Category Archives: Centre for the Study of Democracy

Democracy Under Threat: What Attacks on Grassroots Activists Mean for our Politics

CENTRE FOR THE STUDY OF DEMOCRACY
WORKSHOP
NOVEMBER 4

DEMOCRACY UNDER THREAT:WHAT ATTACKS ON GRASSROOTS ACTIVISTS MEAN FOR OUR POLITICS

OPENING REMARKS AND WAY FORWARD

Subsequent to this workshop, which attracted significant media attention, we received requests for summaries of the proceedings. Presenters were not required to produce written papers; they gave generously of their time and we did not think it appropriate to ask them to produce written summaries after the event. As a contribution to further discussion on the issue we are, however, circulating this brief summary of the opening remarks and comments ion the way forward by the Centre’s Director, Steven Friedman.

Opening Remarks

1.The workshop was convened to raise awareness of the Kennedy Road attacks and their implications for democracy. We hope that it will play a role in injecting into the mainstream debate on democracy an awareness of the way in which attacks on grassroots organising by the poor threaten our democracy.

2.To understand the implications of the Kennedy Road events, we need to say something about the nature of democracy. Its key feature is that it is based on the principle that each adult human being has a right to an equal say in the decisions taken by the political community of which they are a part. This obviously implies that no-one has a greater claim to the right to decide than anyone else. A professor with several degrees behind her name has no greater right to decide than a person who was unfortunate enough not to complete school because decisions on what is right and good are matters of opinion, not products of formal education. Access to learning or wealth does not entitle anyone to a greater say than anyone else. And so, ideally, a democracy ought to be a society in which each of us has an equal say in the decisions which affect us. No society has ever achieved this goal, but it is the standard to which any democracy ought to aspire.

3.This view of democracy may sound obvious to some but it differs from that found in much academic writing and in much of the South African debate. Both often tend to see democracy as a system in which elites are allowed to compete with each other to make decisions and in which grassroots citizens are limited to voting for the elite of their choice. But the view suggested here insists that, if democracy does not give everyone the right to decide, it is not a full democracy. While each individual has a right to participate in decisions, in practice we only really enjoy a say when we combine with others to pursue common interests or values. Democracy is thus impossible unless everyone has the right to organise to influence decisions.

4.The implications for the events at Kennedy Road should hopefully be clearer by now: if people living in shacks are subject to violence which prevents them organising to influence decisions, then citizens are being denied a basic democratic right and democracy is under threat. Democrats ought to see organisation by previously voiceless people as an important advance for democracy, a sign that the system is deepening and broadening. And so democrats ought to see attacks on the right of shack dwellers to organise as a dangerous abridgement of democracy.

5.Concern should be heightened by the fact that the Kennedy Road attacks are not an isolated incident. Over the past five years, there have been repeated allegations that grassroots activists and social movements have been subject to violence and harassment. This appears to have been prompted by the fact that these movements are organised independently of, and are often highly critical of, local power holders, usually local African National Congress leaders. This obviously suggests that a basic democratic right – to criticise governments and holders of political office – is under threat at the grassroots of our society. The attacks remind us, therefore, that, while a section of the society – the better-off and the better-connected – enjoy the freedom to express themselves freely, many do not. This raises the worrying prospect that democracy is flourishing for the middle classes and the affluent, but is being denied to the grassroots poor by local power-holders.

6.A further cause for concern is that the violence against members of Abahlali base Mjondolo(AbM) seems to herald an escalation of the campaign against grassroots organisations. Previously, political office-holders have not explicitly endorsed action against grassroots citizens’ organisations. These attacks were, however, implicitly supported by the KwaZulu Natal MEC for community safety and by senior officials in the provincial government. And so, while previously it may have been possible to see the denial of basic rights as the work of local power holders threatened by democracy but acting independently of and perhaps without the knowledge of political parties and office-holders, the expulsion of social movement activists from an area in which they were organised seems now to be sanctioned by senior office-holders.

7.Despite the severity of the threat to democracy posed by the Kennedy Road attacks and the action against activists of which it is a part, the national debate remains largely oblivious. While our print and electronic media daily discuss the implications for democracy of the activities of political, economic and social elites, attacks on grassroots citizens attempting to exercise their right to a say in decisions are routinely ignored. An illustrative example occurred when participants in the national debate became deeply alarmed at reports that the editor of a Sunday newspaper was to be charged in relation to a report that the newspaper had published: one commentator said that he had been reduced to tears by this development. However, while the editor was never charged, at the same time, AbM activists and supporters were reportedly beaten in the streets of Durban because they wished to present a petition to the mayor of Ethekwini. Commentators entirely ignored this event and none were moved to tears by the prospect of citizens facing violence as they exercised a core democratic right. This silence is an indictment both of our national debates and of our elites. It also confirms the point made earlier – that democracy in our country seems to be understood as a system for elites rather than grassroots citizens.

