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President Ramaphosa to receive Letters of Credence from Heads of Mission-Designate
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President Cyril Ramaphosa will tomorrow, Tuesday, 03 October 2023, receive Letters of Credence from Heads of Mission-Designate at a Credentials Ceremony in Pretoria.
 
Letters of Credence are official diplomatic documents presented to the President by Heads of Mission-designate who have been nominated by their respective governments to serve as ambassadors to South Africa.

President Ramaphosa will receive Heads of Mission-Designate from the following countries: 

1. Republic of Portugal; 
2. Republic of Poland;
3. Jamaica;
4. Republic of Colombia; 
5. Republic of France; 
6. People’s Democratic Republic of Algeria; 
7. Socialist Republic of Vietnam; 
8. Republic of Angola; 
9. Kingdom of Lesotho; 
10. Federative Republic of Brazil;
11. Kingdom of Netherlands; 
12. Republic of India; 
13. Georgia; 
14. Republic of Indonesia; 
15. Kingdom of Denmark; 
16 Ireland;
17. Republic of Tunisia; 
18. Republic of Equatorial Guinea; 
19. Czech Republic; 
20. Republic of Lithuania; 
21. Republic of Zambia, and 
22. Kingdom of Jordan
23. Republic of Estonia
 
Media are invited to cover the credentials ceremony as follows:
 
Date: Tuesday, 03 October 2023
Time: 13h00
Venue: Sefako Makgatho Presidential Guest House

Media RSVPs can be directed to hlobisile@presidency.gov.za
 

Media enquiries: Vincent Magwenya, Spokesperson to the President - media@presidency.gov.za
 
Issued by: The Presidency
Pretoria

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President Ramaphosa to host Special Olympics team at Union Buildings
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President Cyril Ramaphosa will on Tuesday, 03 October 2023, host South Africa’s national team which excelled at the Special Olympics World Games in Germany in June 2023.

Special Olympics is a global movement of people creating a new world of inclusion and community, where every person is welcomed regardless of ability or disability.

The team brought home a total of 49 medals from Berlin - 22 gold, 20 silver and 7 bronze. 

The interaction with Team South Africa at the Union Buildings is part of President Ramaphosa’s ongoing commitment to encourage and celebrate excellence among South Africa’s sports women and men, and the President’s recognition of the role of sport in unifying the nation and forging social cohesion. 

Members of the media are invited as follows:
Date: Tuesday, 03 October 2023
Time: 09h00
Venue: The Union Buildings

Media RSVP: Members of the media wishing to cover the event are requested to RSVP with Makungu Mbetse  - 079 788 3077 / makungu@presidency.gov.za on or before Monday, 02 October 2023 at 12h00.


Media enquiries: Vincent Magwenya, Spokesperson to the President – 082 835 6315

Issued by: The Presidency
Pretoria

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President designates Special Official Funeral Category 2 to honour Mr Aziz Pahad
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President Cyril Ramaphosa has declared that the late former Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs Aziz Pahad will be honoured with a Special Official Funeral Category 2 tomorrow, Saturday 30 September 2023.

Mr Pahad passed away on Wednesday, 27 September 2023, at the age of 82.

President Ramaphosa has extended his deepest condolences to the extended Pahad family who have in short succession lost Mr Aziz Pahad and his brother, former Minister in the Presidency Essop Pahad, who passed away in July 2023.

The South African Police Service will provide ceremonial elements during the funeral service for the former Deputy Minister, which will commence at West Park Cemetery in Johannesburg at 10h00 tomorrow.

President Ramaphosa has directed that flags be flown at half-mast around the country until tomorrow evening.


Media enquiries: Vincent Magwenya, Spokesperson to the President – 082 835 6315

Issued by: The Presidency
Pretoria

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President mourns passing of former Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs Aziz Pahad
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President Cyril Ramaphosa has expressed his sadness at the passing of former Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs Aziz Pahad.

Mr Pahad passed away on Wednesday, 27 September 2023, at the age of 82.

Mr Pahad, who exercised his anti-apartheid activism in the Transvaal Indian Congress and was in exile between 1964 and 1990, served as Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs from 1994 to 2008. Several months after the end of Mr Pahad’s tenure as Deputy Minister, the Department of Foreign Affairs was renamed the Department of International Relations and Cooperation.

