Category Archives: Treatment Action Campaign

Joint statement on the murder of Thuli Ndlovu near Durban

http://www.equaleducation.org.za/article/2014-10-02-joint-statement-on-the-murder-of-thuli-ndlovu-near-durban

Statement issued by EE, TAC, SJC, EE Law Centre, Section27, Ndifuna Ukwazi

On Monday night, 29 September 2014, Thuli Ndlovu, Chairperson of the KwaNdengezi branch of the Abahlali baseMjondolo (AbM) shack-dwellers movement, was murdered in her home. KwaNdengezi is a peri-urban settlement near Pinetown, part of the eThekwini Municipality. Ndlovu’s children were on the property at the time she died. Her daughter’s 18-year old maths tutor, Sphe Madlala, was shot, and was taken to hospital in critical condition.

AbM, in their press statement, have described this murder as an assassination. Given their experience of intimidation and violence in KwaZulu-Natal, this view is not unreasonable. Continue reading

M&G Deep Read: The politics of protest

http://mg.co.za/article/2012-08-21-the-politics-of-protests-in-cape-town

The politics of protest

by Jared Sacks, The Mail & Guardian (There is a longer version of this piece at the Amandla Blog).

Protests have plagued Cape Town for years, but now they’ve begun to bleed out of township boundaries and into spaces that affect the middle class.

The City of Cape Town is currently being rocked by a spate of road blockades and other significant protests. Certain liberal NGOs have joined the Democratic Alliance in condemning the protests claiming that they are violent and “politically motivated”.

Protests in the form of marches, the burning of tyres, and road blockades, have been happening every week throughout the city for years. Most go unreported.

What seems to be different about recent protests, however, is that they’ve begun to bleed out of township boundaries and into spaces that affect Cape Town’s middle class. The blocking of Duinefontein, Vanguard and Landsdowne roads a couple of weeks ago and the recent closure of the N2 freeway by shackdwellers in Gugulethu are important examples of this shift.

On Monday last week, protesters succeeded again in blocking key arterial roads in the City: Duinefontein, Landsdowne and Mew Way, as well as attempting to repeat last Friday’s closure of the N2 – this time near Khayelitsha and by Sir Lowry’s Pass. More shack settlements seem to be joining in each day.

Seeing little change since 1994, many activists who have begun to take civil disobedience into middle class spaces argue that it is better to be vilified and taken notice of than to be given “lip service delivery” from the government.

Over the years community activists have repeatedly found that following the “correct” channels gets them nowhere. The escalation of protests and the turn to more disruptive tactics is a response to complete lack of substantive democracy for anyone who can’t afford to purchase it.

A number of actors are entering into the politics of popular protest in Cape Town. These include the country’s key political parties and their affiliates in the youth leagues, the South African National Civic Organisation (Sanco), ward committees and development forums. These organisations, while they may have some popular support in protesting communities, are generally seeking to leverage attention off the protests’ legitimate grievances.

Civil disobedience

The closing of roads, burning of tyres and destruction of government property (all by themselves constituting non-violent acts of civil disobedience) almost always have the tacit support of the settlement where the protest originates – even if sometimes only a small portion of the settlement is actively engaging in such acts of civil disobedience.

These protests, especially when they are coordinated to have a maximum disruptive effect on the socio-economic life of the middle class and elite, can have a profoundly positive effect in the long run. Even when some of these actions lead to a certain amount of violence (such as self-defence against routinely vicious actions of the police), there can be favourable outcomes for society.

All over the world, mass civil disobedience (whether violent or non-violent) has significantly altered the course of history, toppling dictators, changing economic policies, and turning public opinion. The Egyptian revolution is a case in point. Hap protesters not physically battled the paramilitary police, thrown rocks, engaged in thousands of road blockades, and burned down government buildings which were key symbols of the dictatorship, Mubarak would have likely remained in power for the rest of his life.

It is quite concerning, therefore, that a collection of Cape Town-based activist oriented NGOs have been making a significant effort to vilify certain forms of protest that do no fit within its directors’ and funders’ view of what constitute ‘acceptable’ forms of protest.

To be sure, many of these NGOs can claim important victories. The Treatment Action Campaign, for instance, has had a significant impact in helping turn the tide away from Aids denialism. However, just as often, well-funded protests led by NGOs have gone nowhere. Despite bringing more than 10 000 people into the streets of Cape Town last year, Equal Education has not been able to compel the government to build more libraries. Instead, the Western Cape is now closing down 27 schools in the province.

Of course, this is not to say that legal and well funded mass protests are worthless. They definitely have the ability to have a significant effect. Yet, when poor black communities cannot afford to hire 100 buses to bring enough people to Parliament to make a difference, then other protest tactics must also be considered. When the “proper” channels of protest (including legal challenges, petitions, marches, etc.) are tried year after year to no avail, oppressed communities have every right to engage in other more disruptive acts of civil disobedience.

