Cape Argus

‘Freedom fighters’ honoured

President praises SANDF and all who made ‘heroic sacrifices’ for the country

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PRESIDENT Cyril Ramaphosa has paid tribute to the South African National Defence Force (SANDF), saying the defence force has again confirmed the depth of the roots of South Africa’s democracy.

He was speaking yesterday during an inter-faith church service in Kimberley ahead of Armed Forces Day celebratio­ns on Wednesday, which marks the day the SS Mendi sank in the English Channel on February 21, 1917, killing 646 people.

“The marking of February 21 allows the nation never to forget the heroic sacrifices of the South African soldiers who died that fateful morning when the SS Mendi sank,” Ramaphosa said.

“It has become a day that allows us to remember all men and women who paid the ultimate price in defence of freedom, peace and justice.

“It is a day that reminds us that blood was spilled by countless South Africans and freedom fighters to guarantee us our freedom and human rights.

“It is a reminder that brave men and women continue to put their lives on the line to secure our hard-won freedoms and defend our constituti­on,” Ramaphosa said.

“This year, these celebratio­ns carry a profound and special meaning for our nation.

“They occur at a time when our defence force has once again confirmed the depth of the roots of our democracy and the flourishin­g of constituti­onal order.

“They occur as our nation celebrates the change of leadership in the governing party without any appetite for senseless bloodshed because our defence force is led by wise women and men who abide by the ideal of the supremacy of the constituti­on and the rule of law,” he said.

They were even more significan­t because they occurred in a year when South Africa commemorat­ed the centenary birthday of the first commander-in-chief, former president Nelson Mandela.

“It is this SANDF – the people’s national defence force – that our founding father president Nelson Mandela envisaged as a non-partisan unifier and defender of all South Africans.

“As its first commander-in-chief, president Mandela moulded the SANDF into a law-abiding institutio­n that upholds the constituti­on of the Republic in defence of its people.

“President Mandela left us a coherent SANDF whose task is to diligently safeguard the sovereignt­y and territoria­l integrity of the Republic, build peace, and support developmen­t on the African continent.

“He left us a national defence force that is a true microcosm of our diverse society,” Ramaphosa said.

“This is s SANDF that inspires confidence for a better, more secure tomorrow.

“We pay tribute to the men and women that wear the SANDF uniform and bear arms on behalf of South Africans,’ Ramaphosa said – African News Agency (ANA)

 ?? PICTURE: SIYABULELA DUDA ?? SINGING PRAISES: Minister of Defence and Military Veterans, Nosiviwe Mapisa-Nqakula; President Cyril Ramaphosa; and Northern Cape Premier Sylvia Lucas. As president and SANDF Commander-in-Chief, Ramaphosa was attending the Armed Forces Interfaith...
PICTURE: SIYABULELA DUDA SINGING PRAISES: Minister of Defence and Military Veterans, Nosiviwe Mapisa-Nqakula; President Cyril Ramaphosa; and Northern Cape Premier Sylvia Lucas. As president and SANDF Commander-in-Chief, Ramaphosa was attending the Armed Forces Interfaith...

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