership in 2022 to ensure a coordinated response to these concerns.

The Task Team focuses on five key priorities: advancing land rights and socio-economic development, strengthening traditional institutions, investing in infrastructure and skills, promoting nation-building and unity, and finalising policy and legislative reforms.

Through these initiatives, we reaffirm that traditional leaders are not bystanders in development. You are important partners in governance.
At the national level, traditional leaders play an advisory role on legislation and policies that affect customary law, land reform, and rural development.

At the provincial level, Houses of Traditional Leaders must strengthen collaboration with legislatures and provincial governments to ensure that programmes respond effectively to rural realities.

At the local level, traditional councils must work closely with municipalities to close service-delivery gaps and mobilise communities to protect public infrastructure such as schools, clinics, and water systems.

In the Eastern Cape in particular, traditional leaders have a crucial role to play in confronting some of the most pressing social challenges facing our communities.

When gender-based violence devastates families and communities, traditional leaders must stand at the forefront in declaring that no woman or child should live in fear.

Our government has classified Gender-Based Violence and Femicide as a national disasterto strengthen coordination in addressing this crisis.

But legislation alone cannot change behaviour. Community leadership is essential in challenging harmful attitudes and practices that perpetuate violence.

Similarly, when substance abuse and unemployment threaten the future of our youth, traditional leaders must guide young people towards discipline, opportunity, and hope.

Members of Royal Houses,

As custodians of communal land, traditional leaders carry a profound responsibility.

Land is not only a resource for economic development; it is also the foundation of identity, dignity, and empowerment.

Managing communal land requires transparency, fairness, and accountability so that development opportunities can benefit entire communities.

We must also recognise the potential of agriculture as a driver of sustainable development in rural areas.

The soil is one of our greatest assets. When cultivated wisely, it can create jobs, strengthen food security, and provide opportunities for youth and women.

Government initiatives such as the Presidential Employment Stimulus have already created more than 2.5 million employment and livelihood opportunities, many of them benefiting young people in rural communities.

The Social Employment Fund is also supporting agricultural initiatives by providing training, skills development, and access to markets for smallholder farmers.

Ladies and Gentlemen,

The fight against poverty, inequality and social fragmentation requires partnership between government and traditional institutions.

This spirit of partnership is also reflected in the National Dialogue, which has now entered its first phase.

Traditional and Khoi-San Leaders form part of both the Eminent Persons Group and the National Dialogue Steering Committee, ensuring that voices rooted in community wisdom and heritage help shape the national conversation.

I encourage traditional leaders across the country to actively participate in the community dialogues that will inform the National Dialogue Convention later this year, which will be led by the President.

During this Summit, let us reaffirm that the battle against social ills cannot be fought in isolation.
It is won when chiefs, councillors, churches, schools, and civil society stand together.

It is won when we empower women as pillars of resilience and invest in youth as the leaders of tomorrow.

And it is won when dignity is restored to every household.

As we move forward, let us strengthen the partnership between elected leaders and traditional authorities so that together we build a society that is inclusive, just, and firmly rooted in the heritage of our people.

As you continue with deliberation for the duration of this programme, I wish you robust and directive engagements.

Ndiyabulela, I thank you.
 

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Remarks by Deputy Minister in The Presidency, Kenny Morolong, on the occasion of the TikTok Safer Internet Summit, Nairobi, Kenya
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Addressing a gathering of journalists and Government communicators, on the eve of our State of the Nation Address; I had occasion to say:

“Our 30-year-old Constitution gave us the framework. Our 25-year-old democratic local government brought governance closer to the people. Now, as we prepare for another round of local government elections, we must ensure that our media landscape supports informed participation and strengthens the bonds of community.”

I am repeating these words to you because, I am hopeful that all of us as Africans, do realise how far we come, when the South African story is told. I firmly insist that, we cannot sufficiently tell our story – as South Africans - without counting the sacrifices of the peoples of Africa, in procuring our freedom. 

