Sep 17 2009

Dear Julius: Are you fighting or fostering racism?

Dear Julius and the rest of the Circus
In the ANCYL press release “ANC YL FULLY BEHIND SA’S GOLDEN GIRL—MOKGADI CASTER SEMENYA”, your organisation stated “The ANC YL is [..] very concerned by the fact that all the media reports about Caster Semenya are generated in Australia, which is the most lucrative destination for South Africa’s racists and fascists, who refused to live under a black democratic government.”
Julius, the true enemies of South African unity are not the racists outside of South Africa but rather those still in our country.  Racists like the streotypical white prejudiced against not whites, but also people like yourself Julius.  People who spread words and ideas which are divisive and do nothing to foster the unity of our nation’s people.
And ever time the ANC open their mouth and cried race and waves that big red race card infront of someones face and every single time they do it just because , they are belitteling the chanllenge that is the fight against racism.  Crying wolf.  Racism is alive and well, no one is denying that.  But racism doesn’t exist one way only, so Julius, one of the biggest challenges in the fight against racism is to recognise that discrimination on the basis of colour is something that works both ways and it must end at all costs before we will finally earn the unity our nation so deseperately needs.
So when you stand on your soapbox and tell the country that whites fled the “the black democratic government”, you are doing nothing but fostering the entrenchment of racism.  We don’t have a black democratic government now any more than we had a white democratic government during apartheid.  Instead we have a hard won democratic government which is supposed to be for all south africa’s people.
So Julius, if you truly are interested in uniting this country you need to start thinknig before you speak.  Shooting from the lip as irresponsibly as you do does nothing to build confidence in the minds of those South Africans whose skills are being lured away from this country, the same skills that can be the difference between life and death for the people you supposedly speak for on a daily basis, the poorest of the poor.  Your vocal committment to those poor South Africans is not backed up by your committment to doing work on the ground.  Maybe you should start thinking about that.

Dear Julius

julius-malemaIn the ANC Youth League press release entitled, “ANC YL FULLY BEHIND SA’S GOLDEN GIRL—MOKGADI CASTER SEMENYA” (11 September), your organisation stated: “The ANC YL is [..] very concerned by the fact that all the media reports about Caster Semenya are generated in Australia, which is the most lucrative destination for South Africa’s racists and fascists, who refused to live under a black democratic government.”

Julius, the true enemies of South African unity are not the racists outside of South Africa but rather those who spread racial prejudice within the borders of our country.  Of course there is the stereotypical white racist, but then there are also people like yourself Julius.  The enemies of South African unity are people who spread words and ideas which are divisive.  In a relatively short period of time you have become a master at sowing seeds of racial conflict and disunity.

Everytime you or one of your Youth League colleagues cry wolf on the issue of race, waving that big red race card, you belittle and undermine the veracity of the fight against racism.  Racism does not exist one way only.  One of the biggest challenges in the fight against racism is to recognise that discrimination on the basis of colour is something that works both ways.

When you stand on your soapbox and tell the country that whites fled the “the black democratic government”, you are doing nothing more than fostering the entrenchment of racism.   We have a hard won democratic government which is supposed to be for all of South Africa’s people.

So Julius, if you truly are interested in uniting this country you need to start thinking before you speak.  Shooting from the lip as irresponsibly as you do does nothing to build confidence in the minds of those South Africans whose skills are being lured away from our country. It does nothing to build confidence in those potential foreign investors who can provide job soaking growth and investment in our economy.

Your vocal commitment to those poor South Africans you purport to represent is not backed up by your regular ill-considered public utterances.  I urge you to think before you speak. Use your platform to spread messages which promote unity and add constructively to the fight against racism.

Warwick Chapman, DA Councillor, eThekwini – ward18@ethekwini.org


Sep 1 2009

Mhlongo died despite our requests for investigations

As the Ward Councillor for eThekwini Ward 18 where the Pinetown Home Affairs office is situated and a member of Democratic Alliance, I wish to express my sincere frustration at the situation at Home Affairs and other public sector organisations.

In February 2008, our leader Helen Zille visited the Pinetown Home Affairs office last to discuss our serious concerns about the state of service delivery in that office.  DA activists had earlier uncovered the charging of hundreds of Rands to “streamline” the process of obtaining an ID book.

While I have no doubt Minister Dlamini-Zuma was genuinely upset by the loss of this young man, he chose to end his life because of a frustrating reality which the DA so patently brought to the attention of home affairs over a year ago.  It is high time Government stopped viewing the opposition as yapping dogs and started viewing us as partners in Government.

