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SASSA on 30 days Notice for Beneficiaries to Visit Offices for Social Grant Review

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SASSA on 30 days Notice for Beneficiaries to Visit Offices for Social Grant Review

CHANON LECODEY MERRICKS ONLINE_EDITOR 


South African Social Security Agency is encouraging all beneficiaries not to ignore the 30 days’ notice to do social grant review. Before the Agency terminates or lapses the social grant, it is based on SASSA mandate that beneficiaries must be informed.

The notice of suspension or cancellation of social assistance contemplated in sub regulation 32(2) must be delivered to the beneficiary or the procurator electronic communication or any other means of communication. Sub regulation 32(4) states that the Agency must, prior to suspending or cancelling any social assistance, investigate, obtain and verify all the facts and circumstances surrounding the social assistance.

In Mpumalanga third quarter progress reports state that 12151beneficiaries were notified to visit SASSA offices for social grant review,2303 were reviewed and 221 lapsed.

SASSA Mpumalanga is pleading with beneficiary to respond to this process and take it seriously to ensure that the qualified social grant beneficiaries continue to receive their social grant at the right time. The Agency understands that majority of South Africans depends on social grant but that does not mean that people must receive the grant fraudulently.

Beneficiary must be aware that they can appoint a Procurator, that may conduct the grant review on the beneficiary’s behalf, provided they follow the guidelines and present the necessary documentation.

For more information contact toll free during working days/hours 0800 60 10 11during working hours Monday – Friday.

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Minister Dean Macpherson directs CBE to Investigate Ormonde Collapse

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Minister Dean Macpherson directs CBE to Investigate Ormonde Collapse

CHANON LECODEY MERRICKS ONLINE_EDITOR 


Public Works & Infrastructure Minister Macpherson has directed the Council for the Built Environment (CBE) to lead a technical, governance and regulatory enquiry into the circumstances surrounding the Ormonde building collapse in Johannesburg on 2 March 2026. 

The multi-disciplinary investigation will assess structural and construction factors, examine regulatory and professional compliance, and determine whether any negligence, misconduct or legislative breaches contributed to the collapse. 

The CBE is expected to complete the enquiry within eight weeks, after which a report will be submitted to the Minister to help strengthen building safety, accountability and enforcement across the built environment sector. 

The Minister of Public Works & Infrastructure, Dean Macpherson, has directed the Council for the Built Environment (CBE) to lead a technical, governance and regulatory investigative enquiry into the circumstances surrounding the building collapse that occurred in Ormonde, south of Johannesburg, on 2 March 2026. 

The CBE, which is a regulator of professionals through regulatory frameworks and mandatory standards for the built environment. The CBE Act 43 of 2000 empowers the Minister of Public Works to institute enquiries of investigation into occurrences of this nature, in terms of the following sections: 

Section 4 of the CBE Act to: (a) Advise the government on any matter falling within the scope of the built environment, including resource mobilisation, socio-economic development, public health and safety and the environment, and for this purpose carry out such investigations as it or the relevant Minister deems necessary. 
Section 4(e): To facilitate interministerial cooperation concerning issues relating to the built environment. 

Section 4 (l): Investigate or initiate investigations into matters pertaining to its functions and policies with regard to the built environment and, if necessary, recommend legislation in this regard. 
The investigative enquiry will adopt a multi-disciplinary approach and will examine the incident across three key dimensions: 

1) Technical Investigation The technical component will assess the structural and construction aspects of the project, including a review of the engineering and architectural design, construction methodologies, temporary works arrangements, and material performance. The investigation will seek to determine the probable technical cause of the collapse through structural and forensic analysis. 

2) Regulatory and Professional Oversight The enquiry will examine whether the project complied with applicable regulatory requirements, and whether appropriately registered built environment practitioners were involved in the design, supervision, and certification of the development. Where evidence of professional negligence, misconduct, contravention of the code of conduct or failure to fulfil statutory responsibilities is identified, such matters will be referred to the relevant authorities for further disciplinary and criminal processes. 

3) Legislative and Governance Compliance The investigation will also assess compliance with the provisions of the National Building Regulations and Building Standards Act and other relevant legislation governing construction and building safety. This will include reviewing whether the required municipal approvals, including building plan approvals and development permissions, were obtained and whether appropriate inspection and enforcement processes were followed. Timelines and deliverables 

The enquiry is expected to be conducted over a period of eight weeks, after which the Council for the Built Environment will submit a report to the Minister of Public Works & Infrastructure. This enquiry forms part of the government’s broader commitment to strengthening building safety and restoring public confidence in the built environment regulatory system. 

