Category Archives: Fazel Khan

Fazel Khan

Fazel Khan: fighting for education rights for everyone everywhere.

Sunday, 29 April 2007

To all COMSA members

Comrades,

As you all know, last week I was finally fired after a 7 month disciplinary process. I am not the first person to have been forced out of this university on political grounds in recent months. When I was fired I was clearly told that I will not be the last.

When the media asked me questions about my removal from a photograph and article in UKZNdaba last year I answered them honestly and in good faith. I was certainly not being dishonest and anyone who reads the transcript of my hearing will see that the University failed to prove their claim that I had been dishonest.

I regret that giving my honest and well grounded opinion in response to the questions that were put to me wasted months of my life and got me fired. But I do not regret trying to answer the questions put to me as honestly as I could. If trying to tell the truth at a university is something that ‘brings the university into disrepute’ then there is something seriously wrong with that university. The whole purpose of a university is supposed to be built around the collective search for truth.

It is very important for everyone to be clear that it is not just individuals who are being attacked. Our union is under fire too. From the Gautschi inquisition to the slanderous article in Saturday’s Witness our hard-won freedom to organise is being destroyed. And as a result, it is not just individuals and our union that is under attack. The whole idea of the university, as a space of critical work in education and research, is being undermined.

Our apartheid history means that we have no choice but to look to the future. But this does not mean that there is only one vision of the future. There are many and we need to discuss and debate them all. The management’s vision of the future is corporatisation plus deracialisation. They call this being ‘World Class’ just like the Municipality calls evicting shack dwellers at gun-point and in violation of the law being ‘World Class’.

Corporatisation means giving the university to the market, and this puts it under the power of local and global elites. It makes real deracialisation impossible. In COMSA our vision of the future has been democratisation plus deracialisation. We want the university to be a democratic public institution, one that serves all of society, not just its richest people. We have always fought for an institution that works for everyone, including those who the market ignores because they cannot afford to pay to be students or to have research done.

Over many years of struggle we have won decent workings conditions for permanent staff. Today, we all know that these victories are being rapidly undone by management. This doesn’t only affect workers. Academics were previously given the autonomy that is required for people to become intellectuals and scholars but are now being turned into workers. They are increasingly being placed under surveillance and under suspicion and treated as if they are working on a production line.

Management has developed a new tactic to prevent us from defending ourselves from their consultants who can only see our university in terms of money. When we argue and struggle for our pay and conditions, and when we argue and struggle for our right to be able to teach and research outside of the rule of money, they don’t argue back. Instead, they accuse us of bringing the university into disrepute. This is not true. If anything brings the university into disrepute, it is the way workers, poor students and now even academics, and especially contract academics, are treated. And nothing brings more disrepute to the university than the way that ideas are crushed and arguments settled by intimidation rather than discussion.

But we are all the university. Stanley Naicker is as much the university as Dasarath Chetty. We all have a right to decent pay and decent working conditions. But for many of us the university is more than just a job. Defending our university against an authoritarian management is not just about defending our pockets – it goes to the heart of who we are and why we work here.

Our university is not the only organisation that has been ‘transformed’ to meet the needs of the rich and the powerful. Other public institutions have faced this too. The SABC is now a monkey that dances to the government’s tune. The HSRC had its teeth removed, and its critical thinkers dispersed to the wind. The assault on UKZN is hardly unique.

We need to remember that what is happening to us now has already happened all over Africa. Universities were more or less universally ruined when the World Bank insisted on ‘reform’ of African universities in the 1980s. Now that we are being ‘transformed,’ in the same way once great universities like Dar-e-Salaam and Ibadan were ‘reformed’, we need to learn as much as we can from the academics who lived through the World Bank led attack on African universities. It is important that we learn as much as possible about this from the work done by CODESRIA and the Committee for Academic Freedom in Africa.

And here at home we need to remember that it is not just public institutions that are under attack. Anyone who is critical is under attack. The shack dwellers’ movement Abahlali baseMjondolo, a democratic and deeply principled organisation, has in recent months been subject to vicious and blatantly criminal police violence and state repression.

It is clear that powerful forces are determined to close the democratic spaces opened up in the transition to parliamentary democracy. A new, dangerous and difficult era is upon us. Many of us who felt that the transition didn’t go far enough will now have to fight to defend its limited gains as Zanufication gathers pace in our university, our city and our country.

Here at UKZN instead of developing a vision for the future through collegial discussion, we are supposed silently to accept increasingly bizarre propaganda by and for management. Instead of taking decisions through genuine deliberation, we are supposed to accept dictatorship. Instead of allowing the people who work here to have some say about how and why things are done here we are expected to obey, without question, the decisions of consultants who know nothing about the real value of what we do.

