REMARKS BY PRINCE MANGOSUTHU BUTHELEZI MP, IFP PRESIDENT TO THE JOINT OPPOSITION RALLY AGAINST SECRECY AND CORRUPTION, Pinetown Civic Centre, September 28 2012
When the leaders of South Africa's people gathered at the negotiating table to shape a new democratic dispensation, the IFP stood firm on several fundamental issues. For one, we demanded the inclusion of a Bill of Rights in South Africa's Constitution. We were amazed at the ANC's conviction that a democratic government could not possibly infringe on the rights of its people. Their naivety was exposed and the IFP sensed danger.
Eighteen years into democracy, we have been left with no doubt that a democratic government can indeed infringe on the rights of its people. Perhaps the greatest evidence yet is the ANC's determined pursuit of the Protection of State Information Bill, in the face of public outrage and unanimous dissent.
Everyone has opposed this Bill, from former Ministers to NGOs, from traditional leaders to COSATU, from churches to the media. Without exception, South Africa has rejected what we now call the Secrecy Bill. But still it stands. How is it possible that Parliament is about to pass legislation that the whole of the country has rejected?
Democracy is about Parliament expressing the will of the people. Why then is Parliament adopting a law that the people don't want? Who is the ANC representing? That is the question we in the opposition have joined hands to ask. This cuts across any ideological divides in the opposition, for we all represent the people, and the people are not being heard.
Instead, the ANC is representing the will of the spies, the secret services and the State security apparatus. Under the Secrecy Bill, if Government wants to keep anything secret from the people, it will. The media, which has been so adept at exposing high-level corruption, will be silenced. There will be no public interest defence for those who tell us what corrupt leaders are doing. This is wrong.