Mr Aziz Pahad’s passing follows that of his brother and former Minister in the Presidency, Essop Pahad, in July 2023.

President Ramaphosa extends his deepest condolences to the extended Pahad family who have in short succession lost two distinguished members who dedicated their lives to serving the nation.

The President said: “Our hearts go out to the Pahad family as they mourn the loss of two brothers and two outstanding servants of our people and our country.

“Aziz Pahad worked for our freedom during his decades in exile in the United Kingdom, Angola and Zambia – a period during which he played a diversity of roles including as a member of the ANC's Revolutionary Council and the Political Military Committee and being part of the ANC negotiating team that secretly met representatives of the apartheid regime and also with leading members of the Afrikaner community.

“It was fitting that, in acknowledgment of his vast experience in international mobilisation against the apartheid regime, Aziz Pahad was appointed to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs at the dawn of our democracy and our reintegration into the global community.

“Aziz Pahad was a consummate diplomat not only in the service of our country but in support of causes for freedom and justice elsewhere in the world, notably advocating the plight of the Palestinian people.

“Endearing of disposition and fierce of principle, he represented our nation with passion and clarity and played a significant role in educating the nation of our early democracy about international relations and South Africa’s role, place and vision in a world which itself undergoing change at that time.

“May his soul rest in peace.”


Media enquiries: Vincent Magwenya, Spokesperson to the President – 082 835 6315

Issued by: The Presidency
Pretoria

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Presidential Spokesperson media briefing, Union Buildings, Pretoria
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Good afternoon

This briefing follows a period of intensive engagement by the President on international platforms where President Ramaphosa advanced our national interest – that of growing our economy and leaving no-one behind as we do so – and stated the case of the Global South for transformation of global governance processes and structures.

Today we are focusing on a number of engagements the President will undertake in the coming weeks.

PROGRESS UPDATE ON GOVERNMENT AND BUSINESS COLLABORATION
Yesterday, September 26, 2023, President Cyril Ramaphosa met with members of Cabinet and senior business leaders to receive an update on progress made in the collaboration between government and business.

This collaboration was initiated in June 2023 with the aim of growing South Africa’s economy and restoring public and investor confidence through critical interventions to address the key challenges of energy, logistics, and crime and corruption.

Highlighting the meaningful progress made since the start of the initiative, President Ramaphosa said: 
“We have established an effective working relationship between government and business to tackle the most immediate challenges facing our economy.

“While we have identified key milestones and set out the processes to achieve these, the real test of our success will be in the results felt by ordinary citizens. We are confident that by working together and marshalling the significant resources and expertise that exist in our country, we will end load shedding, fix our logistics system, and tackle crime and corruption.”

A DETAILED JOINT STATEMENT HAS BEEN RELEASED BY THE PRESIDENCY AND B4SA ON THE FOCAL AREAS OF COLLABORATION

PRESIDENCY EXPRESSES CONDOLENCES TO THE MANDELA FAMILY AT THE PASSING OF MS ZOLEKA MANDELA
As the Presidency, we add our sincerest condolences to the sympathies expressed by many individuals and organisations at the passing of Ms Zoleka Mandela.

Our thoughts are with the family and friends of Ms Mandela who has passed away at an age that has deprived all of us of benefiting from the full potential of her charismatic and creative commitment to a diversity of social causes and campaigns.

We wish the family well in their preparations for remembering and taking leave of Zoleka.

May her soul rest in peace.

PRESIDENT RAMAPHOSA EXPRESSES HIS SYMPATHIES TO PEOPLE AFFECTED BY THE WESTERN CAPE FLOODS AND APPLAUDS RESCUE TEAMS
The President would like to extend his sympathies to all the people who have been affected by the recent floods in the Western Cape. The President also expresses his condolences to those who have lost their loved ones during this disaster. 

President Ramaphosa is grateful for the speedy response and hard work demonstrated by various disaster management teams, law enforcement agencies, NGOS and officials who have continued to rep

PUBLIC PROGRAMME 
INAUGURAL SESSION OF THE SOUTH AFRICA – LESOTHO BI-NATIONAL COMMISSION (BNC)

President Cyril Ramaphosa, will on Thursday, 28 September, host the Prime Minister of the Kingdom of Lesotho, The Right Honorable Ntsokoane Samuel Matekane, for the Inaugural Session of the South Africa – Lesotho Bi-National Commission (BNC), in Pretoria.

