Wednesday, 13 May 2026

Budget Vote Speech – Minister Solly Malatsi

Budget Vote Speech – Minister Solly Malatsi

BY : CHANON LECODEY MERRICKS ONLINE EDITOR KASiBC_AFRiCA

LISTEN HERE @KASIBCAUDIO

Honourable Speaker,

Honourable Members,

My fellow South Africans.

Our primary focus is on actions that will unlock faster, reliable, and cheaper internet for all,

especially poor South Africans in rural areas, those who need it the most to get jobs and provide for their families.

This mission aligns with this year’s theme of the World Telecommunications and Information

Society Day: “Digital Lifelines: strengthening resilience in a connected world.”

It reflects the importance of digital infrastructure in the modern economy: public services,

education, communication, commerce, and emergency response increasingly depends ondigital systems.

If these systems are not resilient, they pose a foundational risk to our day-to-day lives.

South Africa has made commendable progress in the delivery of digital infrastructure.

According to the recently released Digital Infrastructure Investment Study commissioned by the Development Bank of South Africa, the true connectivity access gap is now only 2.2% of all South African households.

But - there is a critical question we must ask ourselves: is access itself enough?

The answer to that, fellow South Africans, is clear: NO, it is not enough.

In South Africa’s context, digital lifelines are only true lifelines if people can reach it, afford it, understand it, and use it.

What we need, if we wish to truly leverage the full potential of connectivity, is that access must be meaningful, not only universal.

To this end, low earth orbit satellite services also form part of South Africa’s digital future.

Rather than wait a decade to develop domestic LEO capacity, we must create conditions for

international operators to serve our people now, in a manner that supports national interests and regulatory compliance.

Our responsibility is to ensure that new technologies expand inclusion rather than deepen inequality.

Colleagues,

We do this by reflecting honestly on the DCDT’s mandate as an ecosystem enabler. Our role

is not to build every tower, lay every fibre line, regulate every transaction, or deliver every digital service.

It is to create the enabling environment for the growth of the digital economy, through policy,

legislation, and coordination of government and sector efforts, so that we all work towards a common goal.

We cannot approach this role from a perspective of control, but from a perspective of

unlocking the potential of being online, while protecting the vulnerable from abuse and exclusion.

Where the state does have a role to play through state-owned entities, we must approach

our oversight role with extreme care, act decisively where wrongdoing takes place and provide strategic guidance to steer them towards sustainability.

The digital economy is not only a standalone sector that contributes directly to economic growth but serves as a horizontal enabler of economic productivity across all sectors.

When policy is clear, regulation predictable, and state-owned entities are well governed, we create the conditions for growth that no single project or programme can replicate.

To unlock growth, we must stabilise the fundamentals. This work is neither glamorous nor easy. Its results are not always immediate, but their impact will stand the test of time.

Speaker,

Before I continue to share our plans for the year ahead, I would like to take a moment to reflect on our progress over the past year.

Last year, government removed the ad valorem excise duty on entry-level smartphones. The

Department partnered with the GSMA to measure the impact of this tax break: in the nine months prior to the tax removal, month-on-month entry-level smartphone sales declined by 7.9% per month.

Between April and December of 2025, this decline was reversed, and month-on-month sales in this segment grew by 3.7%, with a clear indication that people can now afford to substitute their feature phones for smartphones.

We will use the outcomes of this study to consult with National Treasury to continue utilising other fiscal tools to increase device access.

We also committed to convening a policy colloquium. This colloquium was held in October 2025 and led to the development of a comprehensive report capturing the views of industry, government and civil society stakeholders. This report continues to inform decision-making within the Department.

We continue to work towards the stabilisation of our entities. SITA, in particular, has shown

commendable improvement, with an unqualified audit finding now a realistic possibility. To this end, I want to thank the interim board under the leadership of Ms Sendzani Mudau to steering the ship through rough seas.

We have now finalised the new board that will be chaired by Dr Stella Bvuma. For the first time in years, SITA also has a permanent Managing Director.

The SABC has for the second consecutive year achieved an unqualified audit opinion, a remarkable improvement after years of governance instability.

The funding model study has been completed, and we are currently consulting with National

Treasury on the most suitable model to ensure that the SABC is empowered to balance its commercial operations and public broadcasting mandate.

