logo
Ramaphosa urges women to raise their voices at National Dialogue, despite key withdrawals

Ramaphosa urges women to raise their voices at National Dialogue, despite key withdrawals

IOL News2 days ago
President Cyril Ramaphosa is calling on women to lead discussions at the upcoming National Dialogue in Pretorie, despite withdrawals from key legacy foundations.
Image: Sandi Kwon Hoo / DFA
President Cyril Ramaphosa says the upcoming National Dialogue must serve as a platform for 'women to raise their voices,' even as several prominent legacy foundations have withdrawn from the event, regarding concerns over its direction and governance.
The first National Convention of the National Dialogue is scheduled to take place on August 15, 2025, in Pretoria.
In his weekly newsletter on Monday, Ramaphosa said organisations from across South Africa would gather to launch the National Dialogue process on Friday, which aims to unite citizens around solutions to the country's pressing challenges.
'Given the history of women's struggles in our country, it is to be expected that at this critical moment in our history, women will once again come to the fore and participate actively in the National Dialogue process,' Ramaphosa said.
'When we announced the National Dialogue, we said it would bring together individuals and organisations from across society to find common ground and new solutions for our country's many challenges.'
He stressed that women, who make up more than half of South Africa's population - are affected by every political, social, and economic issue, often more severely than men.
'Recognising that the lives of women are bound up with the future of the nation as a whole, we are counting on women's groups and organisations to mobilise around the National Dialogue process,' he said.
Ramaphosa said that the government is working in partnership with various stakeholders to ensure women are equally represented across the structures supporting and guiding the dialogue.
Video Player is loading.
Play Video
Play
Unmute
Current Time
0:00
/
Duration
-:-
Loaded :
0%
Stream Type LIVE
Seek to live, currently behind live
LIVE
Remaining Time
-
0:00
This is a modal window.
Beginning of dialog window. Escape will cancel and close the window.
Text Color White Black Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan
Transparency Opaque Semi-Transparent Background Color Black White Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan
Transparency Opaque Semi-Transparent Transparent Window Color Black White Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan
Transparency Transparent Semi-Transparent Opaque
Font Size 50% 75% 100% 125% 150% 175% 200% 300% 400% Text Edge Style None Raised Depressed Uniform Dropshadow Font Family Proportional Sans-Serif Monospace Sans-Serif Proportional Serif Monospace Serif Casual Script Small Caps
Reset
restore all settings to the default values Done
Close Modal Dialog
End of dialog window.
Advertisement
Next
Stay
Close ✕
Ad loading
'To remain true to our objective of giving all sectors of society a voice as we build the South Africa we want, we must ensure that all women are represented,' he said.
'This means a concerted effort to mobilise young and old, urban and rural dwellers, women from different ethnic and linguistic communities, women with disabilities, and LGBTQI+ people.'
He acknowledged that women's struggles are not the same.
'Although they may be similar in certain respects, the issues and challenges facing rural women and women in traditional communities differ vastly from those of women in urban areas with access to education, resources, and public services,' he said.
Ramaphosa referenced last year's South African Women's Pre-National Dialogue, convened by the Institute for Justice and Reconciliation, which emphasised the need for diverse voices to be reflected in the process.
He also claimed that the Government of National Unity (GNU) is committed to inclusive growth, job creation, tackling poverty, and building a capable, ethical, and developmental state - all with a gendered lens.
'No government decision should be made without due consideration of how it impacts women specifically,' he said.
Citing the country's history, Ramaphosa praised the central role of women in past social and political movements - from the anti-pass protests and rent boycotts to modern-day struggles against gender-based violence.
'With the first National Convention taking place during Women's Month, I call on all sectors of society to come together to ensure the full participation of all women in the National Dialogue,' he said.
'This would be the most fitting and powerful tribute to the legacy of the pioneers of 1956.'
Despite the president's appeal, the National Dialogue has been rocked by the withdrawal of several prominent organisations, including the Steve Biko Foundation, Thabo Mbeki Foundation, Chief Albert Luthuli Foundation, Desmond and Leah Tutu Legacy Foundation, WDB Foundation, Oliver and Adelaide Tambo Foundation, and the Strategic Dialogue Group.
In a joint statement issued on Friday, the group said the decision was made with 'deep regret,' but was necessary to protect the process's credibility and integrity.
They accused the organisers of shifting the initiative away from its citizen-led origins toward government control.
'What began as a citizen-led initiative has unfortunately in practice shifted towards government control,' the statement read.
'In pushing forward for a Convention on August 15, at the will of government officials and against the advice of the Sub-Committee Chairs, we believe that a critical moment in which citizens should be leading will be undermined.'
The group raised concerns about a rushed timeline, inadequate logistics, and a lack of meaningful engagement.
They warned that the Convention, as currently planned, risked becoming more symbolic than substantive.
'The rushed timeline, constrained logistics, and limited interactive design mean that the proposed Convention no longer offers a meaningful platform for engagement,' they said. 'It risks becoming more performance than participation.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Zuma and MK party file urgent court bid to challenge Ramaphosa's Mchunu decision
Zuma and MK party file urgent court bid to challenge Ramaphosa's Mchunu decision

