By Scott Bobb
Johannesburg
27 April 2007
South Africa's President, Thabo Mbeki, has urged fellow citizens to work together to fight crime, poverty and racism. Mr. Mbeki made the remarks in a speech marking the anniversary of his country's first democratic elections. Correspondent Scott Bobb reports from Johannesburg.
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| Thabo Mbeki |
"There is a minority in our country who have made crime their business, who terrorize our communities, robbing our people of their hard-earned valuables, raping women and children and in the process using unimaginable violence against law abiding citizens," he said.
Mr. Mbeki urged citizens to fight back by reporting crime and corruption to the authorities.
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| South African army artillery group fire canons to celebrate Freedom day at Victoria and Albert waterfront in Cape Town, 27 Apr 2007 |
The South African leader spoke in the city of Bisho, on the eastern Cape coast 800 kilometers south of Johannesburg. Bisho was the site of a 1992 massacre by right-wing extremists who opposed negotiations that eventually ended apartheid.
Mr. Mbeki said that since then South Africa has made great progress, but it still faces challenges such as eradicating what he called the legacy of its terrible past.
"Freedom and democracy in our country gave birth to a culture of human rights," he said. "At the center of that new culture of human rights is the promotion of non-sexism and non-racialism."
Mr. Mbeki also acknowledged growing political pressure to extend equality to the economic sector in a society where two-thirds of the population lives on less than two dollars per day.
"Let all today on this day, Freedom Day, rededicate ourselves to build a better society in which we can defeat poverty, unemployment, homelessness and economic marginalization," he said.
Mr. Mbeki is due to step down as head of the ruling African National Congress at the end of the year. A fierce battle to succeed him is being waged behind the scenes.
The head of the ANC will likely be the party's candidate in presidential elections due in two years. Nearly a dozen senior leaders have been mentioned as possible contenders.
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