SA not a violent country, says Zuma

President Jacob Zuma laughs as he delivers his State of the Nation address after the formal opening of Parliament in Cape Town on Thursday evening.

President Jacob Zuma laughs as he delivers his State of the Nation address after the formal opening of Parliament in Cape Town on Thursday evening.

Published Mar 7, 2013

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Parliament - South Africa is not a violent country, but there are “elements” that conduct themselves in a shocking manner, President Jacob Zuma said on Thursday.

Addressing the National House of Traditional Leaders at Parliament, he warned against those who would “rubbish our country without realising”.

Noting the recent outrage over incidents of violence, Zuma said in expressing their disgust, people should not paint all South Africans as violent and brutal.

“South Africa is not a violent country; it is certain people in our country who are violent. By and large, we are not; we are peace-loving people.”

Zuma's remarks come after a spate of protests, crimes and police actions have drawn huge international attention to violence in South Africa.

These included the shooting of Andries Tatane by police in the Free State in 2011; the killing of 34 miners by police at Marikana

in August last year; and the recent arrest of eight policeman implicated in the death of Mido Macia, a taxi driver dragged down a street behind a police vehicle.

The savage rape and murder of teenager Anene Booysen in Bredasdorp in the Western Cape last month, and the arrest of paralympian Oscar Pistorius, charged with the murder of his model girlfriend in Gauteng, have also contributed to the spotlight being turned on the country.

A report on the BBC's website last week captured international sentiment in its first paragraph: “Few countries endure more violence than South Africa. It is not what South Africans like to hear, and some even deny it. But it is a fact.”

Zuma told traditional leaders that South Africans should “not lose faith in our own humanity and collective ability to correct the wrongs we see in our country”, and called on them to help seek solutions.

He said the police were dealing with the symptoms in relation to criminal activities. As far as general crime was concerned, the levels had decreased over the years.

However, crimes against women and children remained high, and of concern.

But, the police continued to make inroads. During the past financial year, over 363 life sentences had been secured, with a conviction rate of 73 percent for crimes against women above 18-years-old, and 70 percent for crimes against children under 18-years-old.

“With the support of the community, most suspects in the high profile rape and domestic violence cases have been arrested.

“I have also directed the justice, crime prevention, and security cluster to implement measures to nip violent protests in the bud. We are doing this to build a culture of responsibility, accountability, respect for authority and respect for one another,” Zuma said.

Turning to farming and agriculture, the president said increasing urbanisation could, in the long-term, pose a threat to South Africa's food security.

The National Development Plan (NDP) indicated that 30 years from now South Africa would be mostly urban. Rural areas would be abandoned as the youth migrated to the cities in search of greener pastures.

Migration to the cities would leave the arable and fertile land lying fallow. Such a prospect would threaten South Africa's food security.

“We are already witnesses to this phenomenon. Many fields lie untilled across the country. The NDP identifies agriculture as an economic activity that is still capable of pushing back the frontiers of poverty.

“This requires traditional leaders to work with government to promote farming to our youth and the rural population,” he said.

Years of land deprivation, reinforced by land dispossession laws, had deprived generations of people of the skills necessary to survive from agriculture.

“People who had been proud farmers were now forced to work (for others) after being dispossessed of their land, livestock and equipment. Working on the farms was thus turned into a form of slavery.”

The outcome of this state of affairs over generations was that the youth had developed a grim view of agriculture. Those living in rural areas aspired to move out of the villages as soon as they could.

“We need to change the situation. We need to make them appreciate the economic importance and centrality of agriculture. We must encourage them to study agricultural and food production sciences at school and universities.”

Zuma said both secondary and tertiary education institutions had to respond to this challenge and appropriately channel resources. - Sapa

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