In the 2025/26 financial year, we successfully launched eight cyber-labs in collaboration with

our entities and various private sector partners, providing opportunities for transformative digital skills development for thousands of young people.

For the current financial year, we will build 10 more cyberlabs.

However, the past year has not been a story of success alone.

While the Department is making steady progress towards fully operating at the standard required to play the critical role it must play in our digital economy, challenges remain.

The long-standing issue of the analogue-switch off and digital migration remains unresolved for now.

We have teams across the country working on installations to ensure registered households maintain access to broadcasting services, and engagements with the broadcasters on our next steps will continue.

Over the past year, we initiated several investigations into USSASA, Nemisa, ZADA and SITA to restore good governance practices, uphold accountability and enforce robust oversight.

To continue with the GNU’s efforts to build an ethical and capable state, we will be introducing measures to conduct lifestyle audits for the executive and board leadership across our entities and within the Department.

Despite seeing dividends from governance reforms implemented in the last financial year, several of our entities continue to be in a battle for survival.

Speaker,

The Department’s expenditure allocation for the 2026/2027 financial year is R2.549 billion.

Of that, R1.749 billion is transferred to portfolio entities.

ICASA receives R505million, the Film and Publications Board R112 million, and the South

African Post Office R595 million, allocated to the universal postal obligation.

The SABC receives R234 million.

Speaker,

The budgetary constraints within our portfolio are clear and have a serious impact on the

Department and portfolio entities’ ability to deliver on our joint mandate.

But we are not the only portfolio that is in this position. Fiscal constraints are the reality that we must deal with.

We can no longer hide behind the lack of funds to explain why we fall short of what is expected of us.

Rather, we will be thinking differently about how we use what we do have available to us to fulfil our mandate as best as we can.

One of our greatest assets is our private sector. When working alone, our impact will always be limited. But when we partner with private sector, we open the door to multiply our impact.

To be clear, partnership is not the same as privatisation, but partial privatisation makes sense in certain situations.

We must acknowledge that we find ourselves in a position that is becoming impossible to avoid the hard truth that 100% state ownership of our portfolio entities is no longer sustainable in the context of our fiscal reality.

So, we must honestly assess the need and fitness-for-purpose of some of the state-owned entities. Where we need them, they must be well run and financially sustainable.

But partnering with the private sector is more than just about ownership. Where we can create mutually beneficial commercial agreements where private sector players leverage stateowned assets to deliver services at cost-effective prices, we will get more South Africans connected to the internet and out of poverty.

I believe it is time for us to acknowledge that it is much more important to get people connected and ensuring that they have access to affordable, reliable and secure connectivity, than who delivers that connectivity.

Speaker,

A look at the scope of investments being made in the digital sector just confirms my point that the government’s role in connectivity provision is ripe for review.

At the South African Investment Conference, private sector institutions committed R56.4 billion’s worth of investment across nine confirmed mega-projects in the ICT sector.

This number does not include the hundreds of smaller unannounced investments.

South Africa’s appeal as a destination for digital investments is illustrated though other key statistics: South Africa ranks first on Fitch/BMI’s Sub-Saharan Africa Telecommunications

Risk/Reward Index.

We are, by some distance, Africa's most advanced data centre market.

But investors still view our policy environment as interventionist and protectionist, and the fragmentation of mandates and responsibilities across the portfolio creates opacity that hinders investment.

If our goal is to be seen the genuine entry point into Africa, we need predictable regulation, investment-ready infrastructure, and a clear policy framework. Without getting these fundamentals right, we are robbing ourselves of the full potential of our digital economy.

Speaker,

While we work on stabilising the fundamentals, we are also continuing to seek innovative

ways to stimulate investment in the sector,

One such opportunity is the treatment of digital infrastructure under the Real Estate

Investment Trust regime. Cell phone masts, fibre networks, and data centres are no longer peripheral assets, but core infrastructure on which the modern economy operates.

Allowing companies that own digital infrastructure to participate in the REIT regime could unlock long-term capital, attract foreign direct investment, and provide a much-needed injection into the ICT sector.

The sector has already engaged extensively with National Treasury and SARS on this matter.

As the Department, we support the extension of section 25BB of the Income Tax Act to cover digital fibre, tower, and data centre infrastructure.