The findings will also contribute to ongoing efforts to address illegal construction practices, enhance professional accountability, and strengthen enforcement of building regulations across the country. 

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Minister Kgosientsho Ramokgopa: Africa Energy Indaba

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Minister Kgosientsho Ramokgopa: Africa Energy Indaba

CHANON LECODEY MERRICKS ONLINE_EDITOR 


Programme Director,
Her Excellency Commissioner Lerato Mataboge of the African Union Commission,
Excellencies, Ministers and Deputy Ministers,
Leaders of industry and finance,
Distinguished delegates,
Ladies and Gentlemen,

We gather at a defining moment for Africa and for the global energy system.

This forum does not convene to ask whether nuclear energy has a place in Africa’s future. That question belongs to another era. We meet instead to determine how nuclear power will shape the architecture of our development and anchor the sovereignty of our continent in the decades ahead.

For many years, nuclear energy occupied an uneasy space in global discourse. It was admired for its technical sophistication, scrutinised for its safety, frequently deferred in favour of less demanding political choices and is still questioned for its cost. Yet history clarifies fundamentals. As nations confront the twin imperatives of decarbonisation and energy security, a simple truth has reasserted itself. No modern economy can industrialise, decarbonise and secure its sovereignty on intermittent power alone.

Nuclear energy has returned to the centre of strategic planning not out of nostalgia, not out of ideology, but out of structural necessity. Robert Oppenheimer, one of the architects of the atomic age, reminded the world that “there must be no barriers to freedom of inquiry. There is no place for dogma in science.” In our time, that principle must guide energy policy.

The question before Africa is not ideological. It is structural. It is developmental. It is sovereign.

Firm power is not optional. It is foundational. Nuclear energy remains the only dispatchable, zero emission technology capable of operating at scale around the clock, independent of weather volatility, commodity price shocks and geopolitical disruption. It is infrastructure measured not in electoral cycles but in generations.

The global resurgence of nuclear energy is therefore not ideological. It is structural.

At COP28, more than twenty countries endorsed the Declaration to Triple Nuclear Energy Capacity by 2050. The World Nuclear Association has positioned this ambition as central to credible net zero pathways. Major financial institutions, such as the World Bank Group, have aligned behind nuclear expansion. The IAEA’s modelling demonstrates that decarbonisation without nuclear growth is economically and technically implausible.

The direction of travel is clear. The question is whether Africa will shape this resurgence or be peripheral to it.

Our continent’s electricity demand is projected to more than double by 2040. Industrialisation, mineral beneficiation, hydrogen production, digital infrastructure and urbanisation will demand reliable, scalable power. More than six hundred million Africans still live without electricity access. Energy poverty coexists with industrial ambition. 

We cannot build the African century on structural energy fragility.

South Africa’s experience offers perspective. On the outskirts of Cape Town, Koeberg nuclear power station has supplied roughly five percent of our national electricity from a single site for almost forty years. It has operated at capacity factors consistently above eighty percent, delivered more than two hundred terawatt-hours of carbon-free electricity, and remains among the lowest-cost producers in our system. Koeberg is now undergoing Long-Term Operation licensing, extending Unit 1 to 2044 and Unit 2 thereafter.

For almost four decades Koeberg Nuclear Power Station has delivered stable, clean electricity to our grid with consistently high performance. Nuclear has not been theoretical for us. It has been dependable infrastructure. It has anchored system stability and reduced emissions without compromising reliability.

Nuclear therefore remains core to South Africa’s future energy mix, and we intend to grow our capacity in the coming decades, through our IRP 2025.

Across our continent, nuclear ambition is no longer theoretical. It is measurable.

Egypt’s El Dabaa project comprises four reactors of 1, 200 megawatts each, under construction that represents one of the most significant nuclear infrastructure commitments in modern African history. Nigeria has articulated ambitions of approximately 4, 800 megawatts of nuclear capacity in its long-term expansion pathway. Ghana, Kenya and Uganda are advancing regulatory frameworks under the guidance of the International Atomic Energy Agency. More than twenty African nations have formally signalled interest in nuclear development.

This is not coincidence. It is recognition.