The Inaugural Session of the BNC follows an agreement signed by our two countries in November 2021 to elevate the structured bilateral mechanism from a Joint Bilateral Commission of Co-operation (JBCC) that is convened Ministerial level, to a BNC that is presided over by the two Heads of State and Government. 
The session will consist of the following Sectoral Committees:

• Strategic Political Cluster co-chaired by the Minister of International Relations and Cooperation;
• Security and Stability Cluster co-chaired by the Minister of Defence and Military Veterans;
• Economy Cluster co-chaired by the Minister of Trade, Industry and Competition; 
• Social Cluster co-chaired by the Minister of Higher Education, Science, and Innovation; 
• Good Governance Cluster co-chaired by Minister of Cooperative Government and Traditional Affairs. 

This inaugural Session of the BNC provides an opportunity for both countries to take stock and track the implementation of the Joint Bilateral Commission decisions taken during the Council of Ministers Meeting held on 20 November 2020 in Maseru, in the Kingdom of Lesotho. 

The BNC meeting will also provide both President Ramaphosa and The Right Honorable the Prime Minister Matekane with an opportunity to strengthen bilateral relations and to share information and exchange views on the latest developments in Lesotho and efforts by SADC to facilitate the finalisation of the reform process in Lesotho. 

SPECIAL OLYMPICS TEAM TO VISIT THE UNION BUILDINGS
President Cyril Ramaphosa will on the morning of 3 October 2023, host the Special Olympics Team at the Union Buildings following the team’s success at the Special Olympics World Games that were held in Germany, Berlin between 17 and 25 June 2023.

The team brought back home a total of 49 medals - 22 gold, 20 silver and 7 bronze. 

The interaction with the Special Olympics team is part of President Ramaphosa’s ongoing commitment to encourage and celebrate excellence amongst South Africa’s sports women and men and the President’s recognition of the role of sports to unite our nation and forge social cohesion. 

LETTERS OF CREDENCE FROM HEADS OF MISSION DESIGNATE
President Cyril Ramaphosa will on the afternoon of 3 October 2023, receive Letters of Credence from Heads of Mission-Designate at a Credentials Ceremony in Pretoria.

 Letters of Credence are official diplomatic documents presented to the President by Heads of Mission-designate to mark the beginning of their ambassadorship.

This ceremony is a platform where newly nominated diplomats from our continent and other parts of the globe outline relations between our two countries and their objectives for strengthening partnership.

The event will be held at the Sefako Makgatho Presidential Guest House and media pool arrangements will be in place for coverage. 

BORDER MANAGEMENT AUTHORITY LAUNCH
President Cyril Ramaphosa will on 05 October 2023, preside over the launch of the Boarder Management Authority (BMA), in Musina, Limpopo Province.

The launch of the BMA follows its formal establishment and assumption of its status as a schedule 3 (A) public entity on 1 April 2023.

The establishment of the BMA means that South Africa now has an integrated border management platform, with a single command and control with which to support the attainment of secure borders, safe travel and trade.

The President will be joined by members of the Inter-Ministerial Coordinating Committee (IMCC) on the BMA and the Border Technical Committee.

The President will also tour the Beit Bridge Border Port of Entry and later address guests during ceremonial parade at the Musina Show grounds.

PRESIDENT RAMAPHOSA ASSENTS TO FOUR IMPORTANT ACTS
President Cyril Ramaphosa has recently assented to the following four Acts: the Land Court Act, the Traditional Courts Act, the South African Postbank Limited Amendment Act and the Repeal of the Transkei Penal Code.

The Land Court Act establishes a specialist and permanent Land Court which will replace the Land Claims Court which was a court with a limited lifespan.

This means permanent judges of the Land Court can now be appointed.

The Land Court will have exclusive jurisdiction and power in respect of a number of aspects which have a bearing on land more specifically on restitution claims arising from the Restitution Act.

It also will deal with matters from the Application of the Land Reform (Labour Tenants) Act and shares jurisdiction with magistrates’ courts in respect of matters arising from the application of the Extension of Security of Tenure Act (ESTA).

The Land Court will resolve the challenges that were experienced under these Acts such as backlogs in land claims and dispute resolution mechanisms when disputes arise.