Langa

One of the best examples of real immediate success from illegal protest tactics was the 2007 blockade of the N2 by thousands of residents of the Joe Slovo shack settlement in Langa. The community was resisting the then Housing Minister Lindiwe Sisulu’s attempting to evict 20 000 Joe Slovo residents to the bleak, underdeveloped township of Delft. After authorities ignored all of their various legal protests and attempts to negotiate, the residents’ blockade of the N2 became the key turning point in their struggle. The blockade, a statement that reverberated through public opinion, eventual destroyed the state’s political will to actually carry out the evictions.

Yet in 2010, the Treatment Action Campaign (TAC) and its allied NGOs, together with the South African Communist Party, issued a startling attack on Abahlali baseMjondolo’s non-violent but disruptive informal settlement strike which they recklessly caricatured, in a manner that drew heavily from the negative stereotypes that are frequently held against poor people. During the recent protests, Vuyiseka Dubula, general secretary of the TAC, penned an article in which she called for protests “built on alliances, strategy, clear realistic demands and the genuine intent to improve the lives of people”.

The concern with this assertion is not that alliances, strategy, demands or intent to improve people’s lives are wrong. Instead, the problem here is the self-righteous assumption that large numbers of shackdwellers who are protesting are somehow incapable of thinking for themselves, lack “genuine intent” to improve people’s lives and are in fact actively trying to destroy their their communities.

Whether or not the ANC Youth League is involved in diluting the authentic grievances of the community, the truth is that people are protesting as a strategy to improve their lives.

Thus, what Vuyiseka, TAC and its affiliated NGOs are really saying is that communities should protest their way, should build alliances under their umbrella, and should make only “realistic” (reformist) demands that are acceptable to their vein of sectarian liberal politics. Yet their approach to donor-funded activism often does not work or is unaffordable to shackdwellers – thereby dictating who can afford to protest.

Of course, we must still oppose authoritarianism, recklessness and political opportunism when it emerges within popular struggles. Violence for the sake of violence is nothing but dangerous and regressive. Stoning buses that try to cross through the erected barricades is reckless and does not help protesters’ cause. But to oppose a key protest tactic of the poor such as road blockades, on principle, is to condemn a genuine mass demand for social inclusion and relegate social change to donor funded NGOs.

The anti-apartheid struggle took a multitude of different strategies and organisations to overthrow the Nats. Likewise, in the post-1994 era where neo-apartheid remains a defining feature of South African society, a truly united democratic front will also have to be open to many different ways of struggling for change.

The Big Issue: Violence in Khayelitsha sparks feud between lobby groups

Notes: 1. Much of the reporting on the current upsurge in protest in Khayelitsha has followed TAC and conflated disruption (e.g. road blockades) in which no person is harmed with ‘violence’. 2. Not a single person has been physically harmed in any way in any protest organised by AbM WC and, therefore, none of these protests can legitimately be called ‘violent’. 3. Much of the reporting has, again following TAC, failed to understand that there are various groups organising protests in Khayelitsha and not just AbM WC. 4. AbM WC has issued a strong condemnation of the ANC YL. 5. The current wave of protest in Khayelitsha needs to be understood in the context of the national rebellion of the poor that has been raging across the country, outside of the control of any organisation, since 2004. 6. The emergence of the road blockade as a key tactic of popular protest across South Africa needs to be understood in the context of the global emergence of the road blockade as a key tactic of the urban poor. 7. It needs to be kept in mind that TAC, along with the SACP, is formally linked to and supportive of the ANC and that there is a highly contested local government election coming soon which ABM WC will boycott.

http://www.bigissue.org.za/latestnews.php?nid=91

Violence in Khayelitsha sparks feud between lobby groups
SOURCE: By Aidan Fitzgerald
DATE: 2010-11-11

Civil rights groups and NGOs have laid the blame for an outbreak of violence during a week of protest in Khayelitsha squarely on the shoulders of Abahlali baseMjondolo (AbM), a militant shackdwellers association.

The Treatment Action Campaign (TAC), the Social Justice Coalition (SJC) and Equal Education (EE) all denounced the AbM organised week of informal settlement strikes, which took place from October 21 to 28, claiming that the staged protests in Khayelitsha were a “call to violence”.

“The fact is that there has been a dramatic increase in violent protest since AbM’s campaign commenced. One cannot call for ‘chaos’, and then take no responsibility when chaos ensues,” said SJC co-chairperson Angy Peter, speaking on behalf of the SJC and TAC.

According to Peter, more than 15 vehicles were stoned and set ablaze during the protests, halting public transport for weeks and preventing people from getting to work. A local Khayelitsha fire station was also stoned by a group of approximately 20 protesters.

The Khayelitsha police station was contacted to confirm the reports, but were unable to comment at the time of going to press.