In 2008 we acted in the interests of all South Africans by bringing this issue to the attention of the Department and I suspect our requests were ignored because of the party from whence they came.  President Zuma has committed the Government to working together to do more.  It should now be crystal clear to everyone employed in the public sector that people’s lives hang in the balance and their poor performance can be the deciding factor.

– DA Councillor Warwick Chapman


Jul 1 2009

Letter sent to some striking Doctors in KZN yesterday (and a followup today)

Doctors

This email serves 3 purposes:

1. explaining our interest in getting a DA Students Organisation going at the Medical School campus in Durban
2. describing the DA support for the plight of Doctors and nurses in South Africa
3. motivating you to become involved in the Democratic Alliance as we work for a better future in this country

1. DASO UZKN Medical School

The DA Students Organisation has branches at all major Universities in South Africa and is engaged setting up branches in all tertiary institutions which provide for democratic representation.  We are currently looking for people interested in setting up and standing for office in DASO at the Medical School.  Please could anyone who is interested get hold of me.

2. Better Healthcare in South Africa

As per the press release below, the Democratic Alliance supports many of the issues which Doctors in KZN and around the country are currently protesting against.  The DA has been consistently warning the ANC-led Government of the existing and looming crises resulting from wide-ranging issues in Public Healthcare.  The DA supports better salaries for Doctors and nurses, more stringent check of qualifications and competence of hospital management, and better, more responsive procurement processes.

Please see the DA policy on Health here: http://da.org.za/our_policies.htm?action=view-policy&policy=624

3. How can you get involved
•    Become a member of the DA and seek public office; get into Government and fight for improvements – email me for more information
•    Become a DA volunteer and contribute to change www.contributetochange.org.za
•    Spread the word of the DA an encourage people to use their vote to ensure positive change in South Africa.

Yours in better healthcare for all South Africans,

Warwick Chapman (Cllr)
Democratic Alliance, Durban

warwick@thusa.co.za
083 7797 094
http://warwickchapman.com

STATEMENT BY MIKE WATERS MP
DA SHADOW MINISTER OF HEALTH

DA welcomes salary increases for doctors

Release, immediate: Wednesday, June 24, 2009

The Democratic Alliance (DA) welcomes proposed pay increases for doctors announced by the health minister today, ranging from 29% to 53%. This will go some way to making working conditions in the public sector more tolerable and to closing the gap between what doctors should be entitled to earn, and what they actually earn.

It is unfortunate, however, that doctors had to go out onto the streets to fight to have the commitment the government made to them two years ago met. While on the one hand the government is devoting enormous resources to planning for a massively expensive National Health System, it is at the same time ignoring the basics of the health system. One of these basics is making working in the public sector tolerable for our doctors.

Following on from this, as the next step towards improving public hospitals, the DA calls on the government to conduct a comprehensive review of the qualifications and experience of all hospital CEOs.

MEDIA ENQUIRIES:
Mike Waters – 082 902 4523
Ross van der Linde – 076 543 7254

A follow-up email was sent today entitled “DA Shadow Minister on Health Delivers Speech on State of Health in South Africa”:

SPEECH BY MIKE WATERS MP
DA SHADOW MINSITER OF HEALTH
DEBATE ON BUDGET VOTES 14: HEALTH

Release, immediate: Tuesday, 30 June, 2009

Mr Speaker,
The current crisis in the public health sector with regards to the doctor’s strike has been a long time in the making. It is extremely unfortunate that doctors have been forced to go on strike in order to have their grievances heard.
The groundswell of support for the strike among doctors must set the alarm bells ringing for the ANC government. The fact that a junior doctor in the public sector earns the same amount as a bus driver is indicative of the indifference with which this government has taken doctors concerns over the years and the degree to which it has taken advantage of their commitment and compassion. It also clearly demonstrates where in the ANC priorities in health care actually sit.
If one looks historically at the budget allocation for public health it is obvious that from 1998 to 2003, in per capita terms, the budget flat-lined because the government was spending all its available money on guns to fight non-existent enemies. In 2003 the government began to realize its mistake and the budget did start to increase in real per capita terms. However, the automatic notch and rank increases of 1998 and budget constraints meant that as people left the public health system they were not replaced, and an estimated 60 000 people left during this period. Hospitals have still not recovered.
And while the government may say that from 2003 there were significant budget increases, most of this allocation went to clinics and to the new ARV programme. No compensation has really ever been made available to reduce the strain the whole health system was placed under during those years.
We must remember that the burden of disease has increased dramatically, placing an ever increasing strain on hospitals. Given that hospitals’ budget allocations have been on the same trajectory since 1998, we have the current melt-down. As there were insufficient funds to replace doctors and nurses who left the public service, the work load increased and working conditions deteriorated.
You simply cannot offer a health service with 12 000 vacancies for doctors and 42 000 for nurses.
Equally you cannot neglect a system for so long and expect to fix it in a once off adjustment – it is obviously beyond this government’s capabilities. You as a department mishandled nurses’ OSD increases through grossly under estimating the cost to the fiscus, and now you cannot or won’t deliver on the doctors’ OSD increases. This ongoing neglect of 11 years is finally taking its toll.
Back in July 2007, some two years ago, the government promised through Resolution 1 of 2007 that they would implement OSD increases for doctors in July 2008. The ANC government reneged on that promise.
My question to you, Minister, is if the government made a promise some 24 months ago, why then were no budget allocations made in the 2008/09 budget or even this year’s budget? The answer is clear: this government had no intention of honouring it promise.
It was only after the doctors started marching and threatening industrial action that you, your department and this government sat up and started to take the doctors seriously.
The Doctors have been asking for a 50% increase, which may seem excessive to most South Africans. However, research commissioned by SAMA into doctors’ remuneration shows that in the South African public sector, doctors are paid 50% less than other professionals such as accountants, engineers and lawyers. That is what I call a disgrace.
Since the threat of industrial action, the doctors’ association and yourselves have been shut behind closed doors negotiating, when an agreement was expected to be announced last Wednesday.
However, in what can only be described as bizarre you made a public announcement on the doctors’ increases while negotiations were still ongoing – thus undermining the entire bargaining process and showed bad faith. You announced in your media conference that doctors would receive increases of between 29% and 53%, which most organisations welcomed, including the DA. However, this was misleading to say the least.
When one scrutinises the finer detail, it is clear that the offer was not genuine, and either you deliberately misled the nation or your officials misled you, I believe the latter. Who’s idea was it to hold a press conference while negotiations were still ongoing?
The real increases for most doctors range between 2% – 13 % over a two year period. The offer excluded experience and only commits itself at looking at this principle again in April 2011, subject to availability of funds!
There are also questions hanging over whether doctors have the right to strike – well it is entrenched in the constitution with a limitation clause, meaning that as an essential service, skeleton staff must be in place. After the 2004 and 2007 public sector strikes, the government agreed to negotiate a Minimum Service Level Agreement which would stipulate the conditions of industrial action, – surprise, surprise, this government still has not fulfilled this promise. How many more promises are you actually going to break?
Mr Speaker, the attitude of the MEC in KZN is also of concern, on what bases does a MEC state that there is a third force at play and doctors are destabilising the country? Dismissing doctors also won’t help either, there are so few of them you will have to re-employ them anyway unless you want a further meltdown in health services.
If the government can find an extra R1bn for an expanding cabinet, and R 2 – R4 bn for saving the SABC, it can surely find the money to pay the doctors.
The question of budget allocations also needs to be seriously looked at. The ramifications of the miscalculations of nurses’ OSD allowances continues to eat into the budgets of the Provinces and some health experts believe that by August this year, provinces will be running out of money and we will see a repeat of what happened in the Free State in the last financial, but on a much wider scale. The department also admitted that due to the lack of funds not everyone who is entitled to ARVs will actually be enrolled into the programme as there is simply not enough money, this Minister means people are going to die.
We need to separate the HIV/AIDS budget from the rest of the health budget. It should be treated as a grant where central government underwrites it and guarantees all who need ARV’S can access them.
Minister, whether you were misled by your officials with regard to the doctors’ increases only you will ever know and whether you were set up for failure by hosting a premature press conference only you will know.
However as the political head of the Department of Health you, sir, and only you, must take political responsibility for the atrocious mess we find ourselves in.
I thank you.

MEDIA ENQUIRIES:
Mike Waters MP – 082 902 4523

SPEECH BY EMMAH MORE MP
DA DEPUTY SHADOW MINSITER OF HEALTH
DEBATE ON BUDGET VOTES 14: HEALTH

Release, immediate: Tuesday, 30 June, 2009

The Honourable Chairperson, The Minister, The Deputy Minister.

Honourable members.

During the apartheid era most African people lived in poverty and degradation. Most African people earned very little to survive. Our history has been dominated by colonialism, racism, apartheid, sexism and repressive labour policies and we are definitely not going back, but moving forward to a free and better South Africa.