This is a practical reform that can help us mobilise investment, expand infrastructure, and move South Africa closer to universal meaningful connectivity.

Speaker,

The work of stabilising the fundamentals and investments must now be matched by a focused policy agenda for the year ahead.

The central question guiding this agenda is simple: what must we do to ensure that connectivity becomes meaningful for more South Africans?

The answer is that we must modernise our policy and regulatory environment so that it speaks not only to infrastructure coverage, but also to affordability, device access, digital skills, active usage, trust, and economic participation.

One of the most important shifts we are making is in how we measure connectivity. Coverage metrics remain important, but they no longer tell the full story.

With support from the World Bank, we are reviewing South Africa’s connectivity targets to better reflect affordability, device penetration, active and productive usage, and meaningful participation in the digital economy.

We cannot discuss the issue of policy without discussing the matter of the Draft National

Artificial Intelligence Policy, and the revelation that generative AI was used irresponsibly during the drafting of this policy.

This series of events adversely impacted the policy document, and withdrawing the policy was the only way to ensure that we reintroduce a credible policy for this critical area.

We will be enforcing an internal responsible AI use policy, and review our policy development

process, to ensure that this type of occurrence does not happen again. South Africa deserves better.

I am today also announcing that we are appointing an Independent Expert Review Panel to assist us with reviewing the policy. The panel will be chaired by Professor Benjamin Rosman and will be made up of distinguished experts spanning AI research, law, and governance:

• Professor Vukosi Marivate

• Professor Alison Gildwald

• Ms Heather Irvine

• Dr Tshepo Feela

• Dr Jabu Mtsweni, and

• Advocate Lufuno Tshikalange


This distinguished group of experts will ensure that the policy we reintroduce for public

comment will be based on the best available evidence and aligned with South Africa’s priorities.

In addition to reviewing the National AI Policy, we are in the process of finalising the Audio- Visual Services and Media Policy, after receiving valuable feedback from the public.

I would also like to acknowledge the valuable role that the Portfolio Committee on Communications and Digital Technologies has played in hosting a roundtable on the regulation of podcasts, where we heard how important it is to avoid over-regulation of a sector that has such great potential for young people to access economic opportunity.

Our legislative programme must support this shift. The Electronic Communications Amendment Bill will be advanced to modernise the licensing framework, address convergence in the sector and strengthen competition.

We will also pursue legislative amendments that will enable equity equivalent investment programmes to complement ownership requirements in telecommunications.

My mission in this job is to ensure that every person in South Africa has access to affordable and meaningful connectivity that they can use to improve their lives.

That is why we have also issued a draft policy direction on the rapid deployment of electronic communications facilities, which aims to reduce the costs of building new infrastructure.

We are equally committed to finalising a policy direction on Wireless Open Access Networks to create greater competition and more affordable data for all South Africans. As well as a policy direction on the renewal of Individual Electronic Communications Network and Service

(ECNS and ECS) licenses to ensure regulatory certainty for the large number of licenses that are up for renewal in the near future.

A modern digital economy cannot be governed by frameworks designed for an older communications environment.

Speaker,

I would like to express my appreciation to the Deputy Minister and Director-General for their

support in pursuing our agenda.

I also want to thank the men and women of integrity in the Department and entities who

continue to do their jobs in difficult environments, where the odds may often feel stacked against us.

There are officials who truly embody the ethos of ethical and professional service, and I thank you for that.

We must now move from coverage to participation. We must move from access to use. 

We must move from isolated programmes to a coherent digital ecosystem.

That is the work before us. And that is the work this Department will now lead.

I thank you.

Budget Vote Speech – Minister Solly Malatsi

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Services SETA hands over R90 Million commitment to strengthen CET Development

Services SETA hands over R90 Million commitment to strengthen CET Development

BY : CHANON LECODEY MERRICKS ONLINE EDITOR KASiBC_AFRiCA

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King William’s Town, Eastern Cape, 12 May 2026 – The Services SETA has formally handed over its R90 million commitment towards Community Education and Training development, marking the start of an intervention to support adult literacy, skills development and access to learning.

