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(en) South Africa, An anarchist Journal Zabalaza: #7 - COLLECTIVE BARGAINING BY RIOT:,ELECTION DAY IN SOUTH AFRICA
Date
Mon, 01 Jan 2007 10:16:10 +0200
Seeing the police move on a single column of smoke rising from two burning tyres
over rebellious Khutsong, south-west of Johannesburg, on March 1, local
government election day, I was reminded of the Native American warrior in Dances
With Wolves remarking of the distant fire of a frontiersman that he would not
tolerate “a single line of smoke in my own country”.
The ANC-led government in similar fashion had determined that Khutsong would not
explode on voting day; that the mockery of the vote that occurred would be
“free”, albeit an enforced peace in a township that had driven ANC leaders out,
revolting against an administrative transfer out of Gauteng province to an
uncertain future in the poverty-stricken North-West.
FIRE IN KHUTSONG
So two armoured Nyalas lumbered over to the smoking tyres where photographers
were vainly trying to get a dramatic shot - but Khutsong was virtually deserted
on the morning of the vote.
The fire-gutted Gugulethu community centre was already defaced by crude sexual,
gangster - and, in what is a hopeful sign, anarchist - graffiti. The presiding
officer at the government’s Independent Electoral Commission tent set up next to
the ruin glumly told me he did not expect a single soul to turn out to vote that
day.
He proved right, with barely more than 200 out of 29,000 registered voters
exercising their hard-won right. Khutsong resident Albert Mamela stood near the
smouldering tyres and told of his dream that the people of Khutsong - whether
Zulu, Xhosa or “foreigner” - could “be like the Bafokeng” - the tribe that owns
platinum mines near Rustenburg - and take ownership of Khutsong’s nearby
gold-mines, the riches of which seldom finds its way into local pockets.
Community ownership of the mines would render local government irrelevant, he
said: “because then we will take care of development ourselves”. There is some
healthy anti-capitalist sentiment here, but it is also confused. The Bafokeng
royal house controls the mines in question, and exploitation carries on as
before. A king makes the economic decisions: this is not the working class
ownership and control anarchist-communists advocate .
Khutsong Residents accused councillors of nepotism, the provision of toilets
that did not work and, worse in their view, not living in the areas they
supposedly represented, a common complaint. Mamela claimed that councillors said
R1,2-million had been spent on the road to the Khutsong graveyard, whereas he
knew it had only cost R800,000, suggesting the councillors had pocketed the rest.
He suggested that Merafong mayor Des van Rooyen had, unlike previous mayors,
acquired bodyguards “because he knew what he was going to do” in “selling”
Khutsong to the North West province.
But despite the powerful emotions circulating on voting day, Khutsong was
suffering a hangover from the previous night’s celebration of the successful
boycott call and was unlikely to produce drama, so I drove on into Gauteng,
north-east to the gated suburbs of Houghton to watch former President Nelson
Mandela cast his vote.
THE APF AND ELECTIONS
I had far to travel, so bypassed Pimville in Soweto where the Operation Khanyisa
Movement (OKM) was contesting the elections. There was a fierce debate in the
Anti-Privatisation Forum (APF) over the question of elections. Trotskyist
leader, APF organiser and Soweto activist Trevor Ngwane jumped the gun, forming
the OKM as a party and political vehicle for his career and his politics without
an APF mandate. In stark contrast to the social movements in areas such as
Motsoaledi, Orange Farm and Sebokeng stood firmly by a “no services - no vote”
position [although in Motsoaledi, this was later reversed following an internal
struggle].
Ngwane’s movement won a paid position as a councillor, based on 4,305 votes.
Ngwane did not take the seat as expected, but the OKM councillor who did will
have her lone left-wing voice drowned out by the 75 ANC and 31 DA councillors.
Working class power lies in the community and in the workplace, not in the
forums of the ruling class. Ngwane was ousted a month later at the
Anti-Privatisation Forum annual general meeting as APF chair by Brickes Mokolo
of the Orange Farm Crisis Committee - a key figure in the anti-electoral faction
of the APF. This is a hopeful sign, for Mokolo has helped build a viable,
anti-electoral strategy in that poor settlement.
THE OTHER HALF
Houghton is old, genteel Joburg, replete with bowling greens, high walls and
lanes of poplar trees and oaks, gated with booms and security guards. The old
and new elites, with their black maids in tow, were smartly lined up to cast
their ballots: no burning tyres here; only the worship of Mandela - the
architect of post-apartheid neo-liberalism - as some sort of living saint of the
wealthy.
From Houghton, I drove north-east to the small diamond-mine and prison town of
Cullinan to the east of Pretoria. There, the local Freedom Front Plus branch -
Afrikaner seperatists - was hoping to oust the incumbent Democratic Alliance
neo-liberals from the Nokeng tsa Taemane Municipality. The ANC won, but the only
real excitement on the day was when Afrikaner singer Valiant Swart happened to
pass through town.
MPUMULANGA
From Cullinan, I drove out to Siyabuswa in Mpumalanga, the former capital of
the apartheid-era homeland of kwaNdebele, because here, the Ministry of
Provincial and Local Government had promised me, was an example of a
municipality that, while not wealthy, was exceptionally well run.
Siyabuswa means “we are governed”, but I found that the way that governance
works sadly conforms to the patterns of endemic corruption so well established
in apartheid days.
Residents such as Amos and Elisabeth Msiza and their friend Petros Mhlangu - all
in their fifties - complained that their water-supply (charged at a rate guessed
by the council because their meters didn’t work) was intermittent and that they
lost their pre-paid electrical power whenever it rained.
