Chairperson, I thought that the previous Minister who was standing here was able to articulate that the sidelining of the black people in this country is historical, it is historical and it was systemic by the previous regime. And part of that, the tool which was used to disempower our people was the issue of education and skills. When we talking about the structural nature of our economy is that most of our young people do not have the skills that matter. But thanks through the ruling party, to our government, that today we starting to put thousands if not millions of our young people into the colleges into the universities in order to acquire the skills which are necessary. But what we need to interrogate, are these the skills that matter, that are critical? Day in day out you hear the employers complaining about what they call the critical skills in the economy; which I think we have not been emphasising. So, to do that it's going to be a process because even ... to be where we are was as a result of a particular long process and I think there are terms which we are saying today are trying to deal with the structural nature of the issues we are talking about.
Leave the other noise, leave the other noise about this particular government is responsible for the ... but what we are saying is
there is a very clear programme to deal with all these structural issues which we are talking about today.