Category Archives: Mercury

Mercury: A government that is a danger to the people

This article was first published by SACSIS and was also published in the Cape Times on Pambazuka in French and in Portuguese at Passa Palavra..

http://www.themercury.co.za/index.php?fArticleId=3695463

A government that is a danger to the people

February 26, 2010 Edition 1

Richard Pithouse

THE degeneration of the ANC has reached the point where it poses a clear and present danger to the integrity of society.

Julius Malema is one of the more flamboyant examples of how a movement committed to national liberation has become, in the words of Frantz Fanon, “a means of private advancement”. But Malema is hardly alone. The Communication Workers Union is entirely correct to have diagnosed an “embedded and deep-seated Kebble-ism” within the ANC.

In recent days it has been revealed that Nonkululeko Mhlongo, the mother of two of Jacob Zuma’s children, has a multimillion-rand contract to provide catering services to the KwaZulu-Natal legislature. And Zweli Mkhize’s wife and daughter secured a R3 million tender from the Department of Correctional Services.

This sort of thing has been going on for years and cannot be ascribed to a few problematic individuals. On the contrary, in cases like the arms deal and Valli Moosa’s double dealing between Eskom and the ANC fundraising committee, the organisation as a whole has been deeply compromised. It has also been collectively compromised by the systemic failure to take a clear position against individuals involved in dubious practices.

It may be true that the fish rots from the head, but it is essential that we understand that the degeneration of the ANC is not just a question of the increasing power of a predatory elite within the party.

Empowerment used to be imagined as a collective project that could transform society from below.

It is now understood, at all levels of the party, as a matter of personal incorporation into the minority that is able to profit from our increasingly unequal society.

This process does go some way towards the deracialisation of domination, but there’s not much ground for social hope if that’s the limit of our aspirations.

The ANC has abandoned the language of social justice for the fantasy of a post-political language of “delivery”.

This language assumes that the state only has to meet people’s most basic needs for survival and that this is a simple question of technical efficiency. The first problem with the language of delivery is that delivery itself is often a strategy for containing popular aspirations rather than a strategy for achieving universal human flourishing.

Dumping people in “housing opportunities” in peripheral ghettos where there is very little hope for much more than a child support grant and the possibility of a short- term “job opportunity” might keep them from blockading a major road, but it’s only development in the most perverse sense of the term.

The second problem is that the fantasy of development as a post-political question of government working “faster, harder and smarter” fails to engage with the deeply political realities that shape any attempt at development.

Political decisions have to be taken on questions like whether or not the social value of land and services should come before their commercial value. When the politics of these questions is not addressed, “service delivery” can only be “rolled out” in the margins of society with the result that it itself becomes a process of active marginalisation.

But the inevitably political nature of development is not just about the competing interests of the poor on one side and the rich and corporate power on the other.

There is also a politics that plays out between people on the ground and local party elites.

Time and again officials, often trying to follow directives from senior politicians in good faith, find that their attempts to implement technocratic development are captured by local party elites and appropriated and redirected for their own purposes.

This is not always a case of simple plunder. Often the allocation of housing and services, as well as all the contracts that go with this process, is subsumed into the systems of clientelism and patronage by which the ANC often cements political support within the party at the local level.

In many cases, development projects justified in the name of meeting the needs of the people become projects that are primarily orientated towards cementing alliances within the micro-local structures of the party. Its ward committees and local branch executive committees are populated by a multitude of mini-Malemas.

In Fanon’s analysis there is, inevitably, an authoritarian underside that accompanies the degeneration of the party into a “means of private advancement”. He writes that the party “helps the government to hold the people down. It becomes more and more clearly anti-democratic, an implement of coercion”. A party that says and that must continue to say that it is for the people when in fact it has become a means of private advancement will inevitably collapse into paranoia and authoritarianism as it tries to square the circle by pretending, to itself as much as anyone else, that private enrichment is somehow the real fruit of national liberation.

In contemporary South Africa it is not at all unusual to find that people live in fear of local councillors and their ward committees and branch executive committees.

In fact it is no exaggeration to say that we have developed a two-tier political system with liberal political rights for the middle classes and increasingly severe curtailment of basic political rights for the poor.

Poor people’s movements have long been subject to unlawful and violent repression carried out with impunity by local political elites.

But as these practices become normalised they are carried out ever more brazenly.

The enthusiastic support from key figures in the local and provincial ANC for the attacks on Abahlali baseMjondolo in Durban in September last year stand as one of the lowest points to which the ANC has yet descended in post-apartheid South Africa.

But the fate of Chumani Maxwele, the Cape Town jogger on whom the full and at times lunatic paranoia of the ANC descended last week, has done more than any other event to reveal to a wider public the paranoid authoritarianism that is deeply entrenched within the ANC. Of course there are people and strands within the party that are opposed to the way in which it has become another predatory excrescence on society.

But the ANC no longer has any real political vision and is deeply and often violently suspicious of any real politics that emerges from below – be it from within or outside of the party. It can issue statements against corruption, but the fact is that the political machine by which it is elected is built on systemic patronage, clientelism and corruption. It cannot oppose any of this without fundamentally opposing what it has become.