We must pay careful attention to the processes that disempower us. This is because there is a great danger in seeing our situation as only being the fault of a few specific individuals. It is true, of course, that we have some particularly paranoid and vindictive individuals in management who are doing particular damage to this institution. And it is true that they have now lost the credibility needed to run this university with our consent. They can now only rule by intimidation. But the crisis of this university is deeper than the unacceptable authoritarianism of these individuals.

We already know how to think about this. We never made the mistake of thinking that if only Botha had gone, apartheid would end. We should not think that after Makgoba and Chetty are forced to resign, we will have won the battle. We have made this mistake before.

At UDW, the sometimes militant struggles against various authoritarian vice-chancellors simply paved the way for even *more* authoritarian successors. And many times radicals in our own union have entered management and then quickly become some of the worst managers. This has happened because we focused too much on opposing the individuals in management and did not take enough care to work out the principles by which a more democratic and a more critical and a more just university could be run.

To avoid repeating this mistake, we need to make sure that our union, the spaces in which we interact with other unions, and our departments and schools become non-racial spaces run on the basis of honesty, critical engagement with society, collegial decision making and respect for each other and for the importance of teaching and scholarship.

We have to become the alternative and to develop principles that we can use to change the institution from the bottom up. All authoritarians, on the right and also, as we have learnt, on the left are at their most terrified when ordinary women and men think and act for ourselves. This is when they start their campaigns of slander and intimidation. Sometimes they even start to work together against popular democratic spaces. It is our duty to scare them stiff. They way for us to do this is to create spaces where it is safe for us to think and speak for ourselves. If we make these spaces open and honest then slander will not be an effective weapon. Lies thrive in the dark
and die in the light. Standing alone is very hard but if we are together we can support each other and then we can’t lose. Shackdwellers in Durban have been able to do this and the people that make up this university can do it too.

Of course they will fight back. They will try to weaken us by scaring us. And they will scare us by slandering and threatening disciplinary action against the individuals that they see as the ‘trouble makers’ responsible for stirring up your anger. They will always assume that you cannot think for yourselves and that that the people that you elect and mandate to speak for you are telling you what to think. I do not need to tell you that our management rules in a very vindictive way. It has its little rituals that it uses to pretend that it operates by the law, but they have nothing to do with justice. They are just a performance to create the appearance of justice.

I had to get through 7 layers of security to get into my hearing. My lawyer has to be smuggled on the campus in the boot of a car. And when I finally got to the hearing it was clear what its real purpose was. I was denied legal representation. My representative was given 30 minutes to prepare to argue my case. Witnesses were scared to tell the truth for fear of losing their jobs. The vice-chancellor shamelessly stood outside the hearing personally intimidating a witness before she entered. The chair of my hearing did not come to this dispute without baggage. It was clear that someone who was authoritarian enough to have enthusiastically supported Snuki Zikalala’s crushing of independent journalism at the SABC and Mbeki’s AIDS denialism was never going to take the side of a critical unionist against an authoritarian management.

I asked the chair, plainly and directly, to recuse herself because her sustained support for anti-social authoritarianism made it impossible for her to consider my case fairly. She refused. As you can see for yourselves, her judgement doesn’t have much connection to the evidence that was actually led and debated. She wasn’t even able to spell my name or that of my representative correctly. But the management paid a piper whose tune they knew very well and liked very much.

And so I was fired. And now out and out libel is being spread in the newspapers – libel that goes way beyond what is actually asserted in the judgement.

The lawyers and other experts who have looked at the judgement and the transcript from the hearing have told me that it is impossible for me to lose in court. So I will go to court and I will win in court.

But it is clear that the management is willing to accept regular losses in court. They recently lost their case against Olujimi Adesina, who pointed out the similarities between the University’s management practices and apartheid practices. The court took Adesina’s side.

Management shrugs this off, and makes us pay the bill. For them, trying to shut people up is an ordinary cost of business. This is a price they are prepared to pay to be able to keep intimidating us. We will continue to win in the courts but although these victories are and will continue to be important, we will not win the battle for the soul of UKZN in the courts. The battle for the soul of UKZN will be won at UKZN by the every day choices of the workers, academics and students at UKZN.

I don’t yet know what work I will find. But I know that I will continue to learn, study and teach at the University that the shack dwellers have created for themselves, the University of Abahlali baseMjondolo. I am sure that the shack dwellers are not the only people creating their own democratic spaces as public spaces are increasingly crushed under managerial authoritarianism and given over to the market. If your struggles at UKZN are successful then one day spaces like the University of Abahlali baseMjondolo will be able to reconnect with the University of KwaZulu-Natal. If your struggles are not successful then the University will steadily become another weapon to be used against ordinary people by the state, imperial donors and big business. The stakes are high.