Africa enters this nuclear moment with strategic advantages. We account for approximately fourteen to eighteen percent of global uranium production, with Namibia and Niger among the world’s largest exporters. Our reserves remain significant and underdeveloped. We possess not only demand, but resource endowment.

We must move from exporting uranium to exporting value.

Exporting uranium alone does not constitute sovereignty. Sovereignty is achieved when resources are converted into industrial capability, technological competence and long-term value.

We must move from exporting raw material to exporting expertise.

The technology landscape itself is evolving rapidly. Over eighty small modular reactor designs are under development globally. Two are in operation. Several are under construction. Major economies are investing billions in modular technologies designed for shorter construction timelines, lower upfront capital intensity and scalable deployment.

Small Modular Reactors align with African realities.

They can be deployed incrementally.

They can repower retiring coal sites.

They can use existing transmission corridors.

They can provide both electricity and industrial heat.

They can anchor hydrogen hubs and mineral processing corridors.

The IAEA’s Coal to Nuclear initiative, launched during South Africa’s G20 Presidency, positions nuclear as a strategic pathway to repurpose retiring coal assets, preserve jobs and secure low carbon baseload capacity. For coal dependent regions across Africa, this presents a just transition mechanism that is practical rather than rhetorical. 

This is not merely about adding megawatts to a grid. It is about reshaping economic structure.

The barrier before Africa is not technology. It is finance.

While OECD utilities borrow at rates between two and four percent, many African sovereigns face borrowing costs that can exceed twelve or even twenty percent. Projects that are technically sound and economically rational are priced as though they are speculative.

The divergence between perceived risk and real performance inflates tariffs and delays development. In too many instances, the pricing of African risk generates returns disproportionate to underlying volatility.

This dynamic extracts value from our economies before a single kilowatt hour is produced. In many cases, the pricing of African risk has become more profitable than the financing of African infrastructure itself. This must change.

If the world is serious about tripling nuclear capacity by 2050, Africa must be central to that ambition. That requires financing structures aligned with developmental realities. It requires multilateral institutions to move decisively from policy eligibility to implementation. It requires vendor nations to integrate localisation, skills transfer and industrial participation into comprehensive partnerships.

Nuclear programmes demand patience, scale and institutional credibility. They also demand fairness and trust. 

The governance framework for African nuclear development is robust, with the IAEA providing global oversight. The Treaty of Pelindaba affirms Africa’s commitment to peaceful use. Continental institutions reinforce transparency and responsibility.

Africa approaches nuclear with deliberation, not recklessness.

South Africa’s nuclear policy is clear. Nuclear energy will be used for peaceful purposes, in conformity with international obligations. It will contribute to energy security, economic growth, skills development and climate mitigation. Our IRP 2025 recognises nuclear as a core component of a diversified energy mix, with significant new capacity envisaged over the coming decades.

We are exploring fleet approaches to procurement to secure economies of scale. We are advancing environmental authorisations and siting licences. We are investing in the development of a Multi-Purpose Reactor to support research, medical isotopes and advanced fuel qualification. We are positioning NECSA as a continental anchor for nuclear development.

We are not asking whether nuclear belongs in Africa’s future. We are planning how it will define it.

The next generation of nuclear technologies offers Africa an opportunity to leap forward. Generation IV designs promise higher efficiency, enhanced safety and improved fuel utilisation. TRISO particle fuel, in which South Africa holds experience, offers extraordinary safety margins and proliferation resistance. Advanced reactors can integrate with desalination, industrial heat applications and hydrogen production.

This is not merely about electricity. It is about industrial ecosystems. 

Nuclear energy stimulates high skill employment, advanced manufacturing and long-term supply chains. It builds engineering capability and scientific institutions. It anchors industrial ecosystems that extend beyond electricity generation itself.

Energy sovereignty and industrial sovereignty are inseparable.

Julius Nyerere reminded us that without development there is no independence. In our era, development at scale requires energy at scale. Political sovereignty that rests upon fragile energy systems remains incomplete. True independence demands reliable power that can sustain industry, research, innovation and prosperity for generations.

For too long Africa’s development has been constrained by structural energy insecurity. Grid instability erodes confidence. Import dependency exposes economies to volatility. Nuclear offers a stabilising anchor within that volatility. It provides predictable, long-term operation. It reduces exposure to fuel shocks. It enables decarbonisation without sacrificing reliability.