It will also contribute immensely to the implementation of the Land Reform Programme.

In addition, the Act makes provision for the administration and judicial functions of the Land Court and for mediation procedures. 

Cabinet approved the Bill for tabling in Parliament in February 2021 and Parliament’s National Assembly passed the Bill and sent it to the NCOP for concurrence in September 2022.

At end of May 2023, the National Council of Provinces amended the Bill and returned it to the National Assembly for concurrence.

This Act is vital in bringing our country one step closer to resolving land and land rights issues in South Africa.

With respect to the Traditional Courts Act, our Constitution recognises traditional leadership as well as customary law. Section 211 of the Constitution obliges the courts to apply customary law when that law is applicable.

Traditional courts exist and it is constitutionally essential that they be aligned with the new constitutional dispensation.  

Chapter 12 of the Constitution recognises the institution, status and role of traditional leadership according to customary law, subject to the Constitution, whilst schedule 6 to the Constitution recognises the existence of traditional courts. 

The purpose of this Act is to provide for a uniform legislative framework for the structure and functioning of traditional courts, in line with constitutional imperatives and values. 

The Act aims to improve access to justice services by enhancing the effectiveness, efficiency and integrity of traditional courts for purposes of resolving disputes, with the view to promoting social cohesion, co-existence, peace and harmony. 

To date Traditional Courts have existed outside of the sanction of the Constitution with respect to their operation and regulation.

Traditional Courts were operating according to either sections 12 and 20 of the repealed Black Administration Act, 1927 and there are other homeland and self-governing states laws which regulate the role and functions of traditional leaders in the administration of justice. 

The Traditional Courts Act will now bring about a single statute, regulating the role of traditional leaders in the administration of justice, which will apply across the country.

The Act repeals the remaining provisions of the Black Administration Act of 1927 and legislation of former homelands still regulating traditional courts and brings the operation and functioning of Traditional Courts in line with the Constitution.

This Act has been in the making for some time and has undergone a through public participation process and incorporated the interests of stakeholders.

In December 2015, former Minister of Justice and Constitutional Development, Minister Michael Masutha, held a national dialogue with Traditional Leaders and civil society which agreed that a Reference Group should be established to develop a new version of Bill.

The Reference Group consisted of representatives of civil society and traditional leaders.

The mandate of the Reference Group was to discuss outstanding matters relating to the Traditional Courts Bill, to assist in the development of a Bill and to pave the way for the introduction of the Bill into Parliament.

The concerns raised in respect of the 2008 and 2012 drafts of the Bill were taken into account and addressed and every effort has been made to address them, most significantly in respect of the role of women and other vulnerable groups. 

In terms of the new Traditional Courts Act, traditional courts must be constituted of women and men, pursuant to the goal of promoting the right of equality as contemplated in section 9 of the Constitution.

Traditional courts must promote and protect the representation of women as parties and members thereof.

The Minister of Justice and Constitutional Development must also put measures in place to promote and protect the participation of women and vulnerable persons – with reference to the elderly, children and youth, the indigent, persons with disabilities and the people of different sexual orientation and gender identity.

The Minister must also report annually to Parliament on the steps and measures so put in place.

The Act states that constitutional values are of paramount importance, for instance the right to dignity, achievement of equality, the promotion of non-racialism and non-sexism, freedom of sexual orientation and identity.

It also highlights restorative justice and reconciliation through mediation. 

When dealing with disputes, the courts must be mindful of the existence of systemic unfair discrimination and inequalities or attitudes which are in conflict with the Constitution or which have the susceptibility of excluding meaningful participation in traditional court proceedings by any person or group of persons, particularly in respect of gender, gender identity, sexual orientation, age, disability, religion, language, marital status and race brought about by colonialism, apartheid and patriarchy. 

A founding value of customary law is that its application is accessible to those persons who voluntarily subject themselves to that set of laws and customs.

The Act provides that proceedings may not be instituted in traditional courts if the dispute is being dealt with at another level in the traditional justice system or if the matter is pending before a court of law or being investigated by the police or has already been dealt with in a court.  

When it comes to the types of disputes a traditional court may deal with, the Bill limits the matters which these courts can hear to less serious disputes which disturb harmonious relationships within communities.