There will be no political democracy if we still have people living under adverse poverty conditions with no housing and food or other basic needs like access to health care. The public health care system provides low cost care to millions of poor South Africans and for this reason it needs to be prioritised, nurtured and revived — so that it is able to offer patients more compassionate care and higher quality of medical attention.

Constitutionally, everyone has the right to have access to health care services and it further stipulates that no one may be refused emergency medical treatment. This illustrates the seriousness with which we should treat the doctors’ strike and the EMS strike.

I will focus on the critical effects that this budget will have on quality service delivery, the realisation of Batho Pele Principle and the Patient’s Rights Charter.

After the briefing by the Department of Health on their Strategic Plan for 2009/10 – 2011/12 and the budget the biggest question was the alignment of the budget to the overall plans of the department. The two do not correlate. There is no sufficient money for the department to cover the programmes as outlined on the strategic plan.

Honourable Minister, health institutions are falling apart and will continue to do so and worsen if this budget is not urgently reviewed. For an example the biggest hospital in the southern hemisphere, Chris Hani Baragwanath Hospital is one of the tertiary hospitals deteriorating day by day and faced with problems that undermines the quality of healthcare (service delivery) like:

•    Lack of resources (financial, human, equipment, drugs etc)
•    Lack of management and administrative capacity
•    Financial crisis and mismanagement
•    Poor and inadequate referral system
•    Lack of commitment and discipline
•    High attrition rate leading to the shortage
•    Lack of ICT
•    Poor procurement processes with the GSSC as the middle man

The funds requested by the department of health for comprehensive HIV/Aids plan for the financial year 2009/2010 was R1.4 billion but only received R200 million, what a gap. Recently the Human Science Research Council released the results of their 2009 survey on HIV prevalence and related behaviour and the results indicated that irrespective of the decrease in prevalence among children there is an alarming increase in HIV prevalence in young women in their twenties. We are concerned.

Motsamaisi wa lefapha la bophelo, setjhaba sa Rantsho se a lla, se a bokolla ke lefu lena la Kwatsi ya Bosolla Tlhapi (HIV/Aids). Ha ho phomolo malapeng le moyeng wa batho. Moqebelo o mong le o mong, Sontaha se seng le se seng ke mafu ho bolokwa bafu ka baka la lefu lena.

Uwele hle! Motsamaisi bana ba setse ba le bang malapeng, ba hloka bahlokomedi mme ba qobelleha ho hlokomela ba bang (child headed families). Ho iphaphanya le boima bona ba tsuba dithethefatsi, ba nwa jwala, ba kena mekgahlong e sa lokang ya bakgothutsi, ba rekisa ka mmele ebe qetellong malapa a qhalana, lefatshe lea dubeha jwale ka ha le se le qadile

The cut in the budget for hospital revitalisation projects has serious implications on the deterioration of the health infrastructure conditions and poor work environment for health workers.

The DA believes that the provision of quality healthcare to all who live in SA is a key priority and should be given an urgent attention. In order to avoid a total collapse in healthcare, the Minister should put SMART interventions in place.

To minimise these effects the government should:

•    Prioritise health programmes to ensure better health and therefore life for all
•    Ensure that the appointment of health institutions managers is based on what a person can do (capabilities) and how hard he/she works, which is more important than who they are and who they know.
•    Empower these managers not only to comply but to perform as well
•    Have strict control measures in place to ensure responsibility and accountability by all (from top management to the operational people at the lowest levels)
•    Cut the middleman the GSSC. Think about it, why should the centre buy milk, bread, sugar and other consumables on behalf of the hospitals in Gauteng. It does not make sense, as it prolongs the procurement process especially the delivery and the payment of companies. Hopefully the Gauteng Premier Ms Nomvula Mokonyane will consider what she calls an “exit strategy for the business people who are now multimillionaires through government tenders”.
•    Do a statistical analysis of the staff count in relation to the staff to client ratios of all staff categories and this includes the allied medical personnel particularly the radiographers in hospitals.

The DA believes that no country can prosper without an affordable, effective and easily accessible health system. Such a system requires both a dependable primary healthcare network – that prevents diseases and treats minor illnesses – and a secondary and tertiary healthcare network to provide hospital-based care for more serious illnesses.

In conclusion honourable chairperson, health is life – it’s about the people who voted us all here in Parliament. The simple implication of this budget is that more people are going to suffer, even die, specifically of the opportunistic diseases related to the HIV/AIDS.

The department of health budget need to be reviewed and critically analysed and be placed as priority number one.

The president of South Africa, the Honourable Jacob Zuma stated during his state of the nation address:

“We are seriously concerned about the deterioration of the quality of health care, aggravated by the steady increase in the burden of disease in the past decade and a half”

We all need to work together towards the betterment of the health care.