I repeat this here to tell you a story that because of these heroic sacrifices, South Africa is today celebrating the milestones.

His Excellency, Ambassador Philip Thigo;
Hon. Cabinet Secretary, William Kabogo Gitau;
His Excellency, South African Acting High Commissioner to Kenya;
Executives and Stakeholders of TikTok;
Distinguished guests;
Content Creators;
Digital Safety Experts;
Ladies and gentlemen.

KARIBUNI!

We are pleased to be in Nairobi this week, reinforcing the strong partnership between South Africa and Kenya.

By attending TikTok’s Safer Internet today, we look forward to collaborating on advancing responsible AI governance, enhancing content transparency and strengthening digital safety measures to ensure integrity in AI systems and secure online environments for all users across the continent, including South Africa.

In his work Nexus, Yuval Harari observes, “civilisations are born from the marriage of bureaucracy and mythology. The computer-based network is a new type of bureaucracy that is far more powerful and relentless than any human-based bureaucracy we’ve seen before.”

For centuries, societies were organised through visible bureaucracies: governments, institutions, administrations.

These were slow, human and limited by geography.

However, today humanity has created a new form of bureaucracy: the global digital network.

Algorithms that shape how billions of people receive and consume information every single day power this bureaucracy.

Social media platforms — including TikTok — are now part of this new digital bureaucracy. 

They organise attention, distribute narratives, amplify voices and influence how societies understand or perceive the truth, authority and reality itself.

This therefore this makes information integrity one of the defining governance challenges of the 21st century.

Programme Director,

While we acknowledge how digital networks can spread knowledge, creativity and opportunity, we must accept that they also spread something far more dangerous: misinformation, disinformation and malinformation.

These three forms of harmful information have different origins but the same destructive impact.

Together, they undermine trust in institutions, polarise communities and threaten democratic stability.

Because digital networks operate faster and further than any previous communication system, these harms “are far more powerful and relentless than any human” societies has eever experienced before.

Ladies and gentlemen,

South Africa understands the importance of responsible communication in a democracy.

Our Government Communication and Information System has adopted the National Communication Strategy Framework 2025–2030, which emphasises coordinated, credible and citizen-centred communication across all spheres of government. 

For its part, the South African government, through the National Communication Strategy Framework recognises that communication is not simply about messaging. 

It is about building trust between the state and the people. 

It stresses the importance of accurate, timely and proactive information so that citizens are empowered to participate meaningfully in their own development. 

If we accept this to be true then we should accept that information integrity is not merely a technical issue.

It is a development issue.

It is a governance issue.

It is a democratic issue.

Ladies and gentlemen,

For our purposes in Southern Africa, the SADC Protocol on Communications, calls on all member states to develop efficient, integrated and coordinated communications systems that support economic growth and social development across the region. 

The protocol recognises that communications infrastructure and services are strategic assets that must serve the collective interests of societies and strengthen regional cooperation. 

Today, however, we must acknowledge that the communications environment envisioned in the 1990s has transformed dramatically.

The most powerful communication networks in the world are no longer only national broadcasters or telecommunications systems.

They are global digital platforms that connect billions and shape public discourse.

These platforms function - whether intentionally or not - as the new bureaucracies of information.

This point, underscores the importance of TikTok Safer Internet Summit.

I think that by mere convening of this summit, the organisers are making an emphatic and a bigger point that the responsibility for a safer digital environment cannot fall on governments alone.

TikTok has become one of the most influential cultural and communication platforms in the world. 

It has unlocked creativity, empowered young voices and transformed the way information travels across societies.

However, influence carries responsibility.

With billions of users - many of whom are young - the platform sits at the centre of the global information ecosystem.

That means TikTok is not just a platform for entertainment.

It is also part of the digital bureaucracy that shapes public consciousness.

This reality calls for proactive mechanisms that discourage and disrupt the spread of harmful information.

Programme Director,

Let me suggest three areas where platforms like TikTok can lead global innovation.

First, responsible use of Algorithm.