8.If we are concerned about a democracy which is available to all, we need, therefore, to seek wherever we can to point out to the mainstream of our society that a democracy in which the rights of shack-dwellers to speak collectively are denied – and in which commentators and public figures who proclaim themselves to be democrats fail to realise the clear and present danger to democracy which this poses – is at best a very limited and restricted democracy which may erode because it does not enjoy the support of grassroots citizens on which democracy depends. There is a very real sense in which the attacks on shack-dwellers rights to organise are testing not only the depth and breadth but also the survival prospects of our democracy We hope therefore that this workshop will begin a process in which the rights of grassroots activists to organise freely will be understood as a democratic requirement as important as the rights of those who now participate in the national debate.

The Way Forward

9.The meeting agreed that the workshop ought to begin rather than end a process of highlighting the threat to democracy posed by attacks on grassroots organisations. As an initial step, it was proposed that a statement be issued on behalf of participants endorsing AbM’s call for an independent inquiry into the events at Kennedy Road. This has been done.

10.It was proposed that an organisation or project be launched to monitor and highlight punitive and repressive action against grassroots organisations. It was suggested that it should not restrict itself to investigating and reporting on attacks on organisations but should also be concerned with authorities who violated the human rights of the poor more generally – action against street traders which violated both the law and people’s rights were mentioned as an example. If this initiative is to do its work properly, it will need significant resources and it was suggested that a proposal aimed at soliciting donor support for this idea be drafted.

11.The Centre announced that it had a small discretionary budget which could be used for further events devoted to highlighting the practice of democracy at the grassroots of society and threats to it. Participants in the workshop were invited to approach the Centre with idea for more activities and initiatives.

12.The Centre also reported that a meeting would be held under its auspices at the end of November to discuss ways of encouraging the exercise of active citizenship by the poor. The meeting had emerged out of a seminar called to discuss responses to the government’s anti-poverty strategy at which it was argued that the most effective way of ensuring policies which served the needs of the poor was the active use by poor people of their citizenship rights to express their needs and to ensure that government programmes served them. It had been agreed to convene a discussion to explore ways in which the exercise of active citizenship by poor people could be encouraged. Participants were invited to attend this meeting.

13.Finally, the Centre’s Director noted that it was now an institutional partner in the Global Conversations on Democracy project initiated by the Centre for the Study of Developing Societies in Delhi. The purpose was to open discussion on ways of understanding democracy which differed from current dominant views in the North. The role of grassroots social movements in strengthening democracy is a key concern of this project and participants interested in this issue were invited to suggest ways in which the discussions now occurring on a global scale could also begin in South Africa.

Steven Friedman
Director
Centre for the Study of Democracy
Rhodes University/University of Johannesburg

CSD Supports the AbM Call for an Inquiry into the Attack on AbM

STATEMENT FROM THE CENTRE FOR THE STUDY OF DEMOCRACY

CALL ON THE STATE PRESIDENT TO RESTORE THE CREDIBILITY OF OUR DEMOCRACY BY ESTABLISHING AN INDEPENDENT COMMISSION OF INQUIRY INTO VIOLENCE AGAINST SHACKDWELLERS IN DURBAN

THE credibility of our democracy will remain under a cloud unless an independent Commission of Inquiry into the recent violence at Durban’s Kennedy Road informal settlement is appointed. This was the unanimous view of participants at a meeting of citizens’ organisations and academics held in Johannesburg this week and convened by the Centre for the Study of Democracy at Rhodes University and the University of Johannesburg.

The Centre called the meeting out of a concern that the violence, directed at leaders and members of the Abahlali baseMjondolo (AbM) shackdwellers’ movement, was politically motivated and designed to drive the movement out of the informal settlement because it was seen as a rival to the African National Congress (ANC) in the area ,and because it had launched a Constitutional Court challenge to provincial legislation which gives the provincial government wide powers to force landowners and municipalities to evict informal occupiers. The Centre is particularly concerned that the attacks on an independent and peaceful citizens’ organisation have been effectively endorsed by the KwaZulu-Natal MEC for Community Safety, Mr Willies Mchunu, and by senior officials of the provincial government. This reinforces the impression that a provincial government is attempting to silence a critical voice in violation of core democratic values.

