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Thursday 3 November 2016

The Presidency

Remarks by President Jacob Zuma at the Black Business Tribute Dinner, honouring black business pioneers who thrived in business during the difficult apartheid era, Sandton Convention Centre, Johannesburg

28 October 2016
Photo of: President Jacob Zuma
All Ministers present here today,
Our Esteemed Black Business Pioneers,
The Leadership of Organized Business in particular the Leadership of NAFCOC
Leadership of the Black Business Council,
Telkom Chairman and President of BUSA and BLSA, Mr Jabu Mabuza,
CEO of Telkom, Mr Sipho Maseko
All CEOs present,
All the Awards Recipients
Distinguished Guests;
Ladies and Gentlemen,
Good evening to you all.
Sanibonani! Dumelang

Let me begin by expressing my sincere appreciation and gratitude for this opportunity to address this tribute dinner in honour of the pioneers of black economic emancipation.

This is a historic occasion indeed. We are thus united in celebrating leaders who triumphed against incredible odds. It was not easy at all to run businesses in the early 1960’s and 1970’s, during a difficult period of repression.

Black business people faced restrictive laws and policies that deliberately suppressed black business in the urban areas. Black businesspeople could not set up business in towns but were limited to Black townships. This was when the famous township corner shops or general dealers came to being, and they became an important feature of our lives.

It was also extremely difficult, under the homeland system, to unite black business under one umbrella as it divided Black South Africans according to their ethnic groups, classifying those residing in homelands as non-South Africans.

Also during this time, the heavy hand of apartheid was visible as many leaders of our Liberation Movement were either in exile, or in prison.

Despite all this, many black entrepreneurs worked hard and became household names and an inspiration to all.
We are therefore much pleased that today we are able to recognise these shining stars and beacons of hope against all odds during apartheid. We are also very proud that the ruling African National Congress played a historical and significant role in laying the foundation for Black economic emancipation to take root.

In fact we all remember how the Tambo/Mandela firm assisted Mr Richard Maponya when he suffered repressive apartheid laws affecting his business.
As we honour these pioneers tonight, we also acknowledge the significant role played by organisations such as NAFCOC, the Black Management Forum, FABCOS, African Hawkers and Informal Business and others in laying the foundation for the post-apartheid Broad-Based Black Economic Empowerment (BBBEE) policy of government today.

These organisations soldiered on, and demonstrated their determination never to give up the fight against racial exclusion and economic injustice over these years. 

We are pleased that today many black business owners have become business icons of our nation and continue to inspire young entrepreneurs. You have demonstrated that it is possible to succeed, especially now, in a free and democratic South Africa, with a government that has as its mission, the emancipation of black people from economic bondage.

Black entrepreneurs are succeeding in various sectors of our economy, including mining, information communication technologies, agriculture, construction and manufacturing.
However, the struggle to de-racialise the ownership and control of the economy and ensure the meaningful participation of the black majority continues. We have not yet reached our destination, that is true economic emancipation.

Our collective task is to fast-track economic transformation so that black business can be part of the mainstream, and not be regarded as an alternative sector of the economy.

In this regard, government continues to implement its policies aimed at the radical transformation of the economic landscape, including changing the patterns of ownership of the economy.
These include the Broad-Based Black Economic Empowerment laws, aimed at ensuring the transformation of our economy as well as ensuring that black people participate meaningfully in the mainstream of the economy. 
We regard our Black Economic Empowerment legislation including legislation aimed at opening up state procurement to black entrepreneurs and small business, as a critical component of our national effort to banish poverty, joblessness and inequality.

We must emphasize that the uniqueness of the B-BBEE policy is that its successful implementation requires both the public and the private sectors to institutionalize and implement it with utmost vigour.

In addition, I must reiterate that in order for the B-BBEE policy to succeed in the public sector, government must use its procurement muscle to sustain and grow black businesses.

This is because annually, through the public sector procurement system, government spends in the region of 500 billion rand on goods and services and construction works alone.

In this regard, the buying power of the state is a powerful economic transformation tool. It can and must be used to advance black economic empowerment.