The Act underscores the fact that traditional courts are courts of law and their specific purpose is to promote the equitable and fair resolution of disputes, in a manner that is underpinned by the value system applicable in customary law and custom, and function in terms of the Constitution.  

The Repeal of the Transkeian Penal Code Act: the Transkeian Penal Code was enacted when the area formerly known as the Republic of Transkei became ‘independent’.

The Code codifies criminal law in the former Transkei. Despite the reincorporation of the former Transkei into South Africa more than 20 years ago, the Code remained in full force and effect in the former Transkei, although the former Republic of Transkei had ceased to exist.

In the rest of the Republic of South Africa, a large part of substantive criminal law has not been codified but in the former Republic of Transkei, as a result of the application of the Code, some crimes are codified.

The continued application of the Code thus created an untenable situation, with criminal charges are brought in terms of the Code in the former Transkei but in terms of the common law (and other statutes) in the rest of the Republic.

The new Act repeals this Code. This gives effect to the right to equality before the law - which presumes the uniform application of the criminal law in the Republic, requires the State to ensure that there is a uniform system of criminal law and that there are no parallel laws that regulate the same subject-matter in different parts of the country.

The South African Postbank Limited Amendment Act seeks to amend the South African Postbank Limited Act, 2010, so as to adjust the establishment and the shareholding arrangements for the Postbank through the creation of a new banking controlling company.

The Bill provides for the transfer in shareholding for the Postbank from the South African Post Office SOC Limited to Government and the creation of a bank controlling company for “The Postbank SOC Limited” in terms of the Banks Act, 1990. 

The Amendment Act is necessary to ensure that the Postbank meet the Bank Controlling Companies’ structure requirements. 

DA COURT CHALLENGE OVER THE LADY R PANEL
The Presidency has noted the intention expressed by the official opposition party, the Democratic Alliance, to challenge the appointment of Judge Phineas Mojapelo as the head of the investigative panel appointed by President Ramaphosa, to enquire into the circumstances of the docking of the Lady R Cargo vessel in Simons town during December 2022.

The President decided to appoint the independent panel after having carefully considered the delicate balance that is needed between the public’s right to information and the state’s need to secure information, the disclosure of which may jeopardise our national security and/or international relations. 

Hence, the President decided to appoint an independent panel rather than a commission of inquiry as provided for in terms of section 84(2)(f) of the Constitution of the Republic of South Africa,1996.  

The President carefully considered his decision to appoint a judge to head the panel. President Ramaphosa acted within the law in doing so and we are confident that this appointment will withstand scrutiny.

In its politically motivated court action, the DA’s wants to undermine the country’s national interests, failing to appreciate the importance of resolving this matter in a manner that is credible and expeditious. The DA is failing to appreciate the damage this issue has caused into our economy and potentially, to very important diplomatic relations, which are now repaired as a result of the level of credibility attached to the panel and its work, the outcome of the investigation and the intensive amount of diplomatic work that has been conducted to date and is still being managed. 


Media enquiries: Vincent Magwenya, Spokesperson to the President  -  +27 82 835 6315

Issued by: The Presidency
Pretoria

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President Cyril Ramaphosa to host Lesotho’s Prime Minister Samuel Matekane for the Inaugural Session of South Africa–Lesotho Bi-National Commission (BNC)
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President Cyril Ramaphosa, will on Thursday, 28 September, host The Right Honorable, the Prime Minister of the Kingdom of Lesotho, Mr Ntsokoane Samuel Matekane, for the Inaugural Session of the South Africa – Lesotho Bi-National Commission (BNC), in Pretoria.

The Inaugural Session of the BNC follows an agreement signed by the two countries in November 2021 to elevate the structured bilateral mechanism from a Joint Bilateral Commission of Co-operation (JBCC) that is held at a ministerial level, to a BNC that is presided over by the two Heads of State and Government. 

The session will consist of the following Sectoral Committees:
• Strategic Political Cluster co-chaired by the Minister of International Relations and Cooperation;
• Security and Stability Cluster co-chaired by the Minister of Defence and Military Veterans;
• Economy Cluster co-chaired by the Minister of Trade, Industry and Competition; 
• Social Cluster co-chaired by the Minister of Higher Education, Science, and Innovation; 
• Good Governance Cluster co-chaired by Minister of Cooperative Government and Traditional Affairs. 