I thank you.
MEDIA ENQUIRIES:
Emmah More MP – 083 988 8044


Jun 29 2009

The Court Order Doctors are (rightly) Ignoring

The Democratic Alliance has been warning of the danger posed to the public by various issues of poor management, overly aggressive transformation at the expense of skills and experience, poorly remunerated doctors and nurses and corruption in procurement in the South African health services.  Doctors who have to work in these conditions have recently decided that enough is enough and that for them to do their work and comply with their hippocratic oath, they must force the ANC-led Government to listen.

Here is a copy of the Court Order which requires striking doctors in KZN to return to work.  Doctors seem willing to lose their jobs rather than return to work in conditions which are often so apalling that they cannot save lives due to filth and lack of equipment and medicines.

Personally, I know a good number of these Doctors and while some have chosen to stay on and look after patients despite the strike, others have chosen to protest actively.  Both groups are right.  Both I am proud of.

I would like to assemble personal testimonials of Doctors and other people in the Health services which can shed light on some of the conditions (other than poor pay) within which Doctors must work in South Africa.

Please add your comments using the form below.


May 7 2009

Good Luck Jacob Gedleyihlekisa Zuma, Mr President.

There is something about Jacob Zuma which makes me feel genuine hope for the ability of the ANC to do good on the promises they have made for the coming 5 years.  At the same time, I am confident that someone who has gone to the lengths he has to stay out of court, must have something to answer to, but we would not be the first country in the world to have a head of state with a cloud above their head – Italy’s Silvio Berlusconi has been the subject of several criminal allegations and court cases.

So, while still firmly seated in the opposition camp and convinced he should have the charges against him tested in a court of law, I wish Jacob Zuma well as he embarks on his new challenge as President of the Republic of South Africa.

Sir, your political responsibility is a privilege and opportunity afforded to very few.  Execute your duties well and in the interests of all South Africans.  Show us what it means to be a civil servant.  Indeed, usher the return of “civil” back to “civil servant” and your term will have been one well spent.


- Msholozi ushaya isqueakie takkie

A POEM FOR JZ by Mark Berger

O JZ dear JZ
Our new leader you are
From humble beginnings
You’ve really come far.

And now is your time
To shine and be strong
And make a real difference
And prove them all wrong.

We hope you will show us
The man that you are
With the mind of a politician
And the voice of a rock star.

The ladies will swoon
And many will say
That you use much less botox
Than Zille of the DA.

You’ve shrugged off the charges
You’ve given us hope
You even have managed
To fight off the COPE.

We hope you are firm
We hope you are fair
We hope you will never
Put colour in your hair.

We hope you can calm us
When voices are shrill
We hope you get along
with Patricia de Lille.

As well as the opposition
Who will question you so
And challenge your decisions
To ensure that we grow.

For we really do need you
And you really need us
But who really needs
The Freedom Front Plus?

Our politicians are many
Their ideas are too
But it’s not what they say
It’s about what they DO!

We want you to solve
The serious dilemma
Of that very strange man
Called Julius Malema.

And also the Taxis
Who break all the rules
And endanger our lives
And drive like real fools.

We need lots of jobs
And houses and things
And maybe in our parks
For the kids, some swings?

We need much less crime
And violence and fear
And much less of those who
Make corruption their career.

We want service delivery
And efficiency and speed
And competent people
We do urgently need.

To run the departments
Which impact the lives
Of our sons and our daughters
And our parents and wives.

And Africa she needs us
To show her the way
Out of gradual decline
And rapid decay.

But don’t try to fix Africa
By neglecting the South
As was tried by Mbeki
With his pipe in his mouth.

Our economy is strong
And it can still get stronger
If the minister of finance
Could just stay a bit longer?

Cause we want this to work
And we need you to win
And make better lives for those
Who voted you in.

Without grabbing the farmland
Without calling for war
Without making the mistakes
Of Mad Bob next door.

We’re a Banana Republic
I’m hearing some say
But I think we are more like
A Choc Nut sundae.

With some white and some brown
And some nuts in between
And a warm, rich black topping
With a dollop of cream.

So we hope you’re a fighter
Who will fight the good fight
For the blacks and the coloureds
And indians and whites

We hope you will lead us
With vision and grace
So we can become
A much better place.

Yes you are our leader
And we wish you the best
As the next few years
Put you to the test.

So we send you best wishes
And hope you do well
And as they say in the classics
ONLY TIME WILL TELL!

Good Luck Msholozi!