The R90 million commitment was first announced by Services SETA Administrator, Mr Lehlogonolo Masoga, during the launch of a R5 million infrastructure upgrade project at Mlandeleni Community Learning Centre in Ndwedwe, KwaZulu-Natal, on Monday.Today’s handover was formalised during the launch of the National Adult Literacy for Empowerment Campaign 2026–2030, led by the Deputy Minister of Higher Education and Training, Dr Mimmy Gondwe, at Lovedale TVET College in King William’s Town, Eastern Cape.

Through the intervention, R10 million will be allocated to each province to support CET growth, infrastructure development and the expansion of learning programmes.

Speaking at the launch, Deputy Minister Gondwe said CET Colleges remain important institutions for lifelong learning and second-chance education.

“If we are serious about repositioning CET Colleges as centres of lifelong learning and community renewal, then we must also be serious about investing in the conditions that will allow proper teaching and learning to flourish in our CET Colleges,” said Gondwe.

Speaking on behalf of Services SETA, Mr Thembinkosi Mosia, Manager for Real Estate and Related Services Chamber, reaffirmed the organisation’s commitment to CET development.

“Services SETA has committed R90 million towards CET development to drive change in the agenda, perception and quality of education at CETs,” said Mosia.

Mosia said the intervention supports Services SETA’s broader mandate, which includes skills development, economic development, rural and township development, and youth development.

He also emphasised the need to transform how CET Colleges are viewed and valued, saying now is the time for CETs to receive the dignity, opportunity and respect they deserve.

The National Adult Literacy for Empowerment Campaign seeks to reach one million adult learners by 2030.It responds to the challenge of approximately 3.8 million functionally illiterate adults in South Africa and will provide basic and functional literacy, numeracy, digital, financial, entrepreneurial and civic skills.The campaign will focus on rural, mining and marginalised communities, where access to education and skills development remains critical.

Services SETA’s intervention will support needs-based improvements across CET Colleges. These include classrooms, workshops, ICT facilities, digital learning infrastructure, skills training spaces, refurbished facilities and improved learner support environments.

Today’s handover at Lovedale TVET College builds on the commitment announced earlier this week, moving Services SETA’s support for CET development from announcement to implementation across all nine provinces.

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Minister Gayton McKenzie - Budget Vote Speech

Minister Gayton McKenzie - Budget Vote Speech

BY : CHANON LECODEY MERRICKS ONLINE EDITOR KASiBC_AFRiCA

LISTEN HERE @KASIBCAUDIO

Description

Honourable Members, every government department exists to solve a problem. Some build roads. Some keep us safe. Some teach our children. This department exists to answer a different kind of problem: who are we, and what are we becoming? You cannot build a country only with just concrete and steel. You must also build it with stories, with songs and games, contests and tournaments – with the things people remember in their rocking chair. That is what we do here.

The Department of Sport, Arts and Culture has been allocated R6.617 billion for the 2026/27 financial year: to develop, transform, preserve, protect and promote sport, arts and culture, and through them, to build a nation that is active, creative, winning, and cohesive.

Summary

MINISTER GAYTON MCKENZIE

NATIONAL ASSEMBLY – 12 MAY 2026

House Chairperson

Deputy Minister of Sport, Arts and Culture, Hon Peace Mabe

Ministers and Deputy Ministers present

Chairperson of the Portfolio Committee, Hon Joe McGluwa

Honourable Members

Chairpersons and Chief Executives of our Public Entities

Director-General Khumalo and the DSAC executive team

Distinguished Guests, Members of the Media

Ladies and Gentlemen

Honourable Members, every government department exists to solve a problem. Some build roads. Some keep us safe. Some teach our children. This department exists to answer a different kind of problem: who are we, and what are we becoming? You cannot build a country only with just concrete and steel. You must also build it with stories, with songs and games, contests and tournaments – with the things people remember in their rocking chair. That is what we do here.

The Department of Sport, Arts and Culture has been allocated R6.617 billion for the 2026/27 financial year: to develop, transform, preserve, protect and promote sport, arts and culture, and through them, to build a nation that is active, creative, winning, and cohesive.

Sport and Recreation

Under Programme 2, Recreation Development and Sport Promotion, we are allocating R1.341 billion.

LIV Golf

South Africa successfully hosted LIV Golf at Steyn City in March 2026, attracting elite international players and extensive global media coverage, and proving once more that our country can execute world-class events to world-class standards. The pipeline of future events this opens is as valuable as the tournament itself.

