Category Archives: Anna Majavu

SACSIS: Penalizing Protest Action

http://www.sacsis.org.za/site/article/1338

Penalizing Protest Action

by Anna Majavu

Increased police brutality and the prospect of conservative politicians using public money to sue and bankrupt organizations they ideologically oppose – these are the likely outcomes of last week’s Constitutional Court judgment against protest organisers.

In a judgment which upheld a repressive clause in the apartheid-era 1993 Regulation of Gatherings Act, Chief Justice Mogoeng Mogoeng ruled that members of the public who suffer damages from protestors have the right to recoup their losses from whoever hosted the protest – whether the damages were caused by members of the organisation, or not.

There is no onus on the person suing the organisation to prove that the damages were caused by members of the protesting organisation – the mere fact that the damage happened during the march is enough in the way of proof for anyone to be able to claim damages from the organisers.

In May 2006, after a security guards’ strike by the South African Transport and Allied Workers Union (Satawu) turned violent, then Cape Town mayor Helen Zille decided to sue for damages on behalf of individuals who had suffered losses from the strike.

Ever since then, the DA has been trying to get Parliament to pass their private members’ bill aimed at “holding unions liable for strike damages”. The Constitutional Court has now done their job for them, supported by ANC police minister Nathi Mthethwa who also weighed in on the side of the DA.

However, the judgment has a far broader reach. The head of the Freedom of Expression Institute’s law clinic, Mbalenhle Cele pointed out “assemblies, with all their potential for disruption, are often the only way for individuals to give voice to their grievances, and to do so effectively.” This is primarily because politicians only listen to the language of disruption. While unions normally follow the correct channels and apply for permission to hold marches, making their leaders easily identifiable as organisers, social movements and communities often protest spontaneously or together with other small organisation. If a small non-profit organisation or a refugee rights group happens to support one of these protests, will they be held responsible for damages as the easily identifiable party?

Unions survive off their members’ subscription fees and while some have made shady forays into the murky world of union investment companies, many unions have little reserve funds, using the bulk of member fees to cover legal costs and maintain basic offices. The DA’s hostility to organised labour and protestors in general is no secret.

The conservative opposition party has been unable to mount any effective propaganda campaign against the unions, which continue to organise high numbers of workers. Having failed to find a working class audience willing to adopt failed free market ideas, it is unsurprising that the DA would resort to finding means to financially cripple the unions – effectively the only way of silencing them.

The process of financially crippling the unions can now be accelerated by anyone with an interest in doing this – the DA, big business, some factions of the ANC and the intelligence services. Any of these groups can land unions with a R2 million damages bill simply by inserting undercover agents into a march with an instruction to cause damage to property. This is not a far-fetched notion – it has happened before and indeed, with a judgment like this already working in their favour, anti-union groups would be foolish not to use dirty tricks to finish the unions off altogether. The DA, big business, some factions of the ANC and the intelligence services are all aware that in marches of over five thousand workers, it would be difficult for participants to identify non-union members in their ranks, especially since the trade unions have a tradition of inviting supporters ranging from family members, neighbours, churchgoers, priests, and assorted leftists to their marches.

The judgment ignores the police track record of deliberately sparking violence during protests. In the judgment, Mogoeng said unions would not be held liable in the event of a policeman discharging his gun “by accident” into a crowd, causing a stampede. However, he made no mention of violent police who regularly go on the attack – deliberately and not accidentally – against protestors. The case of Andries Tatane, slain by police last year, is an example. The well-publicised case of the residents of Hangberg is another example.

When the people of this hillside community in Cape Town’s Hout Bay stood together to protect their long-standing community from gentrification, the police broke their own regulations by firing rubber bullets at close range into the residents’ faces, taking out the eyes of four people, and provoking pandemonium.

It is well-known that peaceful union marches are unlikely to end quietly because police normally attack the tail end of a march, or pick off a group of people on their way home who have become separated from the crowd. At a union march two years ago in Cape Town, police became extremely annoyed after workers burnt tyres across the road – even though there was no damage to property or person. The police later embarked on a chaotic armed, hunt of workers through the taxi rank – with the workers running for their lives and the police in hot pursuit, firing rubber bullets as they ran. The current culture of police brutality is likely to worsen as a result of this judgment.

The judgment also opens the way for politicians to use public money to promote their own political agendas. Mogoeng made much of the need to protect innocent bystanders who did not choose for their property or persons to be damaged. Yet in the SATAWU case, Zille said she herself instructed lawyers to sue the union on behalf of individuals whose cars and other property had been damaged during the march. These individuals received the assistance of the DA because the case dovetailed with the bill the DA was trying to push unsuccessfully through Parliament. Zille has never made a similar offer to pay for lawyers for the blinded residents of Hangberg to sue the police who shot their eyes out, and this was clearly an ideologically skewed use of public funds rather than a genuine defence of ordinary people.

