We need Weapons more than Aids Drugs - Manto |
Publication | Independent Online |
Date | 2002-12-18 |
Reporter | Sapa |
Web Link |
A pronouncement by Health Minister Manto Tshabalala-Msimang that South Africa must be prepared - from a military point of view - for a possible invasion by the United States has been branded as "totally irresponsible" by Afrikaner Eenheidsbeweging leader Cassie Aucamp.
He was reacting to a report in a British newspaper on Tuesday that quotes her as saying: "Look at what Bush is doing. He could invade."
Tshabalala reportedly made the statement during a recent interview with the Guardian, which was quizzing her on the availability of drugs to fight Aids.
She told the Guardian that budgetary priorities meant her department could not provide anti-retrovirals to the estimated 4,5 million South Africans with HIV.
"We don't have the money for that. Where would it come from?" the newspaper quoted her as saying.
Asked if it could come from defence savings, if three proposed submarines were left out of South Africa's arms deal, the minister said the country needed to deter aggressors.
"South Africa cannot afford drugs to fight HIV and Aids partly because it needs submarines to deter attacks from nations such as the US," the Guardian quotes Tshabalala-Msimang as saying.
Aucamp said statements such as this were not only totally unfounded, but could kill President Thabo Mbeki's initiatives for an African renaissance and foreign investment in Nepad.
"The AEB calls on Mr Mbeki to do some damage control and repudiate what Tshabalala-Msimang has said."
He warned against the development of an "anti-US culture within the ANC".
Aucamp said the AEB had serious doubts about the Tshabalala-Msimang's view of international politics, and advised her to stick with her stethoscope.
With acknowledgements to Sapa and www.iol.co.za