In the past five years, as part of advancing B-BBEE procurement, government amended the Preferential Procurement Policy Framework Act or the PPPFA Regulations to provide for BEE preference points.
As we have now realised, this amendment has not worked or led to the desired impact. Instead, we have now found that the preference points system prescribed in the PPPFA is rigid and is not responsive to government objectives.

Due to these shortcomings, the preferential procurement regulations have failed to substantially re-shape the skewed ownership and control of the South African economy. We would like to reiterate that Government is now determined to ultimately repeal the PPPFA and its associated regulations and introduce a more flexible preferential procurement framework that is responsive to government objectives.
In this regard, the Preferential Procurement Policy Framework Act will be repealed by the Public Procurement Act. The Public Procurement Bill is now going through the different government stakeholder engagement processes before it is tabled in Parliament. This is targeted for early 2017.
In the interim, government is working on regulations that will improve the PPPFA to make them more responsive to the economic transformation imperatives. One of the key deliverables will be the 30 percent set asides for small businesses, which will be compulsory for all big contracts.

We urge you to engage the National Treasury and the Small Business Development Department to ensure that the views of black business are taken into account into the drafting of the new procurement bill and in amending the procurement regulations.

Government has also introduced the new Black Industrialist (BI) programme. We introduced this programme following discussions with the Black Business Council, where we agreed that it is not sufficient for black businesspeople to be passive shareholders only in big companies.

They need to enter the manufacturing sector and own factories and other production facilities. Only then can we say we are transferring or expanding the ownership of the means of production to the black majority.

In its first year of roll out, which is still in progress, the Black Industrialist programme has managed to approve 22 Black Industrialists projects with a total value of R1.2 billion and over 1 000 direct jobs supported.

In an attempt to facilitate access to markets for Black Industrialists, we have signed partnerships with a number of Original Equipment Manufacturersthat are interested in participating in the Black Industrialist programme.

We have to give practical meaning to the pledge we made during our struggle for liberation that we will never consider our mission complete and our liberation achieved, if the people of our country are still not freed from economic exclusion and deprivation.

We urge you to support the Department of Small Business Development to ensure that it delivers its mandate of promoting a thriving small business sector in our country. Our vision is to see the revival of the township economy.

Those corner shops that made many of our big name pioneers must be revived and supported. Many provincial economic development departments are making that goal a priority. This also includes our determination to support informal traders, who most of the time fall foul of municipal regulations and bylaws.
We need to find a way to help them earn a living while also respecting the municipal regulations. Also important is the need to register all our informal traders. We cannot have mushrooming businesses all over without knowing who the traders are, including those from neighbouring sister countries in the continent and beyond.This is one of the key projects of our InterMinisterial Committee on Migration.

We also want to see a thriving rural economy. Women in particular, in rural areas, must form cooperatives to sell their agricultural produce, crafts or any other income generating activity. This is important as it will make our people self-sufficient and not depend on government only. It will also enable government to provide support.

Compatriots,

Tonight is about celebration. It is about celebrating the achievements of our compatriots against all odds, without a sympathetic and supportive government on our side. Through the actions of these pioneers and leaders in business, we are able to motivate young people.

We say to our youth, if these pioneers could achieve their goals in a climate of institutionalised racism and suppression, you can do it better with a supportive government on your side. We salute you all on your outstanding achievements. You have proven that black people are capable in business.
You have made the country truly proud!
Together we will continue to build a prosperous South Africa.
I thank you.