This inaugural Session of the BNC would provide an opportunity for both countries to take stock and track the implementation of the JBCC decisions taken during the Council of Ministers Meeting held on 20 November 2020 in Maseru, the Kingdom of Lesotho. 

The BNC meeting will also provide both President Ramaphosa and The Right Honorable the Prime Minister Matekane with an opportunity to strengthen bilateral relations and to share information and exchange views on the latest developments in Lesotho and efforts by SADC to facilitate the finalisation of the reform process in Lesotho. 

The Inaugural Session of the BNC will be preceded by Ministerial Sectoral Meetings on 27 September 2023.

Media is invited to cover the Inaugural Session as follows:
Date: 28 September 2023
The Inaugural Session of South Africa-Lesotho Bi-National Commission
Time: 09h00
Venue: The Department of International Relations and Cooperation, OR Tambo Building, Pretoria

Members of the media wishing to cover the session are requested to forward their names to Mtshalip@dirco.gov.za.


Media enquiries: Vincent Magwenya, Spokesperson to the President, 082 835 6315

Issued by: The Presidency
Pretoria

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Presidential Spokesperson to brief media
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Presidential Spokesperson, Vincent Magwenya will tomorrow, 27 September 2023, host a media briefing to update the public on the President’s public programme.
 
Members of the media are invited as follows:
Date: Wednesday , 27 September 2023
Time: 11:30 (Media to arrive at 11:00)
Venue: Room 159, Union Buildings, Pretoria 
 
RSVP: Members of the media wishing to attend the media briefing in person are requested to submit their details to Khutjo Sebata on khutjo@presidency.gov.za or 079 898 4621  by 10h00 on 27 September 2023. 
 
Media following remotely can text their questions to 079 898 4621, the media briefing will be streamed live and the link will be shared prior. 
 
 
Media enquiries: Vincent Magwenya, Spokesperson to the President - media@enquires.gov.za
 
Issued by: The Presidency
Pretoria

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Remarks by President Cyril Ramaphosa at a meeting with the South African Special Olympics Team, Union Buildings, Tshwane
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Programme Director,
Minister and Deputy Ministers,
Premier of Gauteng, Mr Panyaza Lesufi,
Chairperson of the Special Olympics of South Africa, Dr Mathews Phosa,
CEO of the Special Olympics of South Africa, Ms Ancilla Smith,
Members of the Special Olympics of South Africa Board,
Coaching and support staff,
Athletes, 

It is a very special honour and pleasure for me to welcome Team South Africa to the Union Buildings. 

This may be the seat of government but it is also the home of champions like yourselves. 

We have had the pleasure of hosting a number of national teams here as part of our celebration of outstanding achievements by athletes in various sporting codes. 

The 2023 Special Olympics World Summer Games which took place in Berlin, Germany, in June focused the attention of the world on the abilities of persons with intellectual disabilities. 

We are extremely proud that Team South Africa competed and achieved so well as individual competitors and teams. 

Competing against 7,000 athletes from over 180 countries they returned with 22 Gold, 20 Silver and 7 Bronze medals. 

Their dedication, perseverance and unwavering commitment to their sport have not only brought glory to our nation but have also shattered the barriers that once confined them.

And we are proud that Team South Africa flew the flag for social inclusion and the advancement of human rights, which are a hallmark of the nation we have built during nearly 30 years of freedom. 

South Africa is honoured to be one of the first countries to support the Special Olympics Global Leadership Coalition for Inclusion, which reflects our commitment to the inclusion of people with intellectual disabilities in all areas of our society.

Team South Africa are heroes we can look up to and be inspired by in athletic arenas and in every walk of life in our country. 

And then there is a very important member of Team South Africa who has also visited the winners’ podium. 

Dr Mathews Phosa, Chairperson of Special Olympics South Africa, was honoured recently at the 19th Special Olympics Africa Leadership Conference in Addis Ababa. 

The African region recognised the Chairperson for his many years of service to the Special Olympics movement and for hosting the leadership conference in South Africa for 17 years in South Africa. 

With such a hard-working and distinguished captain at the helm of Special Olympics South Africa we can only expect even greater things from Team South Africa. 

Our flag is currently flying at the ICC Men’s Cricket World Cup and the Rugby World Cup and we all know the Proteas and Springboks will draw inspiration from your achievements in Berlin. 