The global nuclear resurgence is underway. The Declaration to Triple Nuclear Capacity by 2050 signals recognition that credible net zero pathways require firm, clean power. Africa must ensure that this expansion includes our continent not as a passive recipient but as an active architect.

The age of questioning has passed. The age of implementation has begun.

How do we structure bankable programmes at scale.

How do we align regulatory frameworks with financing instruments.

How do we ensure localisation and skills development. 

How do we move from feasibility to first concrete.

History will judge this generation not by the debates we convened but by the infrastructure we delivered.

Africa’s development project requires firm, clean and sovereign power at scale. Nuclear energy offers that possibility. It offers reliability without emissions, sovereignty without volatility and industrialisation without fragility.

From this Nuclear Forum at the Africa Energy Indaba, we state clearly:

Africa will approach nuclear energy with responsibility.

Africa will approach it with institutional discipline.

Africa will approach it with industrial intention.

Africa will approach it with sovereign confidence.

We will integrate it into diversified systems.

We will strengthen regulatory independence.

We will negotiate financing rationally.

We will invest in human capital deliberately.

We will not debate indefinitely. We will build.

The nuclear century will not bypass this continent. It will help power the African century.

I thank you.

Minister Kgosientsho Ramokgopa: Africa Energy Indaba

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Torching of Nine Nyanga minibus Taxis as attack on Commuters’ livelihoods

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Torching of Nine Nyanga minibus Taxis as attack on Commuters’ livelihoods

CHANON LECODEY MERRICKS ONLINE_EDITOR 


The Democratic Alliance (DA) in the Western Cape condemns the torching of nine minibus taxis at the Nyanga rank, which was only extinguished in the early hours of this morning. This act is a direct assault on the mobility and livelihoods of our communities and constitutes a serious criminal offence. Such lawlessness has no place in our province, and we stand resolutely with the commuting public who have been victimised by this incident.

While the loss of nine vehicles may seem insignificant to some, we know that these taxis collectively transport hundreds of people from Nyanga to their places of work, study, and homes every single day. Their loss means that many residents now face challenges in moving from point A to point B, facing the real risk of missing work or school. This disruption has a devastating ripple effect on families and the local economy.

Furthermore, we cannot ignore the human cost beyond the commuters. These nine taxis were a source of income for their owners and provided employment for drivers and workers who depend on this industry to feed their families.

Prof. Nomafrench Mbombo, MPP, DA Western Cape Spokesperson on Mobility, said: “The safety and mobility of commuters across the province must always remain a priority, especially in the minibus taxi industry, which is the quickest, most accessible, most common, and most affordable form of transport that many residents rely on to travel to work, school, and health facilities. We need a reliable minibus taxi industry for our people, and the destruction of these vehicles undermines that reliability.”

Meanwhile, DA Western Cape Spokesperson on Police Oversight and Community Safety, Benedicta van Minnen, MPP, added: “The DA in the Western Cape calls on the South African Police Service (SAPS) and all law enforcement agencies to prioritise a thorough investigation into this incident. The perpetrators must be found and brought to book. 

We also call on SAPS to increase their visible presence at transport interchanges across the province to prevent further acts of intimidation and lawlessness that seek to paralyse our communities.”

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Tribute by President Cyril Ramaphosa at the Homecoming Celebration of Rev Jesse Jackson

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Tribute by President Cyril Ramaphosa at the Homecoming Celebration of Rev Jesse Jackson

CHANON LECODEY MERRICKS ONLINE_EDITOR 


The Family of the late Rev Jesse Jackson,
Your Excellencies,
Friends,
 
The people of South Africa are with you today as you lay to rest a great man and celebrate a remarkable life that altered the moral direction of a nation and inspired the conscience of the world. 
 
We are here to join you as you say farewell to a man who carried the message of hope from the streets of Chicago to the streets of Johannesburg. 
 
Today we are also here, as South Africans, to claim Reverend Jesse Jackson as one of our own. We lay claim on him today because he laid claim on us first. 
 
You may ask: how can a son of South Carolina belong to the people of Soweto?
 
How can a man born into the segregated American South be claimed by the people of a faraway land that was bedevilled by a racist system of apartheid?
 
We will tell you how. We will tell you why.
 
Belonging is not determined by the soil on which you were born.
 
Belonging is determined by the soil on which you choose to join the fight against an evil racist and oppressive system.
 
In the long and painful years of our struggle, when the voices of our people were often silenced, Jesse Jackson chose to belong to us by raising his voice against apartheid on our behalf. 
 
