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    <td width="8%">&nbsp;</td>
    <td width="6%"><img border="0" src="/Kate/Pictures/SAflag.gif" width="68" height="50"></td>
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    <p align="center"><font face="Comic Sans MS" size="6">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</font><font face="Comic Sans MS" size="5">NEWS 
    &amp; MEDIA</font><p align="center"><font face="Comic Sans MS" size="5">
    LETTERS FROM THE PRESIDENT</font></td>
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<p class="MainHead" align="center"><font size="5"><b>&quot;Working with our global 
friends to meet tomorrow's challenges&quot;</b></font></p>
<p>[
<a onmouseover="window.status='Previous Letters';return true" target="main" _ href="Previous%20letters%20from%20the%20President.html">Previous Letters
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<p class="MainHead">&nbsp;</p>
<p class="BodyTextFirstPara"><span class="BodyTextUpperCase">The</span> UK-South 
Africa Solidarity Conference will take place in London this week. The strong 
delegation we have sent will have the opportunity <span class="BodyText">t</span>o 
interact with a broad cross section of the British people to reflect on our 
achievements during the first decade of our liberation and to discuss our 
cooperation during our second decade of freedom.</p>
<p class="BodyText">Our people bore the brunt of the struggle against apartheid. 
Many paid the supreme sacrifice to ensure that we gain our freedom. The 
democratic victory of 1994 belongs firmly to these millions and the 
organisations that led them, with the ANC at their head.</p>
<p class="BodyText">Nevertheless it would be a fundamental mistake to minimise 
or underestimate the central role played by the peoples of the world in the 
struggle to end the apartheid system. Their involvement in this struggle 
resulted in the formation of the strongest international solidarity movement the 
world has ever seen.</p>
<p class="BodyText">Many of these international activists against apartheid did 
not forget about our country when we achieved our freedom. They sustained their 
interest in our future, hopeful that we would use the victory to which they had 
contributed so much, to create a better society.</p>
<p class="BodyText">Many have also sought to continue acting in solidarity with 
us to help us build the non-racial, non-sexist and prosperous democracy to which 
we are committed. Anti-apartheid activists have taken initiatives in various 
countries to translate this desire into action.</p>
<p class="BodyText">Perhaps because of its specific historical colonial 
relationship with our country, the UK played a leading role in helping us to 
build the global movement against apartheid. Its Anti-Apartheid Movement was one 
of the oldest and strongest in the world. Some of its leaders, such as the late 
Archbishop Trevor Huddleston, were recognised globally as leaders of the peoples 
of the world against apartheid.</p>
<p class="BodyText">The British people have been among those who have sought 
further to deepen their relations with us by extending a hand of friendship and 
solidarity to us, to give us such support as they can to help us achieve our 
programme for reconstruction and development. This has led to the convening of 
the UK-South Africa Solidarity Conference that meet in London this week. It will 
also be attended by representative drawn from other European countries, which 
are also interested to develop their own national mass movements in support of 
social transformation in our country. The Conference will draw people from all 
walks of life, including politicians, trade unionists and business people, 
academics and religious leaders, youth, women, cultural and media workers, and 
so on. It will examine all aspects of our national life to see in what ways the 
British people can support our efforts.</p>
<p class="BodyText">As happened during the years of struggle against apartheid, 
the UK-South Africa Solidarity Conference has the potential to provide an 
example to other countries of how to tap into the goodwill towards our country 
and people that is so prevalent in many parts of the world. We look forward to 
the outcomes of what will certainly be a very successful UK-South Africa 
Solidarity Conference.</p>
<p class="BodyText">Many years before the birth of the British and global 
anti-apartheid movement, a young Indian lawyer arrived in our country. This was 
Mahatma Gandhi who, as the people of India say, arrived in our country as a 
lawyer and returned to India as a liberator. These shared experiences of 
Gandhiji brought the then struggling people of South Africa and India close to 
one another.</p>
<p class="BodyText">As India achieved independence in 1947, acting through the 
UN, she immediately took up the matter of racial discrimination in our country. 