FIFA World Cup

The 2026 FIFA World Cup – hosted across the United States, Canada, and Mexico – is an opportunity we are treating as a strategic national moment, not just a spectator sport. We are deepening partnerships with host nations on tourism packages, commercial opportunities, and knowledge exchange. Our support to Bafana Bafana and other national teams has been intensified, because South Africa will be present on that stage, and will present competitively.

Beyond football, we are using this World Cup to showcase South Africa’s arts, culture and heritage through exhibitions, performances and cultural diplomacy across Mexico, the United States and Canada. We have also launched a national supporter mobilisation campaign with our corporate partners, including the Lucky Fans Competition, to give ordinary South Africans an opportunity to stand behind Bafana Bafana on the global stage.

We will honour the legacy of the 2010 FIFA World Cup – the only FIFA World Cup ever hosted on African soil – with South Africa’s 2010 legends expected to face Mexico’s 2010 legends in a commemorative Legends Match in Pachuca on 7 June 2026. The spirit of 2010 lives on.

ICC Cricket World Cup 2027

Looking further ahead, South Africa is not approaching the 2027 ICC Cricket World Cup – which we co-host with Zimbabwe and Namibia – as a routine assignment. It is a national project. Infrastructure upgrades are underway at the Wanderers, Newlands, and Kingsmead. Interdepartmental coordination is activated. We are using the tournament to accelerate transformation in the sport and leave a genuine development legacy in townships and rural communities.

Olympics

On the Olympic front: work continues on Project 350, our plan to send the largest and most competitive Team South Africa ever to Los Angeles in 2028. The Department and SASCOC are working with provinces and federations being drawn into their respective roles. Together we are also continuing the work on our bid for South Africa to host a Summer Olympic Games in 2036.

Federations and VAR

Federation support this year is R118.1 million, directed to about 60 national sport federations with strengthened compliance and governance requirements.

Nearly two years ago when I took office, I promised South Africans that VAR would be rolled out, and this Department would ensure that happens. I am proud to announce that on Sunday at the South African Football Association’s NEC meeting in Johannesburg, I agreed with SAFA that they would sign off on the finalisation of procurement of this equipment immediately, with the money having been transferred to them earlier this year, and the implementation roadmap clearly laid out.

Having VAR in our league, cup tournaments and internationals will not only raise the fairness of our game, it will also raise its quality – our players will learn that they need to earn their wins the hard way; the honest way. And the country’s most loved sport will be left far better off.

Ministerial Infrastructure Projects

Beyond the conditional grant, this Department has earmarked R102 million for the delivery of ministerial infrastructure projects this year – four new swimming pools, long-needed upgrades to Eldorado Park Stadium and Mmabatho Stadium, expanded combi courts and outdoor gyms, and the Boxing Arena at the Orient.

Before we took office, this department was building no more than 10 outdoor gyms and 10 combi courts every year for a decade. We have now done more than three times as many gyms, and soon that will be ramped up considerably further, and we have already doubled the physical delivery of combi courts, with a fivefold increase targeted for this year.

These are not abstract budget lines. These are facilities where the next generation of South African athletes will be discovered.

Arts, Culture and Creative Industries

Under Programme 3, Arts and Culture Promotion and Development, we are allocating R1.809 billion.

CCI Sector Clusters

On 30 March 2026, at Nirox Sculpture Park in Krugersdorp, we officially launched the 17 CCI Sector Cluster organisations. This is thirty years of frustration being answered with structure. The clusters have boards. They have signed declarations of accountability. They will have shared office space, shared services, and people agitating on behalf of creatives for the first time with institutional weight behind them.

Our creatives have waited long enough. The clusters are not the end of that wait – they are the architecture through which the waiting ends.

Presidential Employment Stimulus Programme

The Department has secured nearly R400 million from the Presidential Employment Stimulus Programme Phase 7, implemented through four entities: the National Arts Council, the National Film and Video Foundation, the National Museum, and the National Heritage Council. Provinces that have historically received less are being prioritised. We expect this investment to create 10,000 work opportunities in the creative sector this financial year.

The Cultural and Creative Industries Programme has already supported 125 organisations and practitioners, while the Touring Ventures Programme has enabled 26 organisations and practitioners to carry South African culture to nine countries as cultural ambassadors. Amapiano is not waiting for a policy framework – it has already captivated the world. Our job is to build the infrastructure so the next wave of South African artists does not succeed despite the system, but because of it.