The Citizen

time2 hours ago

  • The Citizen

Zuma and MK party file urgent court bid to challenge Ramaphosa's Mchunu decision

The application by Zuma and the MK party comes after their recent loss in the Constitutional Court. Former president Jacob Zuma and the MK party have not given up the fight and have lodged an urgent application against President Cyril Ramaphosa in the High Court in Pretoria. The application by Zuma and the MK party comes after their recent loss in the Constitutional Court. What Zuma wants In the notice of motion, Zuma and his party want the high court to declare Ramaphosa's decision to place Minister of Police Senzo Mchunu on special leave. They also want the appointment of Wits law Professor Feroz Cachalia as acting police minister and the establishment of a commission of inquiry to be declared invalid, null and void and unconstitutional and set aside. ConCourt ruling The ConCourt on 31 July 2025 ruled that the application does not engage the court's jurisdiction and refused direct access to the MK party and Zuma in its matter against Ramaphosa. Ramaphosa's lawyer Kate Hofmeyr argued that cases that can exclusively be decided by the Constitutional Court are very limited. 'This matter does not fall within this court's exclusive jurisdiction. Very few matters do, and this is not one of them. 'Any allegation that the power was exercised unlawfully falls under our constitutional scheme to the High Court and the Supreme Court of Appeal (SCA) to consider first. Additionally, there is no pressing need for this court, on 10 days' notice, to decide the issues in this matter as a court of first and last instance,' Hofmeyr said. This basically means that Zuma and the MK party had to approach the high court first, which they have now done. ALSO READ: Zuma and MK party case should've started in High Court, ConCourt hears [VIDEOS] The court ruling was handed down two hours after it hosted a special ceremonial sitting for retiring Acting Deputy Chief Justice Mbuyiseli Madlanga, whom Ramaphosa appointed to chair a commission to probe explosive allegations by KwaZulu-Natal (KZN) top cop Lieutenant-General Nhlanhla Mkhwanzi of criminal infiltration in the South African justice system. Constitutional matter In his founding affidavit to the high court, Zuma said he is bringing the application in his personal capacity, but because the application is urgent and in the 'interest of justice' he is also deposing the papers on behalf of the MK party. 'The twin purposes of this application are to re-assert the merits of the application which were left unadjudicated by the Constitutional Court on account of its findings on exclusive jurisdiction and direct access; and to raise new grounds of illegality and irrationality based on events which arose post the 30 July 2025 hearing in the Constitutional Court,' Zuma argues. Zuma said that the present application is indisputably a constitutional matter. Section 169(1)(a) of the Constitution provides that the High Court of South Africa may decide any constitutional matter except a matter that the Constitutional Court has agreed to hear by way of direct access or is assigned by legislation to another court of a status similar to the High Court. 'This is such a matter because the Constitutional Court, rightly or in my view wrongly, declined to grant direct access. That decision must be respected as a fact until or unless it is set aside,' Zuma said. ALSO READ: Zuma and MK party accuse ConCourt of ignoring 'most serious' violations by Ramaphosa Urgency In his papers, Zuma argues that in his Constitutional Court application, Ramaphosa did not contest the urgency, exclusive jurisdiction, and/or direct access. 'The president sought and was allowed to opportunistically hide behind those technicalities to escape much-needed judicial accountability for the unjustifiable multiple breaches of the rule of law. There are no more hiding places. 'The serious and unprecedented revelations of alleged criminality made by Lieutenant-General Mkhwanazi, as another highly qualified whistleblower, in the tradition of former Intelligence Chief Arthur Fraser, can no longer be ignored or swept under the carpet at the request of the president,' Zuma argued. Zuma explains that the urgency of the application is 'clearly not self-created, and it can never be reasonably asserted that relief may be obtained in due course.' 