Our success in the Special Olympics shows what happens when government and civil society – represented here by Special Olympics South Africa – work together to ensure that we leave no-one behind. 

And it is your success in Berlin that has brought you to the Union Buildings today, where all of us are excited to meet our stars in person and to celebrate. 

May our commitment to inclusion as a nation shine as brightly as the achievements of our Special Olympics Team.

I thank you.

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Eulogy by President Cyril Ramaphosa at the Official Funeral of former Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs Mr Aziz Goolam Hoosein Pahad, West Park Cemetery, Johannesburg
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Programme Director, 
The extended Pahad family,
Ministers and Deputy Ministers,
Leadership of the African National Congress,
Leadership of the Alliance and Democratic Movement,
Leaders of Political Parties,
Members of the Diplomatic Community,
Religious and community leaders present,
Comrades and friends, 

Today is a sad day. 

It is a sad for the Pahad family, a family that produced stalwarts of our liberation struggle. 

Your grief is all the greater at the passing of Aziz, having also lost your dear sons Essop and Junaid just a few months ago.

It is a sorrowful occasion for the African National Congress, for the South African Communist Party and for the wider democratic movement. We have lost a comrade, a friend and a patriot who dedicated his life to the liberation of our country and its people.

It is a sad day for the diplomatic community, particularly for the many men and women chosen to represent our country abroad who had the privilege of being mentored, counselled and trained by our departed brother and comrade.

Over the past few years we have had to bid farewell to many dear comrades; men and women who were giants of the liberation struggle. 

As much as it is the nature of existence that we all have a fixed time upon this earth, we feel their loss keenly, each and every one of them. 

They played such an important role in the history of our country. They were there at all the high and low points in our struggle for liberation, and remained on to shepherd us along the difficult road to democracy. 

At times such as this one, when we lose another stalwart, we are shaken, as would a tree whose roots have been damaged or lost. 

These great men and women, of whom Aziz Pahad was one, were the roots that nourished the tree of our democracy. It feels as though a part of us has gone with them. 

And yet, such were the legacies they left behind that this great tree that is our democracy, abides. 

We may at times be battered by strong headwinds. Times can be hard. 

But the democracy that Aziz Pahad and his generation worked so hard to achieve remains firm, steady, well-anchored and strong. 

As they pass into the next life, our great democracy that they helped birth, outlives them. It is this legacy we remember today. It inspires us and gives us courage. 

Aziz Pahad will be remembered for his many fine attributes and we will have reflected on some of them today. 

He was an activist who played a formative role in the liberation movement in exile in the 1960s and beyond, and was a key figure in the anti-apartheid movement in Europe and the United Kingdom. 

He was one of the leading figures of the liberation movement that facilitated talks between the exiled ANC and representatives of the Afrikaner community in the mid 1980s.

He was a hardworking public servant, most notably as the long-serving Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs, a position he held from when we attained our democracy in 1994 until 2008.

It is this role for which the South African people know him best. He was a prominent voice in the foreign affairs space, an astute diplomat, a legendary networker and for the many who worked with him, a warm and affable colleague.

Since his passing there have been many tributes to Aziz, and to the role he played in the international relations arena in the formative years of our democracy. 

In this regard his legacy is assured. 

As Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs he was involved in peacebuilding and mediation efforts in a number of conflicts on the continent and in the Middle East.

In reflecting on his life and contribution, we should draw on the words of Islam’s Holy Book the Qur’an where it speaks about the virtue of steadfastness. 

In chapter 16 verse 96 it says:

“Whatever you have will end, but whatever Allah has is everlasting. And we will certainly reward the steadfast according to the best of their deeds.”

We all know that Aziz Pahad was not a man given to sentimentality, nor to false exhibitions of piety. 

He never laid claim to being overly virtuous. We will remember him for his dry wit and his irreverence, be it about politics, matters of faith or the human condition in general. 

And yet I draw inspiration from this verse because steadfastness, unwavering commitment, humility and quiet strength defined our departed comrade and brother. 

As we bid him farewell at the end of his earthly journey, it is necessary that we not only reflect on a distinguished career, but on what made him so good at what he did and what we can learn from him.

He gave meaning to the idea of servant leadership. 

In whatever role he was given, he showed steadfastness, self-reliance, commitment to a greater cause, lack of ego and principle.