When our cause was ignored, and many would look away he stood firm in solidarity with us. 
 
He looked at a people he had never met and said: their pain is my pain. Their chains are my chains. Their struggle for freedom is my struggle.
 
And for this, the people of South Africa remember him not as a distant friend, but as a brother in the struggle for justice and freedom. 
 
That is why we proclaim that he is ours too. 
 
Jesse Jackson was an African. We lay claim to him because he was an African. Pledging his solidarity with our struggle made him one of us. 
 
An African. An African American. 
 
He epitomised the image that was depicted by one of the key founders of the African National Congress, Pixley ka Isaka Seme, who delivered a most famous speech in 1906 when he was a student at Columbia University
 
He said: “I am an African, and I set my pride in my race over against a hostile public opinion… The brighter day is rising upon Africa. Already I seem to see her chains dissolved.” 
 
That speech captured the spirit of African pride and hope. This is what Jesse Jackson meant to South Africa and Africa. Hence we stand here today and say he also belongs to us.
 
Jesse Jackson stood with the people of South Africa during our darkest hour. He told the world that the struggle for dignity in the United States of America was inseparable from the fight against apartheid and injustice in South Africa.
 
When Jesse Jackson reminded the United States that its strength lies not in exclusion, but in the beautiful diversity of its people – black and white, rich and poor, urban and rural, workers and farmers, immigrants and the forgotten – we were inspired by his message and embraced the universal values of diversity, inclusion and equity that he preached. 
 
Nelson Mandela and his comrades were hugely inspired by Jesse Jackson whilst they were serving life sentences on Robben Island as they observed how he carried our struggle for justice beyond the borders of the United States. 
 
He was a voice — a voice that refused to be silenced when silence would have been easier. A voice that preached a message of hope from the streets of Chicago to the dusty streets of Soweto, that justice was not a privilege for the few, but a birthright for all.
 
His rallying call “Keep hope alive” became a compass for our struggle and gave us hope for victory over the evil of system of apartheid exclusion, division and oppression.
 
Jesse Jackson expressed his solidarity with the people of South Africa when he first visited South Africa in 1979, two years after the callous killing of Steve Biko in apartheid police cells. He drew massive crowds at rallies in Soweto, where he famously declared that: "This land is changing hands." 
 
When the Reagan administration chose "constructive engagement" – diplomatic language for doing nothing – Jesse Jackson chose unconditional solidarity with the oppressed majority in South Africa. 
 
He became the most visible American political figure advocating for comprehensive pressure and economic sanctions against South Africa. 
 
By placing South Africa at the centre of American electoral politics during his presidential election campaign, Jesse Jackson influenced millions of voters to confront apartheid as their moral responsibility too.
 
He led many marches here in the United States and in 1985 was arrested with his two sons, Jesse Jr. and Jonathan, outside the South African Embassy. As they were arrested, they sang “We shall Overcome”. It was a song that became part of our struggle and from which we drew inspiration. 
 
He took the fight against apartheid global.
 
On the 2nd of November 1985, he marched with then ANC President Oliver Tambo, Anti-Apartheid Movement President Trevor Huddleston and more than 150,000 people – in what was one of the largest anti-apartheid demonstrations ever held in Britain – to demand sanctions against South Africa and the release of Nelson Mandela. 
 
Not only did he march in the streets; he walked into the corridors of power. 
 
He personally lobbied Pope John Paul II to visit South Africa and hasten change. He pressed Mikhail Gorbachev to cut all Soviet diplomatic ties with Pretoria. He challenged Margaret Thatcher to her face. She refused to budge, but he did not stop.
 
When Nelson Mandela finally walked free in 1990 after 27 long years of imprisonment, Jesse Jackson was there in Cape Town, witnessing a moment the world would never forget. He described the atmosphere as a “release of glee and joy,” as millions celebrated not only the freedom of a man, but the rising hope of a nation.
 
In 1994, he was present when Nelson Mandela was inaugurated as the first democratically elected President of South Africa. Jackson kept returning after 1994, when many of his contemporaries moved on. 
 
We claim Jesse Jackson as one of our own because he never saw the struggle in South Africa as a distant or foreign cause, but as a struggle that belonged to him as well. 
 
His greatest gift to the oppressed people of South Africa was the courage he gave us to believe that we must never surrender hope, that justice would prevail, and freedom would come.
 