Mzonke Poni, a representative for Abahlali in the Western Cape, denied any wrongdoing: “We do not support any action that can result in any harm to another human being but we support road blockades and burning tyres as a legitimate tactic. We are deeply disturbed that these organisations, which have a history of progressive struggle, have tried to demonize our movement and have engaged in such reckless and dishonest statements.”

“We are unapologetic about the need for the poor to disrupt business as usual to draw attention to our suffering. There is nothing wrong with disruption as a tactic of struggle,” Poni said of the tactics used by AbM, a group that started in Durban as a shack-dwellers movement and has now swelled to the largest organisation of militant poor in post-apartheid South Africa.

But Peter argued that these tactics were counterproductive: “We do not agree with AbM’s reluctance to engage with Government. The ‘informal settlement strike’ failed to make ‘the whole of the city ungovernable’ [as AbM claimed it would]. People outside of Khayelitsha were hardly aware that it was taking place. The only people who suffered were the poor,” said Peter.

Poni was quick to refute this claim: “The protests got a lot of media attention, and this attention will help the politicians to understand that we will not continue to suffer in silence.”

“There are always lessons to be learnt,” he said, acknowledging that there were flaws in the week-long strike campaign. “We will discuss this campaign in our movement and see what lessons we should learn this time. But one thing is for sure – the struggle continues.”

We Call on TAC Comrades to Stop Making Divisive Statements and Accusation of ABM WC

We Call on TAC Comrades to Stop Making Divisive Statements and Accusation of ABM WC

The Treatment Action Campaign, Social Justice Coalition and Equal Education have accused Abahlali baseMjondolo in the Western Cape of promoting violence and disrupting their meetings. I would like to make it clear that Abahlali baseMjondolo does not condone violence, meaning harm to persons. Our week of action in October was a strike by shack dwellers, by means of direct action common to protests in other countries. Moreover the accusation that we have disrupted meetings of these organizations is a complete falsehood. Those responsible for disrupting the Irene Grootboom lecture by Comrade Vavi in Site B, and those who disrupted a more recent meeting, are associated with the ANC Youth League in Khayelitsha and not with Abahlali baseMjondolo. We ask these organizations to stop making divisive statements and to publicly withdraw their accusations.

Mzonke Poni,
Abahlali baseMjondolo (Western Cape)
073 2562 036

Comment on the TAC Statement

http://writingrights.org/2010/10/13/unite-poor-and-working-class-people-reject-abahlali-basemjondolo%E2%80%99s-call-for-violence/#comment-3565

Response to the TAC Statement on Zackie Achmat’s blog

I am very disappointed at this statement by TAC which I find factually inaccurate and opportunistic. It also fails to actually do anything but help the oppressors divide the oppressed. I have always had a lot of respect for Zackie Achmat but am upset at his unjust stance in this case.

Firstly, the protests are not really violent. Not a single person has been hurt (this cannot be said for COSATU protests where people are often assaulted). Burning tyres and blockading roads is not violent protest but a legitimate way of poor people demanding attention when they are being ignored.

Secondly, it is unfair and I would say purposefully misleading to mis-comment on statements while not actually providing links to such statements. For instance, Zackie says that AbM wrote a statement basing “white middle-class people”. However, if you look at the actual AbM statement, it does not mention race nor does it make any blanket statements against middle class people. The statement can be found here: http://abahlali.org//////node/7364

Finally, it is paternalistic to claim that – as a non shackdweller – you know what is and is not the right way to struggle for a shackdweller. Yes, debates and discussions between different organisations regarding strategy and tactic are important. However, this does not mean that one should condemn others without first trying to really understand where they are coming from. Yes violence is bad but where is the actual violence really coming from?

The problem with many (not all) middle class activists is that they think their ideology is always right. They have not interest in true participatory democracy and building democratic forms of organising and democratic movements. They want to control everything. They want to decide how the poor can struggle and they want to speak for the poor instead of struggling in solidarity with them.

This is why TAC, SJC, and EE can never build long-term mass movements. If you are a top-down NGO/Movement, then you will never sustain your mass base. The masses will always move away from you because they never truly feel that they “own” the movement.

Also, it should be noted that while TAC, et al, were quick to condemn AbM, they didn’t bother to first meet with AbM and find out why they had chosen road blockades as a protest tactic. This shows that TAC et all had little desire to really dialogue with shackdwellers. Go to one of AbM’s mass community meetings and you will see thoughtful dialogue and a lot of concern about why the government refuses to hear their demands. It is wrong, patronising, and unjust to claim that AbM is a small group of self-styled revolutionaries without even taking a look at how they are internally organised and how decisions are made.

To close, I’d like to call attention to the hypocrisy in this stance given Zackie Achmat’s laudable stance against the oppression of the Palestinians. Yet, when Palestinians protest and conduct civil disobedience, they often try to block roads, even throw rocks and damage property of the Israeli government, etc. Yet Zackie does not condemn them. They are fighting for liberation. They need to have their voices heard. But AbM cannot fight for their own liberation by blocking roads?