In that regard, Aalgorithms should not only optimise engagement.

They should also actively identify and reduce the amplification of demonstrably false or harmful content.

The architecture of digital networks must reward credible information rather than sensational falsehoods.

Second, information transparency.

Users must understand how information reaches them.

Greater transparency around recommendation systems, content moderation and information verification can help rebuild public trust in digital platforms.

Third, digital literacy partnerships.

Platforms must work closely with governments, educators and civil society to equip citizens — especially young people — with the tools to recognise misinformation and verify information sources.

In this regard, we stand ready to partner with TikTok to deliver on the digital literacy programmes across the country.

In an era where every citizen carries a publishing platform in his or her pocket, digital literacy has become as essential as traditional literacy.

We also are pleased that as TikTok you are committing to work closely with content creators to properly monetise their content.

Ladies and gentlemen,

This is not a call for censorship.

It is a call for responsible stewardship of the digital public sphere.

The challenge before us is to ensure that the new bureaucracy of computer-based networks serves humanity rather than destabilising it.

If civilisations are indeed born from the marriage of bureaucracy and mythology, then the narratives circulating within our digital networks will help determine the future of our societies.

Will these networks amplify truth or falsehood?

Will they strengthen democracy or weaken it?

Will they unite communities or divide them?

The answer to these questions depends on the choices we make today.
Governments must create enabling policy environments.

Platforms must innovate responsibly.

Civil society must hold all of us accountable.

Citizens must engage critically with the information they produce and consume.

Together, we can transform digital networks from engines of misinformation into engines of empowerment.

Together, we can ensure that technology strengthens rather than weakens democratic societies.

Together, we can build an internet that reflects the highest values of humanity: truth, accountability, creativity and shared progress.

We have to be deliberate and ensure we put enough guardrails, especially for the vulnerable sections of society: the elderly, the disabled and the children.

Let this summit mark a new chapter of cooperation between platforms like TikTok and governments across the great and beautiful continent of Africa.

I thank you.

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Remarks by Deputy Minister in The Presidency, Kenny Morolong, on the occasion of the TikTok Safer Internet Summit, Nairobi, Kenya
Body

Addressing a gathering of journalists and Government communicators, on the eve of our State of the Nation Address; I had occasion to say:

“Our 30-year-old Constitution gave us the framework. Our 25-year-old democratic local government brought governance closer to the people. Now, as we prepare for another round of local government elections, we must ensure that our media landscape supports informed participation and strengthens the bonds of community.”

I am repeating these words to you because, I am hopeful that all of us as Africans, do realise how far we come, when the South African story is told. I firmly insist that, we cannot sufficiently tell our story – as South Africans - without counting the sacrifices of the peoples of Africa, in procuring our freedom. 

I repeat this here to tell you a story that because of these heroic sacrifices, South Africa is today celebrating the milestones.

His Excellency, Ambassador Philip Thigo;
Hon. Cabinet Secretary, William Kabogo Gitau;
His Excellency, South African Acting High Commissioner to Kenya;
Executives and Stakeholders of TikTok;
Distinguished guests;
Content Creators;
Digital Safety Experts;
Ladies and gentlemen.

KARIBUNI!

We are pleased to be in Nairobi this week, reinforcing the strong partnership between South Africa and Kenya.

By attending TikTok’s Safer Internet today, we look forward to collaborating on advancing responsible AI governance, enhancing content transparency and strengthening digital safety measures to ensure integrity in AI systems and secure online environments for all users across the continent, including South Africa.

In his work Nexus, Yuval Harari observes:

“civilisations are born from the marriage of bureaucracy and mythology. The computer-based network is a new type of bureaucracy that is far more powerful and relentless than any human-based bureaucracy we’ve seen before.”

For centuries, societies were organised through visible bureaucracies: governments, institutions, administrations.

These were slow, human and limited by geography.

However, today humanity has created a new form of bureaucracy: the global digital network.