He encouraged us not to lose hope in the face of oppression. 
 
Not to lose hope in the face of injustice.
 
To have hope that ordinary people, standing together, would write their own history of triumph against apartheid.
 
The life of Reverend Jesse Jackson reminds us that the struggle for justice is never the work of a single lifetime. It is a long and noble journey carried forward across generations. It is a relay in which the torch of freedom is passed from one courageous hand to another.
 
Martin Luther King Jr. lifted that torch and gave the world a dream of justice and equality.

Jesse Jackson carried that dream forward with hope, keeping its flame alive in the hearts of those who refused to surrender to injustice.

And Nelson Mandela carried that dream into freedom, helping to build a rainbow nation where dignity and liberty could belong to all. 
 
And so today that torch still burns. It is now in our hands – to guard it, to carry it forward, and to ensure that the dream of justice continues to light the path for generations yet to come. 
 
Now we must ask ourselves how we can honour the life and memory of Jesse Jackson.
 
We honour him by carrying forward the values he lived for: justice, dignity, equality, 
 
By committing to a lifetime of service to others. 
 
By showing up when others look away from injustice, when they fear to stand up to power and when they walk away from suffering.
 
By pledging solidarity and using every opportunity to support the just struggle of others.
 
By ensuring that there is justice for all. 
 
By keeping hope alive, as Jesse Jackson taught us. 
 
Today we honour a man whose voice stirred the conscience of leaders and ordinary people, whose courage strengthened movements across the world, and whose faith never wavered even when the road was long. 
 
To our mother, Mrs Jacqueline Jackson, to Santita, Jesse Jr., Jonathan, Yusef, Jacqueline, Ashley and the entire Jackson family:
 
We, the people of South Africa, are here to say thank you. 
 
The African National Congress, with which Jesse Jackson worked closely, thanks you. 
 
We are here not only in mourning, but in gratitude.
 
Deep, abiding, unrepayable gratitude. 
 
You gave us your husband. Your father. Your patriarch.
 
You shared him across an ocean, across continents.
 
Across marches and prison gates and inauguration days.
 
When South Africa needed a friend in the corridors of power you allowed Jesse Jackson to be that friend.
 
His support meant that when our people were tear-gassed in Soweto someone in America was weeping with us. 
 
It meant that when our leaders sat in prison cells on Robben Island, someone was standing in the capitals of the world, in Washington and in London, saying: Nelson Mandela and his comrades are not terrorists or criminals. They are freedom fighters. The world must listen and act. 
 
We are grateful that on the day Nelson Mandela walked free – on that historic and miraculous day – Jesse Jackson was standing in the sunlight with us. 
 
Not because it was required of him. But because it was in him to witness the emergence of the South Africa he had campaigned for, been arrested for, struggled for and prophesied about in Soweto in 1979. 
 
We honour him for his enduring commitment, his expression of real love, sacrificial love. 
 
The commitment he displayed did not wait to be invited. It made him simply show up. 
 
Jesse Jackson showed up for South Africa.
 
Again. And again. And again. 
 
Long after the cameras moved on.
 
Long after the sanctions were won.
 
Long after apartheid had been defeated and relegated to the ash heap of history he kept coming back. 
 
To express its gratitude as a free nation, South Africa awarded him the Order of the Companions of OR Tambo
 
But no medal, no honour, no citation is wide enough to express what Jesse Jackson gave and meant to us. 
 
What he gave to us cannot be framed and hung on a wall.
 
It lives in our Constitution. 
 
It lives in our freedom. It lives in the hearts of our people. 
 
That is why we are here today: to carry of Jesse Jackson’s spirit home with us. 
 
For the hope he nurtured, the courage he inspired and the solidarity he showed to our people must not end with this moment. 
 
It must continue to inspire us in our shared journey to build a better life for all our people. 
 
So, on behalf of sixty-two million freedom loving South Africans, we say thank you. 
 
Go well, Reverend. Go well, Mkhulu.
 
The ancestors – Martin Luther King Jr, Nelson Mandela, Oliver Tambo, Winnie Mandela and many others both here and in South Africa – have been waiting to embrace you.
 
And we, the people of the rainbow nation that you helped to build, salute you and we say: Amandla. Power to the People. 
 
Rest in eternal peace.

Tribute by President Cyril Ramaphosa at the Homecoming Celebration of Rev Jesse Jackson


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