For years, we have shouted ‘Amanda!’ and replied ‘Awethu!’ It is critically important to remember that the power really is ours. Although the authoritarians will target us, will lie about us, will slander us, will make deals behind our backs and then stab us in the back, we can be stronger than they are because we are many and they are few.

I have often been frightened through this process. It was very difficult to tell my children that I had been fired. It was also very difficult to tell my parents. I now have no way of bringing a salary home for my children. I have no medical aid if they fall sick. But I am not alone and that has kept me strong. I would like to thank my family, the ordinary members of COMSA, the Freedom of Expression Institute, the Committee for Academic Freedom in Africa, Abahlali baseMjondolo and all the other trade unionists and academics at UKZN, around South Africa, and from Lagos to Istanbul to Boston, who supported me while this hearing dragged on. Every sms, every phone call, every email, every visit, every prayer in every tradition and every song has mattered. I deeply appreciate the personal and political support. Make sure that no one who is targeted for speaking out is alone. That is the best way to take away the management’s power to intimidate.

Through receiving unexpected support and being unexpectedly betrayed I have learnt important lessons about courage and cowardice, principled commitment and opportunism. It is clear that we can’t make easy assumptions about who will stand, who will waiver and who will turn on the basis of the political language that people speak. I have learnt the hard way that sometimes left and right authoritarianism, which both want to think and act for everyone else, will even unite against projects in which ordinary women and men think and act for themselves. I have learnt the hard way that it is what people do that matters, not what they say about themselves. It is everyday practice that matters.

The way to build an everyday practice that can build and sustain an alternative to corporate authoritarianism is to, as we began to do during the strike, build communities of struggle where people can think and discuss and speak out together. When we are together we can support each other when they try to slander us and discipline us in the name of the reputation of the university when our only crime is to have stated that obvious – that our emperors are naked.

My new email address is ihashiliyadlala@gmail.com

Please keep in touch.

Good luck.

Fazel Khan

http://www.themercury.co.za/index.php?fArticleId=3808141

Dismissed UKZN academic vows to fight back

By Amelia Naidoo

“I will go to court and I will win,” a defiant Fazel Khan said after his dismissal from the University of KwaZulu-Natal.

The sociologist and acting Combined Staff Association (Comsa) president was fired for bringing the university into disrepute.

Khan was dismissed last Wednesday following a seven-month disciplinary process which found him guilty of dishonest conduct and gross negligence for speaking to the media after his image had been airbrushed out of a picture that appeared in the university publication UKZNndaba last year.

He was also charged with leaking confidential documents to the media, including to The Mercury, which the judgment stated was “a breach of the duty of trust and good faith that Mr Khan owes to the university as his employer”.

In a letter to Comsa members, Khan wrote that he was forced out of the university on political grounds. He spoke out against the “corporatisation” of the university and the decline in academics’ autonomy, which he said was a requirement for people to become intellectuals.

During his hearing, Khan claimed, there had been heavy security and he had initially been denied legal representation. His representative, Richard Pithouse, had been given only 30 minutes to prepare to argue his case, Khan said. Pithouse claimed that immediately after Khan had been fired, UKZN Vice-Chancellor Malegapuru Makgoba had warned him not to speak to the media or to the Freedom of Expression Institute (FXI) about his dismissal.

Khan said Makgoba had also warned that other academics involved in the “conspiracy to bring the university into disrepute in the media” would be fired soon. “If this is what was said to Fazel when he was dismissed, then I am completely shocked. It is the democratic right of any individual . . . to speak to us at the FXI about issues that relate to their freedom of expression. No one can take that right away,” said institute Director Jane Duncan.

Khan said he had often been frightened through the process. It had been difficult to tell his children and parents that he had been fired, and he was concerned about not being able to bring home a salary.

However, he said he had received moral support from trade unionists and academics, locally and abroad.

Published on the web by the Mercury on May 1, 2007.

We Need Khans

Letter to the Editor, Mail & Guardian, November 24 to November 30 2006,
http://www.mg.co.za/articledirect.aspx?area=mg_flat&articleid=10182

We need Khans In the shackdwellers’ movement, we do not have the money to train as academics or send our children to train as academics. Therefore, we rely on others to bring back the fruits of their knowledge to the poor.

University of KwaZulu-Natal lecturer Fazel Khan is one of few academics who brings his learning to the people. For UKZN to bring him before a disciplinary committee is unacceptable.