And it’s not at all clear if there is any real prospect for the organisation to develop a meaningful political vision with which it can mobilise itself against itself – against what the National Union of Metalworkers has called the “marauding gang” that has compromised the ANC at every level.

If the task of posing an alternative political vision can be still be taken up effectively it may well fall to those unions, poor people’s movements and churches that have already become the conscience of our society.

Mercury: KZN police told to go easy on rubber bullets for crowd control

So its perfectly fine for the police to shoot at the poor with rubber bullets, even when protests are entirely peaceful, except when the eyes of the (rich – and white?) world are watching….It is clear who really counts for Willies Mchunu. This is disgraceful.

http://www.themercury.co.za/index.php?fArticleId=5148448

KZN police told to go easy on rubber bullets for crowd control

September 02, 2009 Edition 1

Wendy Jasson da Costa

KwaZulu-Natal police have been warned not to use rubber bullets indiscriminately as it might send the wrong message to the world before the soccer World Cup in South Africa next year.

The warning by the MEC for Transport, Community Safety and Liaison, Willies Mchunu, follows Monday’s clash between two IFP Youth Brigade factions and the police in central Durban.

“The SA Police Service will investigate innovative ways of dealing with public protests and conflict situations other than the indiscriminate use of rubber bullets,” said Mchunu.

Police used rubber bullets to disperse the two groups and a Sunday Times photographer was injured.

Mchunu said pictures of the photographer beamed across the world left a bitter taste in the mouth.

He apologised for the “mishap” and said he wanted to assure the public that the government’s belief in media freedom remained intact.

“Events such as these might send a wrong signal to the fans queuing to come to South Africa for the 2010 Fifa World Cup,” he said. “I appeal to police officers to be cautious in using rubber bullets. Do not do it indiscriminately.”

The conflict between the two IFP factions occurred as the party’s national executive committee held a meeting inside the building. It came after increasing calls within the party for transformation, including a change of leadership.

Yesterday the IFP Women’s Brigade condemned the clash.

“The IFP women wish to distance themselves from every attempt to bypass democratic processes in the party and force a leadership succession against the will of the party’s grassroots supporters,” said Brigade chairwoman Thembi Nzuza.

She said the women’s brigade believed that the rank and file supported IFP president Mangosuthu Buthelezi as “resolutely” as ever.

Mercury: A cry for deep structural change

http://www.themercury.co.za/index.php?fArticleId=5103297

A cry for deep structural change
The service delivery protests that have swept the country are a demand for an end to the contempt of the ruling elites for the poor

July 29, 2009 Edition 1

Imraan Buccus

OUR country is burning, and the leading lights in the new cabinet are out shopping for expensive cars. The long-standing disconnect between the political class and ordinary people has become a chasm.

The rebellions have made it abundantly clear that we cannot go on as before.

The political class thought that replacing Thabo Mbeki with President Jacob Zuma would pacify the people. The people have smashed that illusion to smithereens. Every day they are burning that illusion in the streets. It is clear that all politicians are now objects of popular suspicion.

This is a time of real risk and real opportunity for the country. Most of the recent protests are a progressive demand for social inclusion. This is a demand that we can all support and, if heeded, could result in real changes.

However, some of the protests have indicated a deeply disturbing return to xenophobic attitudes in which foreigners are blamed for the failures of our political class.

Our task is to oppose xenophobia as militantly as possible and to support the progressive protests and try to link them up so that their demand for social inclusion becomes impossible to ignore.

But it is clear that there is a long way to go. When politicians say that a basic income grant is unacceptable because it will cause “dependency”, they are clearly living on another planet.

A basic income for all will free people from the shame and frustration of poverty. It will empower. It will give everyone a sense of real citizenship.

But the machinations of some among our political class in Durban are cause for even greater concern, especially the obscene attempts to stir up anti-Indian racism around the Early Morning Market issue.

There have been many societies in which elites, confronted with a rebellious populace, have tried to channel the people’s anger towards foreigners, minorities and so on.

The Nazis did this in Germany in the 1930s with their anti-Jewish politics. More recently, Robert Mugabe did this in Zimbabwe with his attacks on homosexuals, and the BJP has done it in India with its anti-Muslim and anti-Christian politics.

If our own local elites are so morally bankrupt that they are willing to try to stir up anti-Indian sentiment to channel popular anger away from where it should be directed – to politicians and big business – it is essential that we all unite around the values of the Freedom Charter and the constitution: South Africa belongs to all who live in it.

On this principle, there can be no compromise. We cannot tolerate any form of racism or xenophobia, whether it comes from our so-called leaders or from the base of society.

Trevor Ngwane’s recent article in The Mercury is an exemplary form of the kind of clear ethical principles that we need to engage into allaspects of our social engagement. The incredible ongoing anti-xenophobic work by grass-roots movements around the country is also exemplary.

Some political leaders think they can keep their game going by turning the poor on one another.

But if people of principle can succeed in opposing this, then it becomes clear that the only real way out of this crisis will be deep structural change in our society.

That structural change will have to be economic – everyone needs a decent life and everyone needs it as quickly as possible. This means that a basic income grant is an urgent priority.