Algorithms that shape how billions of people receive and consume information every single day power this bureaucracy.

Social media platforms — including TikTok — are now part of this new digital bureaucracy. 

They organise attention, distribute narratives, amplify voices and influence how societies understand or perceive the truth, authority and reality itself.

This therefore this makes information integrity one of the defining governance challenges of the 21st century.

Programme Director,

While we acknowledge how digital networks can spread knowledge, creativity and opportunity, we must accept that they also spread something far more dangerous: misinformation, disinformation and malinformation.

These three forms of harmful information have different origins but the same destructive impact.

Together, they undermine trust in institutions, polarise communities and threaten democratic stability.

Because digital networks operate faster and further than any previous communication system, these harms “are far more powerful and relentless than any human” societies has eever experienced before.

Ladies and gentlemen,

South Africa understands the importance of responsible communication in a democracy.

Our Government Communication and Information System has adopted the National Communication Strategy Framework 2025–2030, which emphasises coordinated, credible and citizen-centred communication across all spheres of government. 

For its part, the South African government, through the National Communication Strategy Framework recognises that communication is not simply about messaging. 

It is about building trust between the state and the people. 

It stresses the importance of accurate, timely and proactive information so that citizens are empowered to participate meaningfully in their own development. 

If we accept this to be true then we should accept that information integrity is not merely a technical issue.

It is a development issue.

It is a governance issue.

It is a democratic issue.

Ladies and gentlemen,

For our purposes in Southern Africa, the SADC Protocol on Communications, calls on all member states to develop efficient, integrated and coordinated communications systems that support economic growth and social development across the region. 

The protocol recognises that communications infrastructure and services are strategic assets that must serve the collective interests of societies and strengthen regional cooperation. 

Today, however, we must acknowledge that the communications environment envisioned in the 1990s has transformed dramatically.

The most powerful communication networks in the world are no longer only national broadcasters or telecommunications systems.

They are global digital platforms that connect billions and shape public discourse.

These platforms function - whether intentionally or not - as the new bureaucracies of information.

This point, underscores the importance of TikTok Safer Internet Summit.

I think that by mere convening of this summit, the organisers are making an emphatic and a bigger point that the responsibility for a safer digital environment cannot fall on governments alone.

TikTok has become one of the most influential cultural and communication platforms in the world. 

It has unlocked creativity, empowered young voices and transformed the way information travels across societies.

However, influence carries responsibility.
With billions of users - many of whom are young - the platform sits at the centre of the global information ecosystem.

That means TikTok is not just a platform for entertainment.

It is also part of the digital bureaucracy that shapes public consciousness.
\
This reality calls for proactive mechanisms that discourage and disrupt the spread of harmful information.

Programme Director,

Let me suggest three areas where platforms like TikTok can lead global innovation.

First, responsible use of Algorithm.

In that regard, Aalgorithms should not only optimise engagement.

They should also actively identify and reduce the amplification of demonstrably false or harmful content.

The architecture of digital networks must reward credible information rather than sensational falsehoods.

Second, information transparency.

Users must understand how information reaches them.

Greater transparency around recommendation systems, content moderation and information verification can help rebuild public trust in digital platforms.

Third, digital literacy partnerships.

Platforms must work closely with governments, educators and civil society to equip citizens — especially young people — with the tools to recognise misinformation and verify information sources.

In this regard, we stand ready to partner with TikTok to deliver on the digital literacy programmes across the country.

In an era where every citizen carries a publishing platform in his or her pocket, digital literacy has become as essential as traditional literacy.

We also are pleased that as TikTok you are committing to work closely with content creators to properly monetise their content.

Ladies and gentlemen,

This is not a call for censorship.

It is a call for responsible stewardship of the digital public sphere.

The challenge before us is to ensure that the new bureaucracy of computer-based networks serves humanity rather than destabilising it.

If civilisations are indeed born from the marriage of bureaucracy and mythology, then the narratives circulating within our digital networks will help determine the future of our societies.

