South Africa for a long time was a state, a pariah one at that, without a nation. It also means that there was no shared identity, even for imagination. That is why this point of nation-building is important for all of us. I now go to the programme of arts, culture, promotion and development. This programme looks at the promotion of arts and culture. It also looks at its development. On the promotion side, this is implemented through festivals, exhibitions, symposiums, community engagements and programmes beyond our national borders et al. Any programme undertaken has to respond to our vision, as enshrined in the NDP and in line with our quest for nation-building and social cohesion. This kind of promotion will give all provinces an opportunity to identify flagship programmes. Some have distinguished themselves others have not. I have in mind, for instance, the Eastern Cape one seized The Eastern Cape has Makhanda Arts Festival attracting the whole world to it, in fact, this arts festival is the second biggest in the world in terms of popularity and support after the Edinburgh one. [Applause.] In 2013, the festival contributed R349 million to the GDP and injected R90 million to the local economy of Makhanda.