Entity Oversight

Honourable Members, strengthening oversight over our public entities has become one of the central priorities of this Ministry. Over the past months, the Department’s Crack Team has worked intensively across entities to identify governance weaknesses, financial risks, operational blockages and institutional failures that have too often been allowed to continue for years without decisive intervention.

Last Thursday, I convened all Board and Council Chairpersons to present a clear roadmap for the future of governance within this portfolio. The message was straightforward: oversight structures must become active centres of accountability, not ceremonial structures that meet quarterly while institutions decline. Board members must know the difference between governance and interference, between oversight and silence, and between loyalty to individuals and loyalty to the law. The objective is simple: public entities that are stable, ethical, functional and capable of delivering measurable value for our country.

Of special mention is that Robben Island’s infrastructure programme is advancing, with six capital projects underway. The first phase of the Nelson Mandela Prison House is being prepared for opening in July 2026.

Heritage

Under Programme 4, Heritage Promotion and Preservation, we are allocating R2.912 billion, including R1.718 billion transferred to provinces for community library services – supporting 18 new and upgraded library facilities throughout the country this year to promote access to information and to instil the culture of reading and writing, particularly among young people.

Repatriation and Restitution

Our repatriation programme is not slowing down. On 23 March 2026, President Ramaphosa and I led the reburial of 63 Khoi and San ancestral remains in Steinkopf in the Northern Cape. This was part of restorative justice after these remains were acquired during colonialism to promote racist pseudoscience. In April, we returned the Zimbabwe soapstone bird – a cultural and spiritual emblem of profound importance – alongside eight ancestral human remains, to Zimbabwe. This was an act of partnership and restitution that reflects who we choose to be as a country.

We will be accelerating our efforts to return every unethically acquired historical artefact or human remains in our museums – because we cannot call on the West to return the hundreds of thousands of pieces in their collections that, by rights, they should not possess, if we do not lead by example on our own continent.

When it comes to bringing the remains of our own fallen heroes home, technical teams have visited Lesotho, and our 2026/27 focus extends to Angola, Lesotho, Zambia, and Zimbabwe. There are still thousands of our heroes buried on foreign soil. We will not rest until they have reached their final rest.

Mandela Collection and Robben Island

The Nelson Mandela collection – gifts ranging from children’s drawings to diplomatic objects from heads of state – was declared a specially protected heritage collection by SAHRA on 30 March 2026. We celebrate this formally on International Museums Day, 18 May, at the Bhunga Building in Mthatha.

Legislative Review and Naming

We are reviewing the National Heritage Resources Act, which is now 27 years old and overdue for a reckoning with the present. The National Policy Framework for Heritage Memorialisation will be finalised this year. A Heritage Masterplan is being developed. The Bureau of Heraldry is finalising the new Heraldry Bill to replace legislation from 1962. Twenty-two geographical names were gazetted this financial year, including four significant Eastern Cape town names, among them KuGompo City and Robert Sobukwe.

Allow me to pause and reflect here that when the name of Beyers Naude Drive was changed from DF Malan Drive, there was no outcry. When something is renamed to honour Nelson Mandela, no one complains. But when you recognise Robert Sobukwe, who made a profound sacrifice and was kept in the most inhuman form of isolation on Robben Island, one’s phone never stops ringing. You are called every name imaginable as a Minister.

But let me either remind or inform the producers of this cacophony of protest: Robert Sobukwe was a man for whom the apartheid state wrote an entire piece of legislation – the Sobukwe Clause – so that they could hold him on Robben Island, alone, year after year, without charge or trial. He died under house arrest, never tasting the freedom we now treat cheaply. If we cannot place his name on the map of this country that he gave his life for, then the transformation of our heritage landscape means nothing.

This renaming was not generosity. It is the bare minimum a free South Africa owes him.

The transformation of our heritage landscape cannot be postponed. We will push it forward with clear conscience and consistent purpose.

In Closing

Honourable Members, I have been asked many times what the measure of success for this portfolio is.

It is not the events we host or the facilities we open, though those matter. It is not the awards our athletes and artists win, though they inspire us all.

