ANC wants better security after Kenya attacks

LazyLion

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The ANC's national executive committee called on the state security to analyse the mall attack in Nairobi, Kenya in order to protect the country, the party said on Sunday.

"In this regard our own security cluster was directed by the NEC to analyse the attack and work on the security of our country in liaison with relevant institutions in the continent and the world," secretary general Gwede Mantashe said.

Mantashe was addressing reporters in Johannesburg after the African National Congress' NEC meeting over the weekend.

He said the attack highlighted the need for tighter immigration laws and processes, strengthening of the security features of the South African identity documents and monitoring the movement of people in general and suspicious movements in particular.

"The ANC pledges its solidarity with the people of Kenya in the aftermath of this terrorist attack," he said.

"The NEC further supported the work that seeks to ensure stability and peace in the horn of Africa in general and Somali in particular."

Al-Qaeda affiliated group Al-Shabaab has claimed responsibility for the attack at Nairobi's Westgate mall on September 21. Attackers were at the mall for four days in a siege in which at least 67 people were killed.

Mantashe said the NEC also discussed the latest developments in the International Criminal Court, in the Hague, Netherlands and the proposal by the people, government and parliament of Kenya to lobby African countries to review their membership of the ICC.

He said there was an agreement that the ICC was representing inequality before the world justice where the weak is always wrong and the strong is always right.

"The fact that cases get taken by individuals and even NGOs makes leaders in smaller countries and in Africa, particularly, even more vulnerable.

"There is clear evidence that the ICC is used more to effect

regime change in the majority of cases," he said.

Mantashe said the sovereignty of many African countries was undermined as is the case in Kenya when the ICC requires the president and deputy president to be in the Hague for the duration of their case, reversing the original agreement that they will be in court at the beginning and at the end of the case.

He said with that in mind, the NEC mandated President Jacob Zuma to participate freely in the African Union debate of African countries reviewing their individual membership of the ICC, in Addis Ababa on October 12.

"The NEC strongly mandated the president and the delegation not to break ranks with the continent on this matter," he said.

The committee also congratulated Zuma for championing Syria during the G8 meeting in Russia.

He said the meeting further congratulated Zuma for leading the debate on the transformation of the United Nations (UN) and the Security Council, in particular during the 68th United Nations General Assembly meeting in New York, America last week.

The NEC endorsed sentiments that the UN Security Council needed urgent transformation as it was non-representative, unfair, undemocratic, and non-responsive to the needs of developing nations.


Source : Sapa /kn/dm/lk/ge
Date : 29 Sep 2013 18:28
 
He said the attack highlighted the need for tighter immigration laws and processes, strengthening of the security features of the South African identity documents and monitoring the movement of people in general and suspicious movements in particular.

Our passports are one of the hardest to fake, and yet it's still done.
Obtaining an ID is cheap and easy - a friend of mine at the SSA says you can easily pick one up for R100.

How do they want to monitor movement? There aren't many countries that are capable of that - and the US is certainly not one of them. Our immigration laws are poked due to this whole Zim and Mozambique immigration thing, half of our crime in the north-eastern parts of the country are committed by Zims/Mozzies.
 
You don't need to fake an SA passport. You just hand over a couple of bucks to the right official. This just vindicates the UK's stance on visas.
 
You don't need to fake an SA passport. You just hand over a couple of bucks to the right official. This just vindicates the UK's stance on visas.

And how do you know who the "right" official is? No seriously, a friend of mine needs some papers. PM if you have contacts.
 
I would feel a bit more at ease if it said the government wants better security. To my knowledge the security of our beloved state does not fall to the party itself ... but to the government.

They can beef up our security regarding our travel documents all they want .... but while there are corrupt HA officials and people are allowed to stream over our borders then it means absolutely nothing.
 
I would feel a bit more at ease if it said the government wants better security. To my knowledge the security of our beloved state does not fall to the party itself ... but to the government.

They can beef up our security regarding our travel documents all they want .... but while there are corrupt HA officials and people are allowed to stream over our borders then it means absolutely nothing.

The ANC is unable to distinguish between party and state.
 
According to some tweet Pretoria was next.

Quick, move the Grippens, corvettes and submarines to Church Square. That'll fix al sosatie.
 
You don't need to fake an SA passport. You just hand over a couple of bucks to the right official. This just vindicates the UK's stance on visas.

Exactly. They aren't fake passports at all.
 
Our passports are one of the hardest to fake, and yet it's still done.
Obtaining an ID is cheap and easy - a friend of mine at the SSA says you can easily pick one up for R100.

How do they want to monitor movement? There aren't many countries that are capable of that - and the US is certainly not one of them. Our immigration laws are poked due to this whole Zim and Mozambique immigration thing, half of our crime in the north-eastern parts of the country are committed by Zims/Mozzies.

When I was in Jozi, none of the crimes committed against me (armed robbery and hijacking) were from foreigners. They were done by zulus.
 
When I was in Jozi, none of the crimes committed against me (armed robbery and hijacking) were from foreigners. They were done by zulus.

Maybe Jozie is the exception, but Pretoria has a mass of crime committed by guys from out of town. North West has the same problem.
 
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