Issued by: The Presidency
Pretoria

Tuesday 1 November 2016

AfricanBrains

This is RAD says PC Training & Business College

Technology African Brains WikimediaBy Thandisizwe Mgudlwa – AfricanBrains
“The focus on using technology to improve education in our country should be encouraged. The Tablet PC is a great innovation and indicates the commitment of certain institutions to improve the lives of ordinary South Africans.” South African President, Jacob Zuma.
These words are inline with the technological revolution sweeping South Africa as ‘A RAD development at PC Training & Business College (PCT&BC) is the introduction of the RAD campaign.’
The campaign has been launched to ensure that staff as well as learners adopt the same culture when it comes to participating in the variety of courses and qualifications that are on offer at PCT&BC.
RAD is the acronym for Realising, Achieving and Discovering.
PCT&BC provides the opportunity to a broad spectrum of potential learners from school leavers to currently employed individuals to realise their dreams by improving their education. Choose from a selection of in excess of 500 qualifications including certificates, diplomas and degrees to bring you closer to your dreams.
By constantly making significant investments in technology PCT&BC is well poised to assist you in achieving your potential through efficient training programmes for your success.
All full time students are provided with free PC Tablets and free Wi-Fi access on campus, which will enhance learning systems, as well as access to information and will provide you with a distinct advantage when it comes to getting the results you need!
Essentially, many of the programmes on offer from PCT&BC offer assistance with employment placement after graduation putting you on your path to discovering your talent. Graduation does not mean that your education stops.
Also, with the introduction of the Mobile Learning Academy, PCT&BC has made lifelong learning a reality, so once your short-term goals have been achieved, plan the next set of goals and get going!
Having provided Further Education and Training for the past 23 years, PCT&BC has a proven track record. This is reflected in the long list of accomplishments and industry awards that the college has received over the years, including Best College in South Africa as well as Business Education and Training Award on more than one occasion.
And this proud history is further bolstered by top academic leadership, which is well set to the take the college to new heights as the digital era makes it's mark on tertiary education.
This is RAD!


Monday 31 October 2016

Eric Thomas News

Dr. Eric Thomas


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Eric Thomas, PhD is a critically acclaimed author, World renowned speaker, educator, pastor and auddible.com  Audie Awards Finalist

ET, as he is better known, has taken the world by storm, with his creative style and high-energy messages. 

His words continue to impact tens of millions of people in several hundred countries across the planet!  

Through a significant social media presence and his recent domestic and international tours, “ET, The Hip Hop Preacher” has become a global phenomenon!

Drawing from his own personal experiences as they relate to homelessness, the absence of his biological father, scholastic struggles, and various other obstacles, ET allows his life to be an “open book” from which radiates dynamic and inspiring messages that relate to many people across all strata.

While the typical undergraduate student takes between four to six years to complete their studies, ET took 12.  

For most, that would have signaled the end of any future academic aspirations.  For ET, it was a springboard from which his academic success would be launched!  

In 2005, ET completed and received a Master’s Degree from Michigan State University and on February 5th of  2015, Eric successfully defended his dissertation and will receive his PhD in Education Administration on May 8th, 2015, from Michigan State University.

Eric’s commitment to community activism has been long standing.  

It began with  his award-nominated GED Program that lead to his non-profit, Break The Cycle, I Dare you, and a plethora of ministerial and educational endeavors. 

The culmination of those efforts resulted in the development of  the Advantage program at Michigan State University.   

This program targets high risk college students by improving their study habits and increasing their retention rates.   

Michigan State University is where he continued to pursue his passion to remedy the effects of adverse societal influences plaguing both the young and old.  

It is from this platform that he created International Urban Education Consultants; a non-profit organization committed to finding solutions to close the achievement gap in urban schools through goal framing and helping students to reform their perception of learning.

ET is the epitome of hustle, drive, determination, and success.  

Millions of followers have been able to apply the principles revealed in his award nominated autobiography, The Secret to Success, which has scaled the social media charts with over 50 million hits.  

His sophomore release, Greatness Is Upon You, features 24 life changing fundamental precepts and is meeting with equal success. 

Both titles are available through Eric Thomas and Associates Publications and can be purchased online at etinspires.com

As CEO of his Consulting Firm, ETA LLC., Eric has led his team through the doors of dozens of reputable organizations and Fortune 500 companies such as General Electric, Quicken Loans, AT&T, Nike, Under Armour, New Balance and UPS.  

He has also consulted for major Universities and the major sports teams within the MLB, NBA, NFL and MLS.

Eric’s spiritual walk, tenacity and drive are the perfect example of his quote,When you want to succeed as bad as you want to breathe, then youll be successful.” 

At a  recent business meeting, Eric had the opportunity to learn more ‘Secrets of Success’ from Mr. Warren Buffett. 

This invitation-only event, broadened his mind and further strengthened his resolve to empower others in their pursuit of greatness.

