Category Archives: South African Council of Churches

Daily Maverick: In embracing Marikana, the SACC revitalises itself

http://dailymaverick.co.za/article/2012-09-17-in-embracing-marikana-the-sacc-revitalises-itself

In embracing Marikana, the SACC revitalises itself

Khadija Patel

SA’s beleaguered government continues its security crackdown in Marikana, with the South African National Defence Force announcing that it deployed 1,000 soldiers to the restive mining town in the North West. But even as President Zuma attempted – not very successfully – to allay fears about government’s respect for civil liberties, it was the South African Council of Churches on the ground at Marikana, helping workers apply for permission to march. By KHADIJA PATEL.

“It seems as if both government and Lonmin misread the situation on the platinum belt, and now what seemed resolvable might become an untenable situation,” Bishop Jo Seoka, president of the South African Council of Churches (SACC) said in a statement released by the Bench Marks Foundation on Saturday. Against the backdrop of teargas, rubber bullets and a noxious cocktail of fear and hatred among striking workers and residents in Marikana, Sekoa’s warning of an “untenable situation” was further strengthened by confirmation from the South African National Defence Force that troops had indeed been deployed to Marikana.

“The soldiers were deployed at the request of the police to support them in their operation,” SANDF spokesman Brigadier General Xolani Mabanga is reported by Sapa to have said. According to Mabanga, the soldiers in Marikana hail from the air force, the army and the military health services. And as South Africans react with alarm to the scale of the security presence in Marikana, Sekoa believes the government’s most recent attempts to assert control over the striking workers threatens the gains made in negotiations.

“I am concerned that all the hard work around the peace accord, the negotiations with Lonmin and the rock drillers, where we were making a lot of progress, might now come to an abrupt end,” he said. According to him, the reaction of both government and Lonmin has been hampered by a lack of understanding of the underlying problem.

“Workers, whether in Lonmin or Amplats, have legitimate grievances – grievances that go back years – that have now come to the surface. I know that it is not instigators that are driving the work stoppages, but genuine issues of absolute poverty, lack of respect for workers in the economy and how they contribute to the overall development of the country,” Sekoa said.

Sekoa is also chairperson of the Bench Marks Foundation, but it is in his role as president of the SACC that he has come to the fore in Marikana. And yet just a few months ago, detractors from within the SACC had predicted the untimely demise of the organisation. It is exactly this sort of critical take on Marikana, which the SACC has taken in recent weeks through Sekoa, that many predicted the organisation was no longer capable of. In March this year, dissidents within the organisation told the Mail & Guardian that the organisation’s “strategic capability to be critical has been depleted”. According to these disgruntled insiders, the SACC no longer enjoyed political leverage and had little influence over the president.

And as calls for urgent funding fell on deaf ears and the organisation’s financial woes continued to worsen, provincial and national staff members of the SACC rejected a mass retrenchment proposal by its national executive committee. Speaking to Daily Maverick on Sunday evening, Rev. Mautji Pataki, General Secretary of the SACC, refused to comment on the health of the organisation’s finances or the current standing of the impasse between SACC staff and the organisation’s leadership over the retrenchment packages. Indeed, complaints regarding the SACC leadership raised by its staff are remarkably similar to grievances of striking miners in Marikana against the National Union of Mineworkers.

In a statement released by SACC staff in July, it is claimed the “failure of the [SACC’s national executive committee] to consult the staff of the SACC [about retrenchment packages] is a symptom of individual interests, agendas and power struggles which contradicts the ethos of the SACC operating in a post-Apartheid, constitutionally democratic South Africa.”

Even though such criticism of the organisation is pervasive, the SACC is an organisation with a proud history. When it was formed in 1968, the organisation was meant to foster black leadership in Christian churches to promote the liberation struggle on religious and moral grounds. As the SACC grew, it was key to the revival of mass action against Apartheid in the 1980s. And from 1985, it was a vocal proponent of the campaign for sanctions against South Africa. Previous leaders of the SACC include luminaries like Archbishop Emeritus Desmond Tutu, Rev. Frank Chikane and the late Beyers Naude. The organisation is still housed in Khotso House, which of course also housed Cosatu, among others.

