Times of Eswatini

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CAPE TOWN – Opposition parties wasted no time in punching holes in President Cyril Ramaphosa’s State Of the Nation Address (SONA), saying it was an elections speech filled with empty promises.

Ramaphosa delivered the last SONA of the sixth administra­tion and reflected on the strides made by the ruling party in government using the anecdote of a ‘Tintswalo’ - dubbed a child of democracy born in 1994.

However, Ramaphosa’s success story did not land as intended on the opposition benches with many accusing him of dishonesty about ‘Tintswalo’s’ reality.

DA leader John Steenhuise­n said the president made ‘glaring omissions’ of the ANC-created struggles that many in her generation now face.

“In South Africa today, there is a 70 per cent chance that Tintswalo will be unemployed. There is a 50 per cent chance that she is one of the 30-million people who live below the poverty line. Any day, Tintswalo could become one of the 75 people murdered, or one of the 115 women who are raped or subjected to gender-based violence each and every day.

“Should she get sick, Tintswalo may die in a state hospital that has no electricit­y due to load-shedding. And when she opens her taps, there is no longer any water coming out. The fact is that Tintswalo’s hopes and dreams as a child of democracy have been stolen by the ANC.”

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The leader of the opposition party said the country has regressed, across every metric, into a state of decay and decline that has only worsened inequality, placed millions more in the unemployme­nt queue and taken the country backward.

“For all, President Ramaphosa’s populist posturing and policy proposals this evening, including the doubling down on state-centric policy and legislatio­n and the arrogance of a president who is completely out of touch with ordinary South Africans, the reality is that none of these offerings are workable in the financial framework of a six per cent budget deficit.”

IFP President Velenkosin­i Hlabisa said the address fell flat and was not inspiring, as it was repetition of what has been said over the past five years.

“In its entirety, it was an admission of failure. At some stage, the president himself gave up when he saw the whole house laughing to show that what he was saying is not true, particular­ly around the potholes and roads he claimed were being fixed. “It is a joke. We all know that potholes are a common problem in our country. He spoke of State capture, that they are doing all they can to deal with, but we have not seen a single senior leader of the ANC implicated being taken to task. He avoided Phala-Phala completely.”

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