Will these networks amplify truth or falsehood?

Will they strengthen democracy or weaken it?

Will they unite communities or divide them?

The answer to these questions depends on the choices we make today.
Governments must create enabling policy environments.

Platforms must innovate responsibly.

Civil society must hold all of us accountable.

Citizens must engage critically with the information they produce and consume.

Together, we can transform digital networks from engines of misinformation into engines of empowerment.

Together, we can ensure that technology strengthens rather than weakens democratic societies.

Together, we can build an internet that reflects the highest values of humanity: truth, accountability, creativity and shared progress.

We have to be deliberate and ensure we put enough guardrails, especially for the vulnerable sections of society: the elderly, the disabled and the children.

Let this summit mark a new chapter of cooperation between platforms like TikTok and governments across the great and beautiful continent of Africa.

I thank you.

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Deputy President Mashatile to address the Eastern Cape Traditional Leaders Summit
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Deputy President Shipokosa Paulus Mashatile will this afternoon, 10 March 2026, deliver a keynote address virtually at the Eastern Cape Traditional Leaders Summit taking place from 10-11 March 2026 at the East London ICC, Eastern Cape Province. 

The Eastern Cape Traditional Leaders Summit has been convened as a platform where challenges facing the Traditional Leadership Institution in discharging their constitutional and customary obligation and strategies to strengthen positioning of the institution in working closely with government will be deliberated, with a view to providing practical solutions for the betterment of the lives of communities in the areas under Traditional Leadership. 

A couple of weeks ago, President Cyril Ramaphosa addressed the official Opening of the National House of Traditional and Khoi-San Leaders in Parliament, Cape Town, where he stressed the importance of the institution of Traditional Leadership in the history, presence and future of South Africa as a united, democratic and prosperous country, in the service of its citizens.

The President has delegated the Deputy President to work closely with Traditional and Khoi-San Leaders in addressing issues that they have raised, including Government support to the institution; social ills confronting their communities; interface of Traditional Leadership with Local and Provincial Government; local economic development and job opportunities for Traditional Communities.

Details of the virtual address are as follows:
Date: Tuesday, 10 March 2026
Time: 12h30 
Venue: East London ICC, Eastern Cape Province


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 Brazil-South Africa Business Forum during the State Visit to Brazil, Brasilia, Brazil
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Your Excellency, President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva,
Distinguished Ministers, Ambassadors and Members of Delegations,
Leaders of Business,
Ladies and Gentlemen.,
 
It is a great honour for to be with you today in Brasilia.
 
Brazil and South Africa are much alike. 
 
We are large, complex and diverse democracies. We are resource-rich and full of talent. 
 
We carry the weight of significant inequality and we both carry the ambition to overcome it. 
 
We are members of BRICS, partners in IBSA, advocates together within the G20 and at the WTO.
 
We have consistently championed the view that the rules governing global trade and investment must be made more fair, more inclusive and more responsive to the realities of the Global South.
 
This visit presents us with an opportunity to re-imagine a world of opportunities anchored by our shared values and vision. 
 
As Team South Africa, we are keen to rebalance our trade by growing and diversifying South African exports to Brazil.
 
Both countries have an interest in improving market access and product coverage through the MERCOSUR-SACU Preferential Trade Agreement.
 
Among other things, we need to work on reducing trade friction by strengthening cooperation on trade remedies and resolving non-tariff constraints affecting priority products.
 
There is huge scope for advancing industrial cooperation in identified high-impact sectors.
 
These sectors include biofuels, defence, agro-processing, aerospace, energy, pharmaceuticals, advanced manufacturing and automotive.
 
These cooperation should include technology transfer and skills development.
 
We want to position South Africa as Brazil’s gateway into African markets under the African Continental Free Trade Area, and to position Brazil as South Africa’s gateway into Latin America.
 
Many South African companies have operations in Brazil. These include companies like Sasol, MTN, Naspers, FNB, Aspen Holdings, Grindrod, Standard Bank, AngloGold Ashanti and others. 
 