From then onwards, she remained in the forefront of the global struggle against 
apartheid. To enable us further to broaden and deepen our relations with the 
Indian government and people, the Indian government allowed our movement, the 
ANC, to open a representative office in New Delhi.</p>
<p class="BodyText">Leaders of our movement who have served as our 
representatives in India include the late Alfred Nzo and our Treasurer General, 
Mendi Msimang. This indicates the importance our movement attached to the 
relations between ourselves and the sister people of India.</p>
<p class="BodyText">Last week we visited India with a large government and 
business delegation. Our visited coincided with the celebration of the 10th 
anniversary of the establishment of diplomatic relations between our two 
countries. This was celebrated, in part, in a concert in Mumbai, in which two of 
our leading singers, Yvonne Chakachaka and Vusi Mahlasela performed.</p>
<p class="BodyText">The establishment of these diplomatic relations further 
strengthened the relations of friendship and solidarity that have existed ever 
since Mahatma Gandhi helped to organise the forces of liberation in our country, 
resulting, among other things, in the establishment of the then Natal and 
Transvaal Indian Congresses.</p>
<p class="BodyText">These bonds of friendship and solidarity have remained as 
strong as ever during the period since our liberation. And yet it was clear to 
both the Indian and South African governments that at the practical level, our 
relations did not reflect the deep-seated friendship that our peoples felt for 
each other. At the same time, it was equally clear that there was much scope for 
the expansion and deepening of our relationship, covering many areas.</p>
<p class="BodyText">At the international level, we are both members of the 
Non-Aligned Movement and the Commonwealth. In many instances, within these 
organisations, our two countries take the same or similar positions on the major 
issues of the day. This is equally true of the United Nations and other 
multilateral bodies.</p>
<p class="BodyText">This commonality of views and approaches has been 
demonstrated during the last few months when India, Brazil and South Africa 
decided to join hands in the IBSA Dialogue Forum. This Forum seeks to deepen the 
cooperation between our three countries in all fields, including international 
affairs, the economy, social development, science and technology, and so on. All 
informed observers understand the importance of this initiative with regard to 
giving practical effect to the idea of South-South cooperation.</p>
<p class="BodyText">An example of this is that the Southern African Customs 
Union, of which we are a member, is negotiating or about to negotiate Free Trade 
Agreements with both India and Mercosur, of which Brazil is an important member. 
The increased trade that will result from this will help all the countries 
concerned the better to meet their development challenges and use their 
comparative advantages to the mutual benefit.</p>
<p class="BodyText">Our need and ability to work together was also demonstrated 
during the recent WTO negotiations at Cancun, Mexico. In this instance, India, 
Brazil, China, South Africa, Nigeria, Argentina, Indonesia and other countries 
came together in the so-called G20+ to advance the interests of the developing 
countries as a whole. This cooperation will continue.</p>
<p class="BodyText">Even as we work together with these countries of the South 
to address these and other international questions, many of which relate to the 
important matter of North-South relations, we will also work steadfastly to 
strengthen our bilateral relations with them. This will include a trade 
agreement with China.</p>
<p class="BodyText">The purpose of our visit to India was to address the matter 
of our bilateral relations, and thus add to the reinforcement of the process of 
building South-South relations.</p>
<p class="BodyText">India has a population of a billion people, which is larger 
than the population of Africa. It has a big economy, sections of which are at 
the cutting edge of the global economy. It is highly advanced in such areas as 
Information and Communication Technologies and Biotechnology.</p>
<p class="BodyText">It has a large pool of highly trained scientists, engineers, 
technologists and technicians covering many areas of human activity. For 
instance, just one of a number of Indian Institutes specialising in Cellular and 
Molecular Biology, has over 120 Ph.D. students specialising in this field of 
study. We were also told of a single project that, alone, employs more than 340 
Indian aeronautical engineers.</p>
<p class="BodyText">Indian specialists in information and communication 
technology are much sought after in all countries of the world, including the 
most developed. Major international pharmaceutical companies source some of 
their drugs and medicines from Indian manufacturers, re-selling these under 
their own labels.</p>
<p class="BodyText">At the same time, a huge amount of work is going to bring 
India's considerable intellectual and other capacities to bear, to find 
solutions to such problems as poverty and underdevelopment, and the imbalance 
between the rural and the urban areas.</p>
<p class="BodyText">At the same time, India has some of the most outstanding 
companies in the world, which produce both for the global market, and the large 
Indian population, which includes at least 300 million people belonging to the 
middle class.</p>
<p class="BodyText">We found an India keen to welcome us with great warmth and 
open arms. Here we found a people, government, politicians, business, workers, 
intellectuals, artists and others, all very keen to share whatever they can with 
us, to help ensure that we move forward speedily towards the realisation of our 
goals of reconstruction and development. It would truly be difficult to find 
another country that betters India in terms of the strength and depth of the 
feelings of friendship and solidarity towards our country and people.</p>
<p class="BodyText">Our visit to India will lead to a radical expansion of our 
bilateral relations in all areas. It will significantly increase our capacity to 
meet the national challenge to create a better life for all. Without reducing 
our relations with the countries of the North, it will expand our possibility to 
build our future on the basis of strengthened relations with a strategically 
important country of the South and the world.</p>
<p class="BodyText">Our visit to India served as a dignified tribute and a 
pledge to a shared son of South Africa, India and the world, Mahatma Gandhi. 
Together with the UK-South Africa Solidarity Conference, it made the statement 
that the peoples of the world have the possibility to define the process of 
globalisation in a manner that promotes the goal of building people-centred 
societies.</p>
<p class="BodyText">We enjoy the rare fortune that on our side, we have the 
people of India and the United Kingdom who have the courage and the heart to act 
in a manner that defines them as our all-weather friends. There can be no better 
company in which to celebrate our first decade of Liberation, no better company 
to be in as we confront the challenges of our Second Decade of Liberation.</p>
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