The universities must work to build more Khans. If they try to destroy them, they, as institutions, will just be about individuals getting good jobs for themselves — they will not be about the society any more.

If we do not stand against this action, UKZN as a social project will cease to exist, and the fruits of academic learning will be lost to the poor.

There is no point in sending students to university if they are banned from coming back to their communities and working with the poor — as Khan has done.
— S’bu Zikode, president, Abahlali baseMjondolo

UKZN academic accuses mayor of meddling

There is an error here – Fazel Khan was employed in the sociology department and not at the Centre for Civil Society.

The Mercury

UKZN academic accuses mayor of meddling
December 16, 2005

By Zukile Majova & Carvin Goldstone

An academic at the University of KwaZulu-Natal’s Centre for Civil Society, who has been at the forefront of protest against the perceived slow pace of service provision by the eThekwini Municipality, claims his academic freedom is being undermined.

The claim is vigorously denied by the UKZN Vice-Chancellor and Principal, Prof William Makgoba. The academic says he believes eThekwini Mayor Obed Mlaba is using his friendship with Makgoba to tinker with academic freedom.

At the centre of the uproar is a claim that Mlaba told Makgoba he was very angry about the activities of some of the academics on Makgoba’s payroll.

Fazel Khan, a sociologist from UKZN who is documenting the plight of shack dwellers living in informal settlements in Kennedy Road and Sydenham in Durban, said he was considering dropping his research because of political interference in his work. Khan’s troubles reportedly started on December 7 after he attended the Vice-Chancellor’s Consultation Forum. He said he had spoken to Makgoba at the end of the forum.

“I was talking about union matters when Makgoba told me the mayor was very angry with me,” he said.

“He said Mlaba phoned him to voice his anger with my involvement with the informal settlement disputes.

“I told him that I was elected by the people to represent them, help them write press releases, teach them how to take minutes of their meetings, etc.”

Khan, who is doing a PhD in sociology, told Makgoba that his involvement was in line with his academic work because he was producing a research paper on the matter, and it was part of his community outreach, a requirement expected of all academics. But he said Makgoba had repeated: “Mlaba is very angry with you.”

Makgoba had added that the mayor was preparing a report regarding Khan’s actions of instigating the informal settlers, and it would be presented to the university’s council.

“For the third time he told me that Mlaba is very angry with me,” said Khan.

“I then asked him (Makgoba) what his opinion was on this matter, and he said he did not have an opinion at the time, but would wait for the presentation to be made to council.

“I felt that instead of encouraging independence for researchers, he was exposing them to intimidation.”

The conversation was overheard by Prof Kathan Pillay and an executive member of the National Education Health and Allied Workers’ Union who attended the forum. Pillay said: “I can say that the conversation was informal, but I will not delve into its content because it was between Prof Makgoba and Khan.”

Khan has reported the matter to the Freedom of Expression Institute and the Human Rights Foundation. However, Makgoba said the mayor had never phoned him. He said he had been told by a member of the university staff who had visited the informal settlement at the same time as Mlaba that the mayor had been angry at some academics in the university. He denied intimidating Khan, saying their conversation had been informal and not characterised by “finger-pointing intimidation”.

“I spoke to him off the cuff. There are different kinds of conversations and this one was informal,” said Makgoba.

“I actually feel betrayed that an academic at the university can do this to me.”

He added: “I was just warning him that Mlaba has found out that he was stirring trouble at the settlement while they knew well that the council and the university are co-operating to ensure that they get proper houses.”

The vice-chancellor said he had been informed that the mayor had remarked that he was very disappointed and that he would call him and prepare a report to the UKZN council.

“I told him that when I had facts I would call him to my office,” said Makgoba.

“But the mayor has not called me and, at the moment, everything hinges on hearsay.

“We hear that they (Khan and Centre for Civil Society academic Richard Pitthouse) are not doing research, but they have set themselves as councillors in the area.

“The first thing I will do in the new year will be to call the mayor so we can deal with this matter.”

Mlaba said it was “nonsense” that he was interfering with academic independence.

“Even Makgoba will not concur with claims that I phoned him because I did no such (thing),” said Mlaba.

“These are just people who are determined to pull down our movement ahead of the elections.”

He denied claims that his office was compiling a report that would be forwarded to Makgoba.

“There is no report. I don’t care what they (academics) say. Maybe they know that they are interfering with the council’s plans,” said Mlaba.

Prof Shadrack Gutto, a Director of the Centre for African Renaissance Studies, said academic freedom was protected under section 16 of the constitution, and it should be respected.