Letters

Letter to Judge Kriegler on receiving his resignation

Dear Judge Kriegler

As you will undoubtedly be aware, your letter dated 24 January 1999, tendering your resignation as Chairperson of the come as a complete surprise.

Whatever your final course of action with regard to this matter, I would like to respond to some of the matters you raise on your letter.

The meeting on Friday was requested by the Commission and not called by me or the Government.

With regard to the larger question you raise concerning what you categorise as “jurisdictional skirmishes”, I would, first of all, like to recall the discussion that Advocate Gumbi, yourself and myself had at my residence in December.

During that discussion, as you will remember, you stated that notwithstanding the disagreements that had taken place between the Commission and the Government, the Constitutional and administrative independence of the Commission had not been compromised.

I do not know what has happened since that discussion which leads you to the conclusion in your letter that ” the principle at issue here is the independence of the Commission”.

Indeed, at the December meeting to which I have referred, your own view of the stance of the NP and the DP on this issue was that it had no basis in law or fact. In your view the legal actions they had instituted, in so far as they related to the matter of the independence of the Commission, were purely partisan initiatives which you could not understand and of which you strongly disapproved.

The suggestion in your letter that only you stand for the independence of the Commission whereas everybody else concerned, namely, the other Commissioners and the Government, are both willing to and are compromising that independence, is from all points of view, most unfortunate.

The bland assertion you made that the Commission has not been “given the moral and material support to perform its complex and diverse duties”, cannot be substantiated by any facts.

Indeed, in a meeting with the CEO of the IEC, on 11 January 1999, I asked him whether the IEC would be faced with any financial shortages during the current financial year. The CEO responded firmly in the negative.

I further asked him whether the budget indicated for the next financial year would be adequate and requested that he should enter into direct negotiations with the DG, State Expenditure, to have this matter sorted out, should there be any problems.

As indicated at the meeting on Friday, to which you refer, I spoke both to the Minister of Finance and the DG, State Expenditure, to ensure that the necessary interaction takes place with the IEC, CEO without problems.

Again, as you will remember, at the meeting on Friday, we reiterated the positions of the Government that the latter is committed to the view that the IEC should discharge its duties well and as an independent Commission, that the Government should do all in its power to assist in ensuring that the registration process and the elections are successful and that the IEC and the Government should work in partnership, without compromising the independence of the IEC.

Indeed, as far back as October 1997, the Commission recognised the need to use the government infrastructure in the discharge of its functions. The relationship between the Commission and the Government is therefore a co-operative one.

I suggested the meeting between the Cabinet and the IEC to enable the entire national government to reiterate this and other positions indicated above directly to the whole IEC.

The meeting would also provide an opportunity for the IEC to indicate which elements in the behaviour of the Government were contrary to the realisation of these objectives, so that these could be addressed.

I am afraid I cannot agree with the view you express tat “it is not necessary to put the Resident and Cabinet to the trouble of a meeting to establish harmony”.

Indeed the view expressed at the meeting by the Commission, whose spokesperson, at your request, was the Deputy Chairperson of the IEC, was that we should proceed to convene the meeting.

It would indeed be strange to conclude that the best way to resolve differences that may exist is not to meet.

The suggestion in your letter that the voters` roll that has been compiled so far was not done “free of governmental let or hindrance” and therefore that there has been “loss of manifest impartiality is dangerous in the extreme.

The Commission knows this as well as I do that at no point did the Government interfere with the compilation of the voters` roll. Nowhere has the government interfered with the list of 9 million registered voters which the IEC announce after the first round of registration.

Nothing has been said or done which would suggest any government plans or intention to interfere with the compilation of the roll in future.

There are two things the government has done with regard to the registration process.

It has given funds to the IEC to enable the IEC to do its work.

Secondly, it has assisted the IEC to find volunteers, inside and outside the public service, to carry out the registration work, with a view, among other things, to the prudent utilisation of public funds, consistent with the comments made by the Auditor- General when he reviewed the 1994 accounts of the IEC.