Despite its links to the ANC, the organisation has however not been a praise singer for the ruling party. At various times the SACC has taken opposing stances to government. Notably, earlier this year the organisation met with Deputy President Kgalema Mothlanthe to voice their reservations on the controversial e-tolling proposal. “While the SACC accepted the rationale of the Gauteng Freeway Improvement Project as part of the strategy to decongest the roads, they expressed concerns at the state of public transport and urged government to take urgent steps to provide a reliable, efficient and quality public transport system,” the organisation said in a statement following the meeting.

But it is perhaps in Durban, in the aftermath of the Kennedy Road violence in 2009, that the SACC’s stance was most similar to the one they have adopted on the Marikana crisis of today. In September 2009, a group of 40 people is reported to have attacked a youth meeting of the shack dwellers’ movement, Abahlali baseMjondolo. The attackers allegedly demolished residents’ homes and two people were killed in the ensuing violence. Suspicion was rife that the tragedy was perpetrated by ANC members and local police. And the SACC was scathing in its criticism.

“The Sydenham Police failed to provide the security that the people of Kennedy Road deserve,” Eddie Makue, former General Secretary of the SACC, said in a statement.

Fast-forward to Marikana, then, and an organisation under great strain from within has been resurgent, earning the trust of workers and mine management alike. It was the SACC who succeeded in brokering talks between Lonmin management and striking workers. The church organisation said its president, Bishop Jo Seoka, had persuaded Lonmin executives to finally meet striking miners in Marikana. “We received a mandate from workers that they were eager to meet management and we were able to speak to both management and workers,” Pataki explained.
“We started on the same day of the shootings,” Pataki said, denying strongly that it was the shootings that had taken the SACC to Marikana. He insisted it was co-incidental that the shootings occurred on the same day the SACC began working there. Pataki, however, rejects assertions that it is the SACC now representing workers’ demands in Marikana better than the National Union of Mineworkers (NUM). “They have just asked us to open the road for them,” he said.

Yet it is telling that mineworkers in Marikana have shown more trust in religious leaders in the guise of the SACC than they have in NUM. Pataki nonetheless believes it is the authority of the church that strengthens the legitimacy of SACC in Marikana. “We represent the church. We simply walked into Marikana, knowing nobody there, and people welcomed us,” Pataki said.

“Anybody who does not trust people of the church, well, I don’t know what you can say about them.”

Churches Outraged by Threats Against SACC President & Anglican Bishop

Churches Outraged by Threats Against SACC President & Anglican Bishop

The South African Council of Churches and its international ecumenical partners are shocked and outraged by the death threats against its President, Bishop Jo Seoka, and members of his family.

On Tuesday morning, 15 March 2011, five men armed with guns arrived at Bishop Seoka’s Pretoria home, declaring their intention to kill the Bishop and his wife. The Bishop and his wife were not at home at the time, but the intruders returned later in the day looking for them. They also made remarks that suggested that they were watching the Bishop and his wife’s movements.

Yesterday, two different people telephoned the Bishop’s home enquiring from those present about the Bishop’s whereabouts. The callers reiterated their threats against the Bishop and left a message that he should pack and leave the house.

Although the Bishop remains calm and spiritually strong, Bishop Seoka’s colleagues in the ecumenical movement are extremely concerned about these threats, which have understandably caused members of his family a great deal of anxiety. At the time that these events occurred, the Bishop was hosting a meeting of the SACC’s international ecumenical partners, who are equally disturbed by these reports.

At the moment, we have no information about who is behind these threats or their motives. However, we recognise that Bishop Seoka, who is the Anglican Bishop of Pretoria, has long been an outspoken advocate for social and economic justice and a courageous opponent of corruption and unethical business practices in his capacity as a leader of the ecumenical movement.

Furthermore, we cannot take these threats lightly because we know that clergy are often vulnerable. We have been shocked and saddened by past incidents in which clergy and church leaders have been murdered.

The Gauteng Police Commissioner has been notified of these threats, and we appreciate