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Dear Fellow South African,
This year, we mark three decades since South Africa
adopted its democratic Constitution. The Constitution is
more than the supreme law of the land; it is a solemn
promise that never again should any person be stripped
of their humanity and dignity.
Later this week, on 21 March, we will observe Human
Rights Day. As we celebrate the rights we have enshrined
in our Constitution, we also recall the events at
Sharpeville on that day in 1960 when apartheid police
opened fire on unarmed protesters, killing 69 people and
injuring many more.
As we observe this day, we must reflect on whether we
are fulfilling the promise contained in our
Constitution.
Of all the values enshrined in our Constitution, one of
the most fundamental is the advancement of human
dignity. It is the foundation on which the rights to
equality, to freedom from discrimination, to education,
to health, to a safe environment and others are built.
It is the idea that every person possesses an inherent
worth that must be respected and protected.
This is a right that must be preserved in all
circumstances.
In our Constitution, human dignity is not an abstract
ideal, but a concrete right that has meaning in peopleˇ¦s
daily lives. The right to dignity is operationalised
through law, institutions and policies. Our courts
continue to assert this right and, where necessary,
order government and those in power to take measures to
enhance peopleˇ¦s dignity.
Protecting a personˇ¦s right to dignity is not limited to
the way people treat each other. It is also about
improving the circumstances in which people live. It
lies at the heart of the policies and programmes of this
government and of the work of many organisations and
individuals across society.
Since the adoption of our Constitution, indeed since the
advent of our democracy, we have worked to restore the
dignity of all South Africans. Millions of South
Africans have access to water, electricity, healthcare,
education and social support that were denied to them
under apartheid.
This work, which we have undertaken together as a
society, has enhanced the human dignity of children, who
are supported by a child support grant, who have access
to early childhood development, who attend fee-free
schools, who receive school meals and who will be able
to access funding to study at a university or college.
The provision of housing, water and electricity has
changed the lives of families across the country,
reducing poverty and improving their quality of life.
Human dignity also means that people have to be involved
in decisions that affect their lives and that shape
their country. That is why it is so important that
democratic institutions are built and defended. And that
a free media, an independent judiciary and a vibrant
civil society reinforce accountability.
We know that our work is far from complete. Poverty,
inequality and unemployment remain stubborn obstacles to
the full realisation of human dignity for every South
African. Closing those gaps is a constitutional
imperative that belongs to all of us.
That is why we are working even harder to accelerate the
momentum of economic recovery, so that our economy can
grow faster, create employment and reduce poverty.
When we mobilise investment to build factories or open
mines to create jobs and opportunities for emerging
businesses, or when we build new roads and revitalise
hospitals, we are working towards a society in which
everyone has dignity.
When we lay new pipes to bring water to outlying
villages or repair ageing water infrastructure in cities
and towns, or when we restore the supply of electricity
to communities, we are advancing the right to dignity.
As the global economic outlook becomes increasingly
uncertain, we must hold fast to the path we are on. We
must sustain our massive investment in infrastructure,
continue with far-reaching reforms in energy, water and
logistics, overhaul our skills development system and
expand support to small businesses.
On Human Rights Day this year, let us rededicate
ourselves to the Constitution and to its most cherished
principles. Let us resolve in our homes, schools,
workplaces and communities to treat every person with
the dignity that is their right ˇV and let us never stop
working until we have ensured that every person can live
in dignity, comfort and peace.
With best regards,
ˇ@
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