The government has mot interfered with the tasks of the IEC to “evaluate and select, train and motivate, deploy and control officers engaged in the electoral process”.

The reference you make to “an irretrievable loss of (the) power” with regard to these matters is entirely without substance and certainly beyond perhaps my primitive comprehension.

I am aware that there are some in our society who are fixated on the notion that our government cannot be trusted to abide by the democratic norms enshrined in our Constitution and laws.

This is despite that fact that the people in government are drawn exactly from among those who sacrificed everything, including their lives, to bring about this democratic order.

Whatever the self-induced prejudices among some of the citizens of our country, that fact remains that those who fought for a democratic South Africa will remain among the front ranks of those who will fight in defence of the democratic order, an important part of which is an independent IEC.

It had been our hope that you would lead the present IEC during the life of its mandate.

I would like to believe that nothing we have done, personally and on behalf of the Government, has suggested that we have been unwilling to give you and the IEC “the moral and material support” you and the IEC need to discharge your responsibilities and to solve any problems that may arise, as they are bound to arise.

You may, nevertheless, decide that you would rather not serve as a member and Chairperson of the IEC. That , of course, is a decision you are free to take and, as you correctly intend,l discuss with the Resident of the Republic..

Those of us who remain will continue to strive to find solutions to any problems that exist, doing the best we can to serve the people of South Africa and further to entrench the democratic order in our country.

We had hoped that you would assist all of us in these processes by bring into play your considerable talents and personality.

I suppose we will have to do the best we can in the circumstances.

Let me also express my sincere appreciation of the important work you have done at the IEC and of the open and honest relationship I hoped we had established.

Yours sincerely

THABO MBEKI

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Letters

Letter to People`s Forum: Now is your time to speak

Dear Friend,

Thank you for giving me and other leaders of the ANC a chance to hear what you think and feel.

Allow me to take this opportunity to tell you that the ANC has spent many years with some of the most talented South Africans putting together and formulating its policies.

More recently, we have begun working on a plan for the reconstruction and development of South Africa. When finalised, this plan will do something concrete about the terrible social and economic conditions created by years of apartheid rule.

It will be a plan to stimulate the economy and create jobs; a plan to ensure that all our children receive the education they deserve; a plan to provide training and open doors of opportunity. Above all, it will be a plan that will bring about peace in our land and create a just society based on the principles of democracy and the rights of the individual.

Throughout the struggle the ANC has always given expression to the voice and will of the people. Now that, for the first time, you have the chance to elect a government of your choice we want to ensure that the ANC remains true to this cause.

May I assure you that your thoughts and feelings will play a meaningful role in our efforts to serve the people and continue our job of building a just and fair society in which our children can grow and prosper.

