minister naledi pandor in cape town, welcome to hardtalk. thank you very much and good afternoon.r, your country, south africa today looks desperately ill at ease with itself. would you agree? no, i don't think so. i don't think ill at ease, i think south africa is confronted by many very difficult and challenging problems. but given its history, i'm not surprised that it is confronted by these problems. so i wouldn't characterise us in the way that you have but i certainly admit that we are facing very deep and complex challenges, that we have defined solutions for. and complex challenges, that we have defined solutions forlj and complex challenges, that we have defined solutions for. i use the phrase ill at ease with itself because i think i and many people around the world find it quite hard to fathom how the country, the rainbow nation whose struggle we saw just a generation ago for freedom, how it can now include so many people who we've seen on our televisions joining people who we've seen on our televisionsjoining protests, chanting, directing with spears and saying foreign