President Cyril Ramaphosa has described South Africa’s ongoing failure to provide basic services as a life-threatening crisis. Speaking at a National Dialogue in Pretoria, he highlighted the severe shortage of medicine in clinics and the lack of reliable water supply in many communities.
“When a clinic has no medicine, lives are at stake. When taps run dry, communities are deprived of their dignity,” the President stated. He urged both leaders and citizens to ask why these problems persist and to work together on solutions.
Ramaphosa connected these service delivery failures to broader issues like poverty, gender inequality, and discrimination. He argued that these challenges show how much work is still needed to achieve the constitutional promise of equality for all.
The President also addressed groups that chose to boycott the dialogue, noting that those who refuse to participate often later complain about being excluded. He defended the National Dialogue as a crucial platform for tackling the country’s most pressing problems.
The event brought together political leaders, civil society, and citizens to find practical solutions. For many attendees, the urgent need for healthcare and water dominated the discussions, with strong calls for government accountability and action.
President Ramaphosa concluded that unity and responsibility are essential, warning that ignoring these failures will only deepen inequality and further erode public trust in the government.