Visit: shop.etinspires.com/#

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Africa News

“Africa Must Become A Permanent Member Of UN Security Council” – Zuma



South African President Jacob Zuma’s call for the transformation of the United Nations Security Council (UNSC)and for Africa to have permanent seats in the council, is gaining momentum, government communications reported.
In a speech delivered at the UN General Assembly on Wednesday last week, Zuma committed himself to rally the world behind South Africa’s campaign to transform the UNSC and for Africa to have permanent seats in the council.
The UNSC comprises 15 members, five of them – Britain, France, China, the United States and Russia – are permanent, while 10 are non-permanent members that serve for two years on a rotational basis without veto power. South Africa has been calling for this to change.
“Let me reiterate that the 70th anniversary of the UN next year provides an opportunity for us to seriously reflect on the need to reform this august body, moving beyond words to action, Zuma declared.
“Ten years ago, world leaders celebrating the 60th anniversary of the UN agreed on the need for reform of the United Nations Security Council in particular,” President Zuma said to rumbling applause.
In a loud and clear message to the more than 120 leaders, who converged at the UN Headquarters for the UNGA General Debate, President Zuma said the UN can no longer afford to have Africa out of the UNSC on a permanent basis.
“When we converge here next year, on the 70th year of the UN, we should be able to adopt a concrete programme that will guide us towards a strengthened UN and a reformed Security Council.”
President Zuma also noted that some “contentious aspects” of the UN system, such as the veto powers and the exclusion of regions such as Africa in the Security Council, were some of the critical matters that cannot be ignored in the quest for transformation.
The UNSC is the UN’s most powerful body. It helps to shape international law and is the first to respond to crises. This places Africa in a precarious position, considering that most issues the council has to deal with emanate from the continent.
Apart from the call to reform the UN, President Zuma’s remarks, as anticipated, focused on the progress South Africa has made in attaining its Millennium Development Goals (MGDs), whose deadline of September next year looms larger.
President Zuma continued, “South Africa has recorded impressive progress through the expansion of health infrastructure and improved access to health services for all South Africans.”
“On the reduction of child mortality, MDG 4, and the improvement of maternal health, MDG 5, significant progress has been recorded, but more work remains. In fact, more work remains worldwide to fully achieve these goals, especially in the developing world,” he said.
He said Africa had to confront those underlying root causes that continued to make it impossible for its people to have a better life.
Despite the progress that the continent has made, reports continued to show that Africa is lagging behind in terms of the attainment of some of the MDGs.
“It is for this reason that we appreciate the crafting of a post-2015 Global Development Agenda that will carry forward the unfinished business of the MDGs. The eight MDGs were adopted by the UN in 2000 and set clear targets in improving conditions in a wide range of areas, including halving extreme poverty rates to halting the spread of HIV/AIDS.
“The General Assembly has proposals to replace the MDGs with what is being referred to as the new Sustainable Development Goals, which outline 17 goals and 169 targets. This is part of the UN’s post-2015 development agenda, which aims to carry forward the work of the MDGs that have just eight goals and 21 targets.”
President Zuma said the post-2015 Global Development Agenda “will provide a frame of reference for our collective agreement on what has to be done”.
“We reiterate that developed countries should be reliable partners and meet their commitment to development goals, such as contributing 0.7% of their gross national income towards Official Development Assistance,” he asserted.
President Zuma further said the recent outbreak of Ebola, which has claimed more than 2 000 lives in some West African countries, was one example of the challenges that developing countries continue to contend with.
“We believe that Ebola would have been contained within a few days had it been an outbreak in the developed world. But it has become a pandemic that threatens the economies of affected African States.”
The outbreak had exposed the challenges of capacity, lack of infrastructure and other limited resources in Africa, he said.
South Africa would continue to provide resources to assist the people and governments of Liberia, Guinea and Sierra Leone to contain the virus.
Jacob Gedleyihlekisa Mhlanganyelwa Zuma was re-elected president of South Africa in 2014.
