K Mosunkutu: Launch of 2007 Bontle ke Botho Clean and Green
Campaign

Keynote address of Gauteng MEC for Agriculture, Conservation
and Environment, Khabisi Mosunkutu, at the launch of the 2007 Bontle ke Botho
Clean and Green Campaign

17 April 2007

Programme Director
Leaders of political parties present
Executive Mayor of the host municipality: Councillor Dikeledi Tsotetsi
Executive Mayor of Sedibeng District Council: Councillor Mlungisi
Hlongwane
Executive Mayor of the Midvaal Municipality: Councillor Martie Wenger
Members of Mayoral Committees and Councillors present
School principals and teachers present
Director: Stakeholder engagement: Mr Sipho Thanjekwayo
Government officials present
Members of ward committees and representative of various community
organisations
Learners
Invited guests
Ladies and gentlemen

It is a pleasure to have this opportunity to be here with you today and to
say a few words on the importance of what brings us here today and commend all
participants of the Bontle ke Botho campaign.

This project will celebrate its fifth year of fruitful existence at a time
when the essence of its being continues to be forcefully shoved into the
forefront of global discussions. Mismanagement of the environment is wreaking
havoc across the globe. Massive and agonising loss of life and property has
brought to sharp relief what James Lovelock meant when he observed that 'Living
matter on the earth collectively defines and regulates the material conditions
necessary for the continuance of life.' This bitter understanding of how
mismanagement of the environment, if not stopped can nastily define and
regulate our lives, has been brought home. This interpretation was recently
played out in Durban, KwaZulu-Natal, when ferocious storms hit the beach.
Previously it was Mozambique and some Southern American states before them.

These bitter lessons inform us that the environment can be humanity's most
pitiless enemy. The critical role of Bontle ke Botho can be found in the midst
of this devastation, it is but one intervention by our Provincial Government.
It is, as we may know, aimed at contributing to effective and sustainable
utilisation of energy and water. Its objective is also to contribute to
effective control of the generation, storage, recycling and re-use of waste in
a manner that contributes to our strategic objectives. In helping achieve these
objectives, the project will be contributing to better management of our
environment, managing the environment such that it becomes humanity's greatest
friend instead of being an implacable opponent.

In its brief life, this Clean and Green project has indeed contributed
towards fighting poverty, job creation and the building of sustainable
communities. One project that embodies these objectives is the Vusisizwe Garden
Project. In addition to maintaining the gardens at the O R Tambo International
Airport, the project also manages eight mini waste depots in Ekurhuleni.

Through the project, water tanks have been provided to some needy schools
within Gauteng and numerous other poverty and nutritional projects have been
initiated.

As the project turns five years this year, we need to find more creative
ways of contributing not only to its sustainability. We also need to find ways
of ensuring that it attracts more participants from our communities and from
the business sector. We must find ways of making a cleaner, greener environment
more meaningful to more people in our communities.

As municipalities utilise the project to further enhance their Environmental
Management Frameworks, locating these within their Integrated Development
Plans, we collectively need to find and deploy more creative ways of ensuring
that more and more members of our communities, especially those who are
unemployed, find more practical reasons to align themselves and practically
partake in the project whilst also being able to ward off poverty. We certainly
can find ways of converting waste into meaningful livelihood.

In the course of this year, we shall launch an anti-litter campaign. We
shall also launch a project aimed at keeping our rivers in a healthy state. I
wish to encourage you all to support these projects with vim and vigour. They
too will be contributing to a drive for ecosystem, social and economic
development that will directly benefit all our citizens.

In conclusion, allow me to wish all the participants in the 2007 Bontle ke
Botho project success.

I thank you.

Issued by: Department of Agriculture, Conservation and Environment, Gauteng
Provincial Government
17 April 2007

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