Those who have read his fine book, Insurgent Diplomat, will have been struck by a narrative that is not so much about an individual and their exploits, than it is a charting of the evolution of our country’s foreign policy and those who enriched it. 

This was vintage Aziz Pahad. 

It was never about him. He never sought to place himself at the centre of the narrative of our democratic history. 

He was not consumed by the pursuit of fame, status or the accumulation of riches.

For him, South Africa was the central character. The democratic state was the protagonist of the South African story.

Such is the nature of truly great men and women. 

They are servants of the people. They are willing and prepared to serve, whether it is in high office or in the trenches. They are not obsessed with titles, prestige or being courted.

Over the years he gave interviews to talk about his book, about the country’s foreign policy orientation, and also to express his concerns about what he saw as the liberation movement straying from its founding values.

He did not use his stature as a liberation stalwart to speak down to anyone or to level critique that was solely informed by his own opinions. Instead he called for us to embrace each other across the race, class and political divide, to put our differences aside and work for the betterment of our country.

In an interview in 2014 he also called on South Africans of all races “to return to grounds of common interest in order to build on them and advance”.

Fellow Mourners,

It has been said that when a great man or woman dies, for years the light they leave behind lies on the path.

We have in recent times laid to rest a great many stalwarts of our freedom struggle, and today we bid farewell to one more.

Even as we must eulogise them, we would not be honest if we did not acknowledge that many of them departed this life disappointed by what they were witnessing. 

They have seen the liberation movement to which they dedicated their lives being racked by factionalism and in-fighting. They have seen the democratic government being eroded by corruption. 

They have seen public anger and impatience at the inability of government to respond with the necessary urgency to their needs.

In one interview, Aziz Pahad said: “We dare not forget that we are the servants of our fellow countrymen. The concept of Batho Pele, of putting people first, is disappearing like mist before the sun.”

We, who remain, have a responsibility to ensure that Batho Pele does not disappear, but that it is restored, revitalised and once again stands at the centre of all our efforts.

For the legacy of stalwarts like Aziz Pahad to have meaning they cannot be confined to the history books. They must be returned to, again and again, learned from and taken forward.

These stalwarts were once the strong roots that held us firm. Over the passage of time new roots have grown and new shoots have blossomed. We owe it to the generation that paved the way to freedom to not let those roots wither or die.

We must return this country to the path of fundamental transformation and our liberation movement to its founding values. 

To do so requires hard work. It demands sacrifice and putting the needs of the people first. It needs men and women disinterested in status and position, like Aziz Pahad and his generation. 

As we lay Aziz Pahad to rest today, let us be mindful of the weighty responsibility we carry to ensure that their sacrifices were not in vain and that their legacies have meaning.

Great nations are built through the efforts of the courageous, the principled and the steadfast. Such was the man we bury today.

To the extended Pahad family, our thoughts and prayers are with you at this time of great difficulty. Thank you for sharing him with us. He will be sorely missed.

To Him we Belong and to Him we Shall Return. 

I thank you.

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Closing remarks by President Cyril Ramaphosa at the conclusion of the Inaugural Lesotho-South Africa Bi-National Commission
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Your Excellency, Prime Minister Matekane,
Ministers,
High Commissioners,
Colleagues,

We have come to the end of our bilateral discussions, which have been frank and cordial.

We remain forever grateful for the strong ties that exist between our countries and peoples. The work we have just completed is the continuation of our endeavours towards the realisation of our shared aspirations.

This Summit has been an opportunity for us to take stock of our bilateral cooperation in a number of fields. The comprehensive report that was presented by our respective Ministers captures the state of our bilateral cooperation in detail.

We emerge from this Inaugural BNC with renewed energy and vigour for the task of building our economies and developing our nations.

We should use this mechanism to enhance and consolidate the implementation of existing agreements.

We should also work more closely together to promote broader economic integration through the Southern African Customs Union, SADC and the African Continental Free Trade Area.

Just as our two countries share common histories, so too do we share a common future. 

Let us work together to build a sustainable, prosperous and secure future for all the people of South Africa and Lesotho. 

Prime Minister Matekane, I wish to conclude by again expressing my sincere appreciation to you and your delegation, and to all involved in the planning and preparation of today’s meeting.

I thank you.

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 Union Building