Dear Fellow South African,
Today we commemorate President Nelson Mandela’s
birthday.
Such is his towering legacy that it is a day celebrated
around the world, with its international observance
having been declared by the United Nations in 2009.
This is in testament to his role as a revered statesman,
unifier and above all, as a peacemaker.
Striving for peace in the world, for an end to conflicts
everywhere, and for a true international fellowship of
humankind are the ideals that Nelson Mandela stood for.
They were relevant when he was a statesman on the
world stage, and they are even more relevant today with
many parts of our continent and the world embroiled in
conflict.
As South Africa we hold fast to the ideal that a better
world can be achieved through engendering peace. This
derives from negotiation and compromise over violence,
the use of force and resorting to war.
South Africa’s contribution to world peace is through
supporting societies in conflict, and this is largely as a
result of the Nelson Mandela legacy.
Our experience with negotiating an end to apartheid and
with building a multiparty democracy is regularly sought
out by parties seeking to bring conflict to an end.
Since democracy we have played such a role in Northern
Ireland, Palestine, Zimbabwe, South Sudan, Eswatini, the
Democratic Republic of Congo, Lesotho, Ethiopia, and
most recently, in Sudan.
Last week I met with the Deputy President of the
Transitional Sovereign Council of Sudan, where we
discussed the support South Africa can lend to the
convening of an inclusive dialogue process towards a
permanent peace.
Earlier this month I was in the Democratic Republic of
Congo, where South Africa is playing a key role in
facilitating dialogue, conflict resolution and providing
technical assistance under the 2013 Peace and Security
Cooperation Framework for the DRC and the Great Lakes.
Last month marked six months since the signing of the
Agreement on Cessation of Hostilities Agreement
between the government of Ethiopia and the Tigray
People’s Liberation Front in Pretoria on the 2nd of
November 2022.
This peace agreement that South Africa played a role in
brokering under the auspices of the African Union,
continues to hold.
President Mandela said that ‘the heroes are those who make peace and build.’
We will continue to follow in his footsteps by calling for
political solutions to conflicts.
We are fortified by the towering moral courage of great
leaders like President Mandela.
That is why on this Nelson Mandela Day I call on all each
and every one of us to promote peace everywhere.
The peace-making and peacebuilding processes we are
called upon to get involved in are the fruit of Nelson
Mandela’s legacy.
With best regards,