Category Archives: racism

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.

Witness: Rising xenophobia

http://www.witness.co.za/index.php?showcontent&global[_id]=25477

Rising xenophobia
23 July 2009

THIS country is awash with strikes or threatened strikes for higher wages, and with township protests about government failures in service delivery. It seems that the gloves are off in spite of, or perhaps because of, the exigencies of recessionary times.

A disturbing feature in some of the current protest has been the resurgence of xenophobia. This has been particularly noticeable on the Reef where last year’s xenophobic attacks first broke out. It is unfortunately to be expected that, in straitened times, people will turn on one another where there is perceived competition or threat. This can affect anyone deemed to be “the other”, whether the person concerned is a foreign national from elsewhere in Africa or a fellow South African of a different culture or background.  Continue reading

ANC administration sows seeds of racial discord

http://www.themercury.co.za/index.php?fArticleId=5093475

ANC administration sows seeds of racial discord

July 22, 2009 Edition 1

Trevor Ngwane

SHOUTS of “Hamba khaya! Hamba uye eBombay!” (Go home! Go to Bombay!) rang out, seemingly crystallising the mood of some of those at the public meeting called by the Durban city fathers at the ICC on July 10. The meeting concerned the impending closure of the Early Morning Market, which is hotly contested by traders of all races.

Later that afternoon I returned to my Chatsworth flat a troubled person. Most of my neighbours are of Indian descent, and since I moved here a few months ago from Soweto, they have treated me like one of their own.

As a youngster growing up in Lamontville we had stone throwing skirmishes across the Umlazi River with our Chatsworth neighbours. We all laughed hard when, in a candid moment of neighbourly bonding, I told that story to a group of Chatsworth youngsters. Everyone thought it was a joke. But suddenly, thanks to the meeting I attended, it is no longer a joke.

There was hostility and hatred among some of the people listening to the mayor and the city manager explain why the market had to go.

It was naive for any of us to imagine that decades of racism would simply disappear because our country has adopted a democratic constitution that outlaws racial discrimination.

My socialist political convictions compel me to watch out for and to combat racism with the same vigour in the new South Africa as I did in the days of apartheid.

Roy Chetty, the chairman of the Early Morning Market Support Group, was disturbed by the racism directed against people of Indian descent.

Isizulu

He objected to the decision by Mayor Obed Mlaba to speak only in isiZulu, despite many traders not understanding fully what he was saying about an issue that concerns them directly.

The mayor opened his speech saying he assumed that as South Africans all of us present should be able to understand isiZulu since it was after all one of the 11 official languages. But since not everyone knows isiZulu, Mlaba’s message contained a provocative sub-text: if you don’t understand isiZulu this might not be your meeting.

Even when translation was later provided for the other speakers it left a lot to be desired. The translation from Isizulu to English was selective. A lot was left out by the translator, either because he didn’t like translating travesty or the intention was to keep English speakers ignorant about what was being said.

If you understood isiZulu the message was crystal clear. Sometimes it was stated outright, other times it was oblique, implied or idiomatically expressed. The message? The Indians are a problem.

Despite city manager Michael Sutcliffe’s cogent Power Point presentation, many people left the ICC thinking that the main social benefit of getting rid of the market was getting rid of the Indians and that the proposed mall would provide business opportunities to long-denied Africans. (In reality, it will be chain stores of multinational corporations who will take the biggest mall locations.)

Councillor Majola, who was chairing the meeting, quoted an old “ANC strategy and tactics document” stating that the struggle was about liberating blacks in general and Africans in particular. A senior city official was less restrained. “Kufanele sibakhiphe iqatha emlonyeni” (we must remove the piece of meat from their mouths).

Given South Africa’s past, the accusations of racism and exploitation levelled at some elements within the Indian merchant class are valid.

Capitalism continues unabated in South Africa and where there is capitalism there is exploitation and oppression. Yet this should not be generalised.

One thing that has struck me about Durban is the widespread anti-Indian feeling among many Africans.

As one worker complained to me, recently: “The Indians and the makwerekwere will run this country.” Makwerekwere is the extremely derogatory – and deadly – term used for Africans who originate outside of South Africa.

But ordinary working class people are not born racist or xenophobic. These ideas are entrenched by the system.

Political and business leaders sometimes peddle racist ideas. But ideology is not just words, it is also practice. When people are forced to compete over crumbs, when the only way to go up is to push someone else down, then don’t be surprised when anti-social attitudes abound.

When people are victimised or denied economic opportunities because of their race or the perceived machinations of a racially defined cabal we can expect racist attitudes. Towards the end of his life the American black power leader Malcolm X, who fought racism by calling for black separatism, realised the futility of this approach.

Pilgrimage

Two wrongs don’t make a right. As a devout Muslim Malcolm met white Muslims for the first time in his pilgrimage to Mecca and returned a changed man, espousing class rather than race strategy to rid the world of injustice and inequality.

Nelson Mandela was exemplary in embracing his racist enemies as fellow human beings. What he failed to realise was that a system designed to make the rich richer and the poor poorer invariably breeds racism, sexism and other forms of oppression. In his long road to freedom he took a short cut – he fought racism but ducked the fight against its true source: the economic system of exploitation.

This is the trap the eThekwini Municipality is creating for itself. By deploying capitalist forces to solve the Warwick Junction hubbub of urbanisation, they will be forced to attack the many in favour of the few. They seem to be doing that with their ill-conceived plan to destroy the livelihoods of hundreds of people associated with the market.

The 1949 Durban anti-Indian race riot left 142 people dead. In May 2008 the xenophobic attacks left 62 dead.

The ANC administration in Durban should refrain from sowing dragon’s teeth as they appeared to be doing at the meeting. In their eagerness to win the argument, they retraced their steps away from South Africa’s non-racial vision. Respect and fairness should be accorded to everyone, irrespective of country of origin or historical origins of our ancestors.