Brazilian companies such as Petrobras, Embraer, Marcopolo SA have operations in South Africa. 
 
We welcome the establishment by Embraer of an aviation training academy at OR Tambo International Airport, building South African aerospace talent and embedding our country in a global aviation value chain. 
 
Marcopolo has invested in automotive manufacturing in the Gauteng province, contributing assembly capacity and workforce development. 
 
The Brazilian industrial engineering group WEG has built a manufacturing and distribution presence that serves South Africa’s mining, energy and water sectors. 
 
The foundation for greater trade and investment is in place.
 
Within BRICS, we have both championed development-oriented reform of the international financial architecture. 
 
Within IBSA, we have demonstrated that South–South cooperation can deliver real outcomes in health, agriculture, science and education. 
 
In the G20, South Africa has built on the momentum of Brazil’s distinguished Presidency in 2024, advancing shared priorities of inclusive growth, climate finance and fairer trade rules.
 
We have the foundation of a preferential trade agreement, the MERCOSUR-SACU Preferential Trade Agreement, covering more than a thousand tariff lines. 
 
We see this agreement as a platform with much greater potential than has yet been realised.
 
We are eager to work with our Brazilian partners to expand its product coverage and increase its use within the business community. 
 
South Africa is open for business.
 
We both have the policies, infrastructure and financial and technical tools to make it happen. 
 
Our Industrial Development Corporation and the Export Credit Insurance Corporation of South Africa are in the room. 
 
They are available to support a joint financing fund instrument targeting large scale infrastructure projects in manufacturing, biofuel, transport and energy. 
 
Both countries have sound technical standards regulators and agencies. 
 
There is therefore good opportunity for technical exchanges in the field of standards, accreditation, specification and conformity assessments.
Agreements have been signed. Now is the time to accelerate implementation. 
 
To Brazilian executives who are considering where to deploy capital and build partnerships in the decade ahead, South Africa is not simply a market of 63 million people. 
 
South Africa is the gateway to a continent of 1.4 billion people, integrated through the African Continental Free Trade Area into a single market with a combined GDP approaching $4 trillion. 
 
Our main ports – Durban, Cape Town and Richards Bay – are among the busiest in the southern hemisphere. 
 
Our financial system is the most sophisticated on the African continent. 
 
Our logistics infrastructure, legal framework and depth of skilled human capital together provide a competitive advantage.
 
South Africa and Brazil are not simply trading partners. 
 
We are fellow architects of a more equitable international order. 
 
At a time when multilateralism faces real pressure, when the rules governing international trade are in flux, when the voices of the Global South risk being marginalised, our partnership carries a greater significance.
 
Let our economic partnership be the living expression of that shared political purpose. 
 
When South Africa and Brazil trade more, when we invest in each other’s economies, when we build value chains that span the South Atlantic, we are not merely creating jobs and generating returns. 
 
We are demonstrating that the Global South can shape its own prosperity.
 
I am here today with a business delegation representing South Africa’s most capable export and investment-ready companies across aerospace, mining, chemicals, agro-processing, pharmaceuticals, energy, defence and advanced manufacturing. 
 
They have made this journey not as observers, but as partners ready to build.
 
As I look around this room at the companies, the entrepreneurs, the investors and the decision-makers who have made the journey to be here I see something powerful. 
 
I see two nations choosing partnership over isolation. Cooperation over competition.
 
In closing, I invite you all to join us at the South Africa Investment Conference in Johannesburg on the 31st of March 2026, not simply as guests, but as partners in building a future of shared prosperity between our nations. 
 
The door to South Africa is open. And the time to invest and grow together is now.
 
I thank you.
 

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Media remarks by President Cyril Ramaphosa on the occasion of the State Visit to the Federative Republic of Brazil, Brasilia
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Your Excellency, President Luiz Inácio Lula Da Silva,
Ambassadors,
Ministers,
Distinguished Members of our Delegations
Ladies and gentlemen of the Media
 
I wish to thank you, President Lula, for the warm welcome extended to me and my delegation and for the constructive manner in which our discussions have been conducted.
 