The measure is whether the child in Khayelitsha gets to play hockey. Whether the child in Lusikisiki gets to walk into a library and find a book written in her language, about her people. Whether the musician from Mamelodi can make a living from her talent without being exploited, because there is finally an institution standing in her corner.

We are not there yet. But we are closer than we were. And with this budget, we are taking another deliberate step.

I would like to close with the final stanza of a famous old poem, “Don’t Quit”, often attributed to Edgar Albert Guest. Whoever wrote it, it belongs to us all – a reminder of why we work, and why we do not stop in our Government of National Unity, which is changing this country for the better every day.

                                    Success is failure turned inside out –   

The silver tint of the clouds of doubt,

And you never can tell how close you are,

It may be near when it seems afar;

So stick to the fight when you’re hardest hit –

It’s when things seem worst that you must not quit.

We propose that this House adopts Budget Vote 37.

I thank you, Chairperson.

Title

Minister Gayton McKenzie - Budget Vote Speech

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Faster Cheaper Internet for all in South Africa

Faster Cheaper Internet for all in South Africa

BY : CHANON LECODEY MERRICKS ONLINE EDITOR KASiBC_AFRiCA

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Malatsi’s ‘faster, Cheaper Internet for all’ Budget is a Game Changer

Minister Solly Malatsi has announced that he is delivering on his promise to make internet access in South Africa faster and cheaper for all people, and the DA proudly welcomes this.

In his Budget Speech, tabling the Department of Communications & Digital Technologies plan for the coming year, Malatsi has announced plans for legislative amendments that will allow investment in telecoms infrastructure, with equity equivalents.

The Minister’s implementation of equity equivalents removes the barrier to investment that has kept South African internet expensive and kept it out of rural and poorer communities. This is the boldest move in telecoms expansion South Africa has seen in decades. Communications & Digital Technologies has been without legislative reforms for almost twenty years

Minister Malatsi’s review of the Department's governing laws and policies, working with experts and the industry, has paid off. Under the DA, an Amendment Bill is before Parliament to bring the Department into the modern day.

Malatsi’s drive for modernisation also sees more private sector players leverage state-owned assets to deliver services, driving down prices and getting more South Africans connected to the internet. This is a courageous step in the right direction.

Technological breakthroughs are supported by cleaning up the Department too, and the DA supports the announcement by Malatsi that he is introducing measures to conduct lifestyle audits for the executive and board leadership across his Department’s entities.

The DA sees Minister Malatsi’s Department plan and budget as one that finally makes access to the internet a priority for poor South Africans in rural areas, those who need it the most to get jobs and provide for their families.

The DA supports this budget, from Minister Malatsi, and we see it as a game-changer moment for South Africa’s internet access.

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Home Affairs Wins Constitutional Court Case Against Repeat Asylum Applications

Home Affairs Wins Constitutional Court Case Against Repeat Asylum Applications

BY : CHANON LECODEY MERRICKS ONLINE EDITOR KASiBC_AFRiCA

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The Department of Home Affairs has won a significant victory against abuse of the asylum system through today’s judgment of the Constitutional Court in Director-General, Department of Home Affairs and Others v Irankunda and Another. In its majority ruling, the Court upheld the Department’s appeal against an earlier ruling from the Supreme Court of Appeal by confirming that repeat asylum applications are not permitted once an original application has been finally determined.

Today’s judgment marks the latest major step in the Department’s drive to clamp down on abuse of the asylum system and restore the rule of law in the broader management of immigration and refugee matters. The Court’s ruling prohibiting endless repeat applications by asylum seekers whose original applications have been rejected comes just weeks after Cabinet approved the Revised White Paper on Citizenship, Immigration and Refugee Protection, which introduces the first-safe country principle to similarly end the practice of asylum seekers “picking and choosing” South Africa as their preferred destination in the region. These recent breakthroughs demonstrate that the Department is making rapid progress in rebuilding these systems from the ground up to better serve South Africa’s interests.

The Minister of Home Affairs, Dr Leon Schreiber, said: “This judgment from the highest court in the land is an affirmation of the unprecedented progress we are making in restoring the rule of law and clamping down on abuse in the migration and asylum systems. It further demonstrates that our commitment to systemic reform - not in opposition to, but anchored in our Constitution - is rapidly resolving problems that once seemed insurmountable.”

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