I thank you once again, Yours sincerely,

Nelson R. Mandela

More Letters

Letter from The President: Promoting unity in action for socio-economic freedom
Letter of memorandum as handed over to the British High Commission in Pretoria: Dewani should be extradited to South Africa to stand trail
Letter from The President
Countdown to one million-membership and ANC centenary
Response to the open letter to the ANC by the Afrikanerbond
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ANC response to DA leader by Kgalema Motlanthe
Letter from The President – An ANC government for all the people
Letter to members of the ANC YL before elections
ANC sends letter of complaint against NPA to Public Protector
Open letter to ANC Secretary General Comrade Gwede Mantashe
Open letter to Comrade Terror Lekota
ANC statement on open letter from Terror Lekota
President Thabo Mbeki`s letter of resignation to Cabinet
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A letter of gratitude from the Sisulu family
United Nations Development Programme: Letter of condolences to the Sisulu family
Nelson Mandela Foundation responds to report in the Daily Telegraph
Letter from Ebrahim Rasool to Premier Morkel
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Letter to Piet Rudolph by Nelson Mandela
Thabo Mbeki, Secretary for International Affairs, ANC: Letter to the Secretary-General of the United Nations
Letter from FW de Klerk to Nelson Mandela
Reply by Nelson Mandela to letter from FW de Klerk
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Reply by Nelson Mandela to letter from FW de Klerk
Letter from Nelson Mandela to F.W. De Klerk
Response from FW de Klerk to Nelson Mandela`s memorandum of 26 June 1992
Letter from Oliver Tambo to Sir Geoffrey Howe, United Kingdom Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs
Letter from Oliver Tambo to the Prime Minister of Lesotho, Dr. Leabua Jonathan
Letter to E. S. Reddy, Director, United Nations Centre Against Apartheid
Letter to the chairman of the Special Committee against Apartheid
Letter by Oliver Tambo to the Chairman of the United Nations Special Committee Against Apartheid
Letter from Oliver Tambo to Ayzatollah Khomeini
Letter to the Chairman of the Special Committee against Apartheid by O.R. Tambo, President of the ANC
Letter by Oliver Tambo to the OAU Secretary-General, Mr. William Eteki Mboumoua
Alfred Nzo, Secretary-General, ANC: Letter to the Secretary-General of the United Nations
Alfred Nzo, Secretary-General, ANC: Letter to the Secretary-General of the United Nations concerning treatment of political prisoners in South Africa
Alfred Nzo, Secretary-General, ANC: Letter to the Secretary-General of the United Nations concerning the treatment of political detainees in South Africa
Reginald September, representative in Europe, ANC: Letter to the Special Committee against Apartheid
Letter to U. Thant, Secretary-General of the United Nations, by Oliver Tambo
Campaign against bank loans to South Africa
Raymond Kunene, London representative, ANC: Letter
Letter from Albert Luthuli to the Secretary-General of the United Nations, U Thant
Duma Nokwe, Secretary-General, ANC: Letter to the Secretary-General of the United Nations
Maindy Msimang, Administrative Officer, ANC, London: Letter
Tennyson Makiwane, East African Representative, ANC: Letter to U Thant, Secretary-General of the United Nations
Letter by Nelson Mandela to Sir de Villiers Graaff, Leader of the White Opposition United Party
Letter from representatives of States Members of the United Nations to the President of the Security Council requesting consideration of the situation in South Africa
Letter from W.M. Sisulu to Prime Minister D. F. Malan on behalf of the African National Congress
Letter to the Prime Minister, Mr J.C. Strijdom from Albert Luthuli
44th National Conference: Letter on “certain tendencies” from Dr. A. B. Xuma
Letter from W.M. Sisulu to W. A. Hunton
Letter from W.M. Sisulu to Paul Robeson
Letter from W.M. Sisulu to Dr. W.E.B. Du Bois
Letter dated 17 November 1952 from Mr. Z. K. Matthews, representative of the African National Congress
Letter to the Chairman of the Ad Hoc Political Committee of the General Assembly from Prof. Z. K. Matthews, President, ANC, Cape
Letter addressed to the Secretary-General by the permanent representatives of Afghanistan, Burma, Egypt, India
Exchange of correspondence prior to the commencement of the Defiance Campaign
Letter from W.M. Sisulu to Prime Minister D. F. Malan on behalf of the African National Congress
Letter from the representative of India to the Secretary-General concerning the treatment of Indians in South Africa
Letter to the Secretary-General of the United Nations, Trygve Lie, and extracts from a memorandum on the situation in South Africa, Southwest Africa and Bechuanaland from Alfred Xuma
DR. A.B. Xuma, President-General, African National Congress: Letter to the Secretary-General of the United Nations, Trygve Lie
Letter from Dr. A. B. Xuma, President-General of ANC to the Chairman of General Assembly, opposing South Africa`s proposal for incorporation of South West Africa
Petition to the Prime Minister by President John L. Dube
Appeal by President John Dube to the British Public about The Native Land Act