Discussion at the meeting heightened this concern. The president of AbM, Mr Sbu Zikode, and other leaders of the movement, described how they had been driven into hiding and were now forced to conduct their entirely lawful activities in Kennedy Road in secrecy. AbM leaders told the meeting that they were now forced to operate much as underground anti-apartheid activists had been forced to do before South Africa became a democracy. While our Constitution guarantees every citizen freedom of speech and association and the right to use the courts, AbM appears to have been denied the first and to have been punished for exercising the second. Further, AbM argued that those who have been arrested for their alleged involvement in the attacks and denied bail, are actually victims and are, in effect, political prisoners.

Academic analysts who delivered presentations pointed out that democracy is meant for all citizens, not simply for those who are well-heeled and well-connected. If basic democratic rights are denied to shackdwellers, they warned, South African democracy is in great danger. If citizens in the suburbs are allowed to speak their mind and criticise government actions and policies but those in the shack settlements are not, our country will, they suggested, lapse back into what it was pre-1994, a state in which some enjoy the right to speak but others do not. The allegations raised about the Kennedy Road violence are therefore extremely serious because they suggest that the democracy which so many fought so hard to achieve is now in danger because some political power-holders are not prepared to tolerate peaceful and legal citizen action if they feel threatened by it.

Participants were obviously aware that the allegations about events at Kennedy Road remain untested. But all agreed that, given their seriousness, they need urgently to be tested. They added that that the best way to ensure that this happened would be support AbM’s call for an independent and neutral inquiry into the events. At present, a Task Team comprising those who are alleged to be complicit in the attacks has been given the official mandate to investigate. This is obviously unacceptable. The inquiry must be entirely independent and its impartiality should be beyond reproach.

We therefore urge the State President to demonstrate his and government’s commitment to democracy and concern to protect the rights of citizens by urgently appointing such an inquiry.

Prof Steven Friedman
Director
Centre for the Study of Democracy
Rhodes University/University of Johannesburg

CSD Seminar: Democracy under Threat? What Attacks on Grassroots Activists Mean for our Politics

Centre for the Study of Democracy (CSD) at the University of Johannesburg invites you to a seminar entitled:

Democracy under Threat?: What Attacks on Grassroots Activists Mean for our Politics

DEMOCRACY requires that the right to express ourselves in association with others be enjoyed by all, not only those who are well connected and visible. Constant allegations over the past few years that grassroots social movements who are critical of the government have been subject to police action denying them those rights are, therefore, a severe threat to the credibility of South African democracy.

Until now, the evidence has suggested that attacks on the rights of grassroots citizens to free political activity have been the work of local politicians seeking to protect their turf, not of regional or national politicians. Recent violent attacks on leaders and members of the shack-dwellers’ movement Abahlali baseMjondolo in Durban’s Kennedy Road settlement have, however, been publicly endorsed by ministers in the KwaZulu-Natal provincial government, raising the possibility that senior politicians are now endorsing attempts to suppress grassroots government critics. If these fears are accurate, democracy is under grave threat: if some are denied the right to express themselves, no-one can be sure that their rights and freedoms will be preserved.

The events at Kennedy Road and the repeated allegations that grassroots political activity is being suppressed therefore require careful scrutiny and analysis. We need to understand their implications for democracy and the steps which are needed to ensure that all are entitled to speak and to associate. The Centre for the Study of Democracy at Rhodes University and the University of Johannesburg will, therefore, host a seminar at which grassroots activists, scholars and human rights campaigners will discuss threats to free political activity and their implications.

Venue: Training Centre, 6th Floor, South African Human Rights Commission (SAHRC)

Time: 9am to 3pm

Date: Wednesday, 4 November 2009

RSVP: Johnny Selemani – jaselemani@gmail.com / 073 553 0726

Kate Tissington – kate.tissington@wits.ac.za / 072 220 9125 (by Friday 30 October 2009)

Speakers:

Steven Friedman, Centre for the Study of Democracy (CSD)

Pregs Govender, South African Human Rights Commission (SAHRC)

S’bu Zikode, President, Abahlali basMjondolo

Mnikelo Ndabankulu, Spokesperson, AbM

Zodwa Nsibande, General Secretary of the Youth League, AbM

Michael Neocosmos, Monash University

Richard Pithouse, Politics Department, Rhodes University

Andile Mngxitama, Foundation for Human Rights (FHR)

Marcelle Dawson, Centre for Sociological Research, University of Johannesburg (to be confirmed)

Noor Nieftagodien, History Department, University of the Witwatersrand