The judgment also opens the way for politicians to attempt to claim damages even where nothing has been damaged. Zille was furious five years ago when 93 Cape metro police protested by travelling in a pre-planned convoy for two hours along the N2 highway, bringing traffic to a standstill. The protest was entirely peaceful yet if it happened today, the city could make an attempt to quantify the time spent by commuters in the traffic jam as money, and sue for these costs.

A similar scenario is already unfolding in Australia where unions are fined for every day of an unprotected strike. Under the guise of saving the public from “havoc and turmoil”, political leaders in New South Wales are currently seeking to fine unions the equivalent of R1.5 million for every day of a wildcat strike – raising the fine from the current R150 000 a day.

In Australia, workers are individually fined if they embark on unprotected strikes. Earlier this year, 13 companies that claimed to have been affected by a seven-day strike at a construction company sued more than 1000 Australian workers for striking. These workers were fined a total of R56 million, suspended for seven years – as long as they didn’t strike again during that time. In this case, private companies were able to argue that the strike had “disrupted work on a site of economic significance to the Australian economy”, the Australian newspaper reported last month.

The Mogoeng judgment in favour of the DA and police minister Nathi Mthethwa has clearly started South Africa down a similarly slippery slope.

The Times: Info bill protesters gather outside parliament

http://www.timeslive.co.za/politics/2011/11/22/info-bill-protesters-gather-outside-parliament

Info bill protesters gather outside parliament

About 600 people are protesting outside parliament against the ANC’s new secrecy law, which is likely to be passed by the National Assembly at 2pm today unless dozens of ANC MPs break ranks and vote against the Protection of State Information Bill.

Carrying placards proclaiming “Jou ma se secret” and “The truth will set us all free”, the protesters, which included grassroots community movements and journalists, said they were opposed to the bill.

A priest even offered to pray for a speedy recovery for State Security Minister Siyabonga Cwele, whom he said was suffering from paranoia after he last week labelled groups opposed to the bill as “proxies” of foreign spies.

Earlier today, the Eastern Cape-based Unemployed Peoples’ Movement described the new law as an “onslaught against democracy and people’s dignity”.

“When the people protest because of the corrupt politicians who treat the poor with contempt and a lack of caring the ANC does not listen. Instead we are beaten, jailed, tortured and even killed. Who can forget Andries Tatane? Who can forget when the residents of Hangberg in Cape Town were jailed and shot at for refusing evictions? This is not democracy. There is no freedom if the people do not know what the government is doing in their name,” said the movement’s chairperson, Ayanda Kota.

“The arms deal and its cover-up was the point at which we first lost the freedom to know and it has got worse with the secrecy bill. Politicians want to be kings and queens and not the servants of the people. Just look at their blue-light cavalcades” Kota added.

Meanwhile, the University of Cape Town said it had blanked out its home page in protest against the bill.

“UCT opposes the lack of a ‘public interest defence’ in the current version of the bill. Without such a defence mechanism, for instance, members of the media would not be able to fulfil their role as a watchdog,” the university said in a statement.

Sowetan: Mixed requests for budget policy needs

http://www.sowetanlive.co.za/news/2011/10/25/mixed-requests-for-budget-policy-needs

Mixed requests for budget policy needs

FINANCE Minister Pravin Gordhan again faces conflicting demands across the political spectrum when he presents his medium-term budget policy statement this afternoon.

Cosatu spokesman Patrick Craven said yesterday the federation expected Gordhan to lower interest rates. “The other priority must be job creation,” he said.

DA MP Dion George said it would be “politically expedient” of Gordhan to dedicate much of his speech to the global recession when the government could save R5-billion by disbanding the National Youth Development Agency, Economic Development department and ministry of Women, Children and People with Disabilities, and scrapping “pointless” district municipalities.

The DA called for R8-billion to be spent on new roads, R1-billion on teacher training and R2.6-billion to fill all vacancies in public hospitals.

It also wants subsidies to attract foreign companies to industrial development zones – and “labour market reforms” .

But Craven said Cosatu would strongly oppose this.

“Labour laws need to be strengthened and incentives inside these zones must be very carefully monitored so we can see if they are being used to create jobs and not just (to take) the profits overseas.”

Abahlali baseMjondolo (residents of the shacks) president S’bu Zikode said they had “become hopeless” about any relief for the poor.

UDM leader Bantu Holomisa called for an indaba on how to achieve economic freedom for all. “The ruling party has touted various economic policies. Consultants appear to be the sole beneficiaries.”

Cope MP Nick Koornhof said South Africa would not weather another recession unless Gordhan reined in the alarming levels of irregular government spending.

Elroy Paulus of the Black Sash said it opposed VAT being increased to fund health insurance.

The Times: Sexwale comment blasted

http://www.timeslive.co.za/politics/2011/10/03/sexwale-comment-blasted.

Sexwale comment blasted

A housing-rights organisation has asked Human Settlements Minister Tokyo Sexwale to withdraw comments about the possibility of a “cut-off date” for free housing.

The Abahlali baseMjondolo (Those Who Live in Shacks) organisation, which fights for the rights of shack dwellers, said Sexwale’s statement last week was a recipe for “uncontrolled protests”.

Sexwale told an international conference in Cape Town that the government was discussing an end to free housing.

“There has got to be a cut-off date. We are discussing that. You can’t cut off the poor right now, particularly in the current national economic environment. But we can’t sustain what we are doing for a long time,” Sexwale said.

Abahlali baseMjondolo’s Western Cape chairman, Mzonke Poni, who yesterday completed a three-day fast in protest against South Africa’s housing shortage, said the government should have held public hearings before discussing an end to free housing.

“If they open this for public comment the government will see it has no support at all,” said Poni.

“The state is already failing to build houses for the poor and now they want to have a cut-off date.

“When people occupy unused pieces of land, they unleash the police against us.

“We cannot accept an announcement that will see people move from bad to worse,” he said.

COPE MP Phumelele Ntshiqela, who claimed to represent 17000 members of an organisation called National Informal Settlements of SA, said he had been flooded with complaints since Sexwale made his comments.

“Sexwale must withdraw his statement. People are fuming over this. If the government cannot build houses or deliver services, then what do we have the government for? Housing people is sustainable because it creates jobs and restores dignity.

“We are going to fight this decision and [a cut-off date] is not going to happen.”

Richard Pithouse, a political science lecturer at Rhodes University, Grahamstown, backed the organisations and said the government had to continue providing housing until everyone was housed.

“If Sexwale thinks providing decent housing is negotiable he is completely out of touch with the political realities,” said Pithouse.

“There is no realistic vision for poor people to attain a dignified life in his world view, and we have no choice but to consider his attitudes a clear and present danger to the integrity of our society.”

Sowetan: ‘Tin Town’ residents now threaten to boycott elections

http://www.sowetanlive.co.za/news/2011/04/18/tin-town-residents-now-threaten-to-boycott-elections

‘Tin Town’ residents now threaten to boycott elections

‘Tin Town’ residents now threaten to boycott elections
18-Apr-2011 | Anna Majavu

RESIDENTS of Cape Town’s ‘Tin Town’ transit camp say they will not vote in the May 18 local government elections unless they get houses first.

More than 5000 people live in one-room tin shacks in a part of Delft, better known by its nickname of Blikkiesdorp, about 20km from the city centre.

At least 3000 are estimated to be of voting age and their votes will be pivotal in deciding who wins the Delft ward currently held by the DA’s Cynthia Claasen.

DA leader Helen Zille personally accompanied Claasen on the campaign trail during the last elections.

Despite being moves there on the understanding that they would soon get houses, some Blikkiesdorp residents have been there for more than five years.

ANC mayoral candidate Tony Ehrenreich said yesterday it was sad that the DA had left the residents in a “temporary” relocation area.

“I understand their frustration and urge them to vote. I promise them that if they vote ANC I will, as a matter of urgency, ensure that Blikkiesdorp residents are put on the fast track to get houses of their own,” Ehrenreich said.

But Blikkiesdorp informal committee spokesperson Willy Heyn said: “We have made a clear stand of , “No land, no house, no vote” for any political party in the coming municipal election.

“When we were forcibly removed from our stable homes, mayor Dan Plato promised that it would only take the government three months before they move residents of Blikkiesdorp to proper housing,” Heyn said.

Matilda Groepe, spokesperson for the Symphony Way anti-eviction campaign in the area, said four families share one outside toilet with a tap connected to the plastic basin.

“This causes serious health risks, especially for women, children, and the disabled. For upliftment in the community we requested a container from Plato to house a skills development centre, but once again our plea fell on deaf ears.

“The 2010 educational pass rate in Blikkiesdorp was 59 percent; without proper homes to study in, our children can’t learn,” she said.

Blikkiesdorp shot to prominence before the Soccer World Cup last year, with one British newspaper dubbing it “the World Cup’s shameful secret – the hungry and homeless “dumped” in a makeshift tin city where football fans will not see them”.

The city has repeatedly denied allegations that conditions are sub-standard in the camp, pointing out that homeless people often present themselves at Blikkiesdorp, begging to be allocated a shack there.