We wish to pay our respects to the victims of the recent floods and landslides in the state of Minas Gerais and to convey to the families of those who lost their lives our deepest condolences. 
 
Our meeting takes place in the year that South Africa celebrates the 30th anniversary of the adoption of our democratic Constitution. 
 
On this occasion, we reflect on the progress our democratic nation has made and the sacrifices that made our freedom possible. 
 
We remain deeply grateful for the solidarity of the people of Brazil during our struggle for freedom. This support contributed meaningfully to the achievements we celebrate today.
 
Our visit takes place against the backdrop of renewed conflict in the Middle East. We reiterate our call for the peaceful resolution of all disputes in line with the United Nations Charter. We condemn the loss of civilian life and the destruction of vital infrastructure. 
 
We call for an immediate cessation of hostilities.
 
Your leadership has strengthened the foundations of our strategic partnership. We value your guidance on how our cooperation can be deepened and made more impactful.
 
South Africa and Brazil share a commitment to equality, economic growth and the eradication of poverty. These shared values provide a strong basis for building practical, mutually beneficial programmes that advance our respective national development priorities.
 
I am joined by several Ministers and officials. Working with their Brazilian counterparts, this delegation is well positioned to expand cooperation across key areas of mutual interest.
 
Our interactions with the Brazilian government and the forthcoming Business Forum are important steps in strengthening and expanding our strategic partnership. 
 
The South Africa–Brazil Joint Commission is a central platform for this work and we look forward to hosting its eighth session later this year. 
 
We also welcome progress in several sectors, including the conclusion of the Memorandum of Intent on Agriculture and the Memorandum of Understanding on Basic Education. 
 
Deepening our economic cooperation is imperative. 
 
South Africa remains committed to strengthening cooperation in agriculture, agro‑processing and value‑added exports. 
 
Enhancing reciprocal market access, including through the MERCOSUR–SACU Preferential Trade Agreement, will be vital. Our business delegation stands ready to pursue new commercial opportunities.
 
South Africa serves as a strategic entry point for Brazil into the African continent, just as Brazil provides a gateway for South Africa into Latin America and the Caribbean. This visit strengthens these linkages and supports broader regional engagement.
 
As we conclude our engagements, I reaffirm South Africa’s commitment to advancing our Strategic Partnership. 
 
The clarity and warmth of our discussions give me confidence that the momentum generated during this visit will yield concrete outcomes for both our nations and our respective regions.
 
President Lula, thank you once again for your generous hospitality and the spirit of partnership that continues to define our relationship. 
 
We look forward to welcoming you to South Africa soon.
 
I thank you.
Obrigado.
 

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President Ramaphosa extends period of Madlanga Commission
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President Cyril Ramaphosa has amended the period in which the Judicial Commission of Inquiry Commission into Criminality, Political Interference and Corruption in the Criminal Justice System arising from specific allegations by Lieutenant-General Nhlanhla Mkhwanazi on 6 July 2025, must complete its work and submit its final report.

Accordingly, the Commission shall submit a second interim report by 29 May 2026 and a final report on the completion of the inquiry, on 31 August 2026.

This extension was granted at the request of the Commission due to the number of persons who must still appear.

The President appointed the Judicial Commission Inquiry in terms of section 84(2)(f) of the Constitution on 21 July 2025.

Justice Mbuyiseli Madlanga was appointed Chairperson of the Commission of Inquiry and Advocates Sesi Baloyi SC and Sandile Khumalo SC were appointed as members of the Commission.

The Commission submitted its first interim report to the President on 17 December 2025 and resumed its activities in January of this year.

In its interim report, the Commission referred a number of matters for immediate criminal investigation and urgent decisions on prosecution, as well as recommendations on the employment status and recommended suspension of individuals.
 

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

Issued by: The Presidency
Pretoria
 

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