“If you have money, this government helps you - but not those who struggle,”
Mhlangu said.
The three residents blamed unelected municipal manager George Mthimunye for
Siyabuswa’s shoddy service delivery.
Their view was supported by ex-ANC independent candidates such as July Msiza who
told me that Mthimunye faced not only criminal charges of having sexually
harassed his secretary, but was also accused of having stolen council funds to
pay for two friends of his to be trained as traffic officers (one of whom
allegedly crashed a council vehicle she was illegally using for her own
purposes, in far-off White River). So much for well-governed Siyabuswa!
TWELVE YEARS ON
Fast-forward to April 27, “Freedom Day”, twelve years down the line from what
Archbishop Desmond Tutu memorably called the “Rainbow Nation” waiting to make
their mark in the first post-apartheid ballot.
And what a mark it has been: from the heart-rending wail of Fort Callata’s
mother at the Truth and Reconciliation Commission hearings to the ascendancy of
the Black Economic Enrichment phalanx into positions of capitalist and state
power; from the collapse of the neo-fascist AWB to the rise of Phumzile
Mlambo-Ngcuka as a possible future president thanks to the axing of Jacob Zuma.
Trevor Manual is the darling of this elite and its middle-class praise-singers,
for whom fiscal discipline is a golden calf and equality a sin. This mutual
admiration society has decreed a perpetual round of expensive parties to praise
the near-feudal conditions on which their empires are built, a perpetual
celebration so to speak (I’m reminded of Jello Biafra’s phrase “the happiness
you have demanded is now mandatory!”).
But millions look set to be unemployed for life and HIV/Aids, tuberculosis,
malaria and ailments of malnutrition such as kwashiorkor and marasmus - usually
associated in the popular imagination with famine in Sudan or the Horn of Africa
- stalk the population.
Last May, at the second annual National Security Conference, two analysts from
very different sectors had a dire warning for the country: COSATU chief
economist Dr Neva Makgetla and Standard Bank credit policy and governance
director Desmond Golding agreed that a highly educated but permanently
unemployed “underclass” constituted the country’s biggest security threat. The
working class is retreating, but not defeated, and it haunts the imagination of
those who rule this country.
UNFREEDOM DAY
Further rioting and arson in Khutsong attended the elevation of councillors to
office on the basis of a 2% poll - an election that Human Sciences Research
Council society culture and identity specialist Dr Mncedisi Ndletyana rightly
described during a TV interview as “illegitimate”.
The official celebration was declared an “unFreedom Day” by the poor in Durban
who decried the evaporation of the dream of equality the 1994 elections had
promised, but which the elites had betrayed. They demanded an end to evictions,
cut-offs and forced relocations, saying they were fighting for unconditional
access to the resources fenced off by the rich.
Local government specialist Greg Ruiters of Rhodes University told me that the
yawning chasm between the developmental promises of neo-liberalism and the
grinding poverty of South Africa’s sprawling shackland (three out of every four
South Africans now lives in urban areas) would increasingly see people take to
direct action.
“The key problem for all parties contesting the local government elections,”
Ruiters said, “is that citizens have discovered another, more direct, channel
for giving voice to their needs: ‘collective bargaining by riot’ may become more
common than waiting to vote.”
The key problem for all the poor, however, is that electoral, representative
politics is so limited and disempowering. As Sheila Meintjies of Wits
University’s political studies department put it, “there is a growing sense that
the councillors don’t necessarily hold all the power, that the officials are
really, if anything, to blame for a lack of service delivery.”
These unelected municipal officials, she said, were directly lobbied by very
powerful big-business interests that short-circuited the country’s
bourgeois-democratic process and skewed development in favour of the rich.
A grim example of this powerful bureaucratic class is eThekwini (Durban)
municipal manager Mike Sutcliffe, an ANC strategist and die-hard opponent of the
Abahlali baseMjondolo (Shack-dwellers’ Movement), whose protest marches he
illegally tried to ban.
In March, Sutcliffe and his ideological cohorts suffered two key court defeats -
by the Abahlali baseMjondolo and the Soweto Concerned Residents - which
confirmed the absolute right of people to gather and to demonstrate without
requiring police permission. This is a big victory for the social movements that
they should fully exploit.
WORKING CLASS DEMOCRACY
We anarchist communists would go further than Meintjies, underlining that it is
simply impossible for the country’s 400 Members of Parliament to truly represent
the interests of 46.9-million people. It is even less likely that 37 very
wealthy party-political Cabinet Ministers, tainted by the elitist idea of
“democratic centralism” will bend over backwards for the working class and poor.
Both our Westminster-style parliamentary democracy and the ANC’s “democratic
centralism” are anything but democratic.
The elections of 1994 were a huge victory inasmuch as apartheid’s doom was
sealed. But there were not enough, and could never be enough, and their
achievement is increasingly overshadowed by the grim neo-liberal class war being
waged by the ruling elite . Capitalism, with its class system, will always
benefit the few at the expense of the many.
Activists in Swaziland and Zimbabwe should take heed. Real popular empowerment
and real economic and social equality can only be achieved by well-organised,
mass-based, directly-democratic, community-controlled action against the
parasite class. “Collective bargaining by riot” is a good start, but we must
build working class power until we can move onto the offensive, and remake the
world.
===============================================================
web site link: http://www.zabalaza.net/index02.htm
pdf of #7 - http://www.zabalaza.net/pdfs/sapams/zab07.pdf
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