'The impugned commission has already commenced and continues to operate at huge cost to the taxpayer. In the (unlikely) event of its delivering a final report in six months' time, the matter would still not have been heard in due course.' Cachalia Zuma also argues that Cachalia has since assumed office and will be 'making decisions which affect the security of the people of South Africa' while Mchunu 'who has been illegally placed on leave of absence by the president continues to earn a salary and enjoy other expensive privileges such as bodyguards, drivers, free ministerial accommodation, air travel domestic workers and the like.' 'It is trite that the matter involves very serious and unprecedented allegations of executive and judicial capture which, if true, constitute a threat to the very democracy prevailing in South Africa. 'It is impossible to imagine a greater catastrophe than that which would transpire if the allegations are true and the matter is not heard as one of the utmost urgency. In relation to the question of urgency, the merits must be regarded as true and proven,' Zuma argues. Senzo Mchunu Zuma also argues that there is 'no express legal provision which empowers Ramaphosa to place a minister on leave of absence. 'The respondents can therefore only rely on an implied power which is said to flow from the power to dismiss. 'It will be argued that the decision does not pass the reasonable necessity test because the power to dismiss in section 91(2) must not be confused with the power to dismiss an employee,' he said. 'Financial benefit' Zuma said the appointment of Cachalia is 'totally incoherent' and false explanations given by Ramaphosa in 'respect of this decision owe to the fact that it is rooted in improper motives and bad faith'. 'Its purpose if to grant undue financial benefits to Minister Mchunu at the expense of the taxpayer and to shield him from accountability and well-deserved dismissal or removal from the Cabinet. 'In explaining this appointment, the president has performed both somersaults and backflips in a series of incompatible volte face manoeuvres, all pointing to sheer irrationality,' Zuma argued. In his papers, Zuma argued that following the swearing in of the acting police minister, both Ramaphosa and Cachalia gave media interviews, with differing accounts of his official title and status. Questions to Ramaphosa Zuma's attorneys sent a letter to Ramaphosa on 4 August 2025, posing 15 unanswered questions regarding his actions and justifications. Zuma said Ramaphosa's response was 'inadequate'. 'Given the public importance of the issues and the imminence of the 1 August date for the assumption of office by Professor Cachalia, the matter cries out for direct access.' ALSO READ: Zuma demands Ramaphosa resign by Friday, or else… Madlanga Commission Zuma also argues that there is no legal provision which is capable of endowing the president with the power to confer upon the Madlanga Commission the powers which are reserved to the Judicial Service and/or Magistrates' Commissions, to investigate allegations of misconduct on the part of members of the judiciary. 'There are specific and well-accepted policy reasons why such powers are exclusively reserved for the bodies referred to above. These include the preservation of the independence, dignity and effectiveness of the judiciary.' The matter is expected to heard on 26 August 2025. ALSO READ: Madlanga inquiry: How much probe into Mkhwanazi's allegations will cost

ActionSA deploys two seniors to observe and monitor National Dialogue
ActionSA deploys two seniors to observe and monitor National Dialogue

eNCA

time2 hours ago

  • eNCA

ActionSA deploys two seniors to observe and monitor National Dialogue

CAPE TOWN - Unresolved questions raised by key stakeholders and the broader public have led to growing concerns surrounding the National Dialogue convention. This had led to the withdrawal of several NGOs, interest groups and political parties that were meant to be participating. Central to the impasse is the budget allocation for the convention. ActionSA Parliamentary Leader Athol Trollip had a discussion with eNCA's Gareth Edwards and shared his party's standpoint on the upcoming National Dialogue

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store