In 2007, he had won the presidency of the African National Congress, South Africa’s National Liberation Movement, which was established in 1912.
President Zuma was born in Nkandla (Natal Province), South Africa, on April 12, 1942. He had served as deputy president of South Africa from 1999 to 2005.
He was born in a part of South Africa now known as KwaZulu-Natal (once Zululand) and became politically active at a young age.
Influenced by a trade unionist family member, Zuma joined the ANC, a Liberation Movement that stood against the country’s practice of Apartheid—or racial segregation—and other discriminatory policies of the colonial era.
Forced to go underground after the 1960 bannings, the ANC, which had long been a nonviolent group, developed a militant wing in the early 1960s. Known as Umkhonto we Sizwe (Spear of the Nation), the new militant group undertook acts of sabotage against the government.
Zuma joined the group in 1962 and was arrested the next year with 45 other members and soon was convicted of conspiracy.
Zuma also joined the South African Communist Party (SACP) in 1963.
Sentenced to 10 years in prison, he served his time in the infamous Robben Island prison where Nelson Mandela, the country’s future president, was also imprisoned for many years.
Whilst imprisoned, Zuma served as a refree for prisoners’ association football games, organised by the prisoners’ own governing body, Makana Football Association.
After his release in 1973, Zuma continued working for the ANC and played an essential role in building the underground organization’s infrastructure in KwaZulu Natal.
Zuma first left South Africa in 1975 and landed in Swaziland, and then proceeded to Mozambique, where he dealt with the arrival of thousands of exiles in the wake of the Soweto Uprisings.
He was elected to the ANC’s National Executive Committee in 1977. Holding a number of ANC posts over the next decade, he established a reputation as loyal and hard working.
Zuma also served as Deputy Chief Representative of the ANC in Mozambique, a post he occupied until the signing of the Nkomati Accord between the Mozambican and South African governments in 1984.
After signing the Accord, Zuma was appointed as Chief Representative of the ANC.
He served on the ANC’s political and military council when it was formed in the mid-1980s, and was elected to the politburo of the SACP on April 1990.
And in January 1987, Zuma was forced to leave another country, this time by the government of Mozambique (due to security treats).
Zuma then moved to the ANC Head Office in Lusaka, Zambia, where he was appointed Head of Underground Structures and shortly thereafter Chief of the Intelligence Department of the ANC.
Following the end of the ban on the ANC in February 1990, Zuma was one of the first ANC leaders to return to South Africa to begin the process of negotiations.
In 1990, he was elected Chairperson of the ANC for the Southern Natal region, and took a leading role in fighting political violence in the region between members of the ANC and the Inkatha Freedom Party (IFP). He was elected the Deputy Secretary General of the ANC the next year at the ANC December National Conference, and in January 1994, he was nominated as the ANC candidate for the Premiership of KwaZulu-Natal.
Zuma had experience in national leadership, as he started serving in the National Executive committee of the ANC in 1977 when the party was still a guerrilla movement. By the time he became its president he had served the ANC for thirty years. After the 1994 general election, with the ANC becoming a governing organisation but having lost KwaZulu-Natal province to the IFP, Zuma was appointed as Member of the Executive Committee (MEC) of Economic Affairs and Tourism for the KwaZulu-Natal provincial government, after stepping aside to allow Thabo Mbeki to run unopposed for deputy presidency of South Africa.
In December 1994, he was elected National Chairperson of the ANC and chairperson of the ANC in KwaZulu-Natal, and was re-elected to the latter position in 1996. He was elected Deputy President of the ANC at the National Conference held at Mafikeng in December 1997 and consequently appointed executive Deputy President of South Africa in June 1999.
In terms of party tradition, as the deputy president of the ANC, Zuma was already in line to succeed Thabo Mbeki, who by now was President of South Africa.
The ANC structures held their nominations conferences in October and November 2007, where Zuma appeared favourite for the post of ANC President, and, by implication, the President of South Africa in 2009.
With then-incumbent ANC- and South African President Thabo Mbeki as his opposition, Zuma was elected President of the ANC on 18 December 2007.
After the general election in 2009, Zuma became the President of South Africa.
And at the December 2012 National Conference, Zuma was re-elected as President of the ANC.
Zuma's style of governing is hugely influenced by one of his mentors, Nelson Mandela, South Africa’s first democratically elected president.

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