We also need radical land reform and a mass public works project to create employment and build houses.

However, that structural change will also have to be political. Grass-roots movements have been rebelling against ward councillors and refusing to vote since 2004. They are not anti-democratic.

But they are against a form of democracy in which parties exert a top-down control over communities. There is a clear demand for a radicalisation of democracy. People want a bottom-up politics.

The deep structural change that is required has to be ethical. Our society is rank with crass materialism, corruption and a general contempt towards the poor. The political classes have to live simply and to forgo the BMWs and Johnnie Walker Blue. Politics has to be about service – not plunder.

The rebellions that have swept the country are a demand for deep change, and they will produce deep change. The question is whether this change will be progressive or reactionary. If we pass this test, a promising future beckons. If we fail this test we will slowly sink into disaster.

This may sound dramatic. But when burning barricades block so many of our streets, when the police shoot at protesters every day and when hundreds of protesters are sitting in jail cells, the situation is very serious. We ignore the seriousness of the situation at our peril.

Mercury: Police target ringleaders

http://www.themercury.co.za/index.php?fArticleId=5093528

Police target ringleaders
Service protest anger boils over

July 22, 2009 Edition 1

SHAUN SMILLIE, POLOKO TAU & SAPA

SOUTH Africa has been gripped by a wave of violent service provision protests in three provinces, with fears that it might escalate and spill over into other provinces.

The protests in recent weeks depict a government still treading water in the race to keep democracy afloat, analysts say.

Anger against inadequate municipal services has boiled over after President Jacob Zuma’s administration was elected, under pressure to deliver on election promises.

Yesterday, protesters fought running battles with police through the streets of Siyathemba, which borders the town of Balfour in Mpumalanga.

Police fired rubber bullets and teargas, and cleared the barricades. They also called up reinforcements. Superintendent Meshack Mtsweni said police had changed tactics.

“We are focusing on the ringleaders. We have specific people who are identifying who the ringleaders are,” he said.

Police had arrested one ringleader.

Nomvula Mhlongo, who is 89, was on the streets of Siyathemba township taunting the police from behind a barricade of burning tyres.

She was there because she still lived in the same house that flooded in summer and got too cold in winter. “There is niks hier and I have been here all my life,” she shouted.

Yesterday, 99 protesters appeared in the Balfour Magistrate’s Court on a charge of public violence.

At least eight foreign-owned shops stood looted or gutted. The few locally-owned shops stood out, as they were boarded up, but untouched. At the Balfour police station, police were working in shifts and a braai had been organised to feed them. Also at the station were foreigners desperate to organise an escort to their shops.

One of them was Abrham Ayano, an Ethiopian. “This place is supposed to be life in heaven. But I have just risked my life for nothing,” he said.

Ayano’s shop in Greylingstad had been looted and he didn’t have a place to stay for the night.

Meanwhile, a stalemate, cushioned by promises of action from a councillor not directly responsible for the ward, led to protesters marching on the Thokoza police station, where they formed a human wall across the main entrance. Once again, the police readied for battle, but the tense stand-off ended without further violence.

The Ekurhuleni Municipality was quick to respond, asking the community to respect the law and promising to deal with the issues.

The worst-hit provinces were the Eastern Cape, Limpopo and Mpumalanga, where the number of households with access to water was 73 percent, 83 percent and 89 percent respectively. In the Eastern Cape, 66 percent of households used electricity for lighting, with 81 percent in Limpopo and 82 percent in Mpumalanga.

Nationally, housing provision by the government had dropped by 8.2 percent between April 2007 and March 2008, compared to the same period the previous year.

Mercury: Four arrested over shack building material

http://www.themercury.co.za/index.php?fArticleId=4985930

Four arrested over shack building material

May 18, 2009 Edition 1

NOMPUMELELO MAGWAZA

FOUR people were arrested in Durban yesterday after they were found in possession of suspected stolen building material.

Sydenham police Superintendent Glen Nayager said that residents from the Foreman Road informal settlement had notified officers that the material, which was intended for the reconstruction of burnt shacks, was being stolen.

He said the police had watched the area and four men travelling in a bakkie with the building material were arrested yesterday.

“They were taken to Sydenham police station and were later charged with being in possession of suspected stolen material,” said Nayager.

Foreman Road ANC chairwoman Patricia Mjoli, however, denied that the material had been stolen. She said the remaining material had been stored in some of the rebuilt shacks by the Foreman Road ANC committee for safety.

“I was one of the people asked by the committee to store doors and window frames. The committee had decided to remove the material to a safe place this morning (yesterday), but they left some in our shacks. Then people stormed into my shack, demanding the material, and I was afraid that they would hurt me.”

Mjoli, who was not among those arrested yesterday, said she had been accused by locals of stealing building material that belonged to the settlement’s residents. She could not explain why it had not been used and had been stored.

Nayager said the police had been called to the settlement to break up fights between residents later in the day.

“People’s houses had been broken into after others found building material inside their newly built shacks. We had to break up fights and we used stun grenades to disperse the residents. Some people were taken in for questioning,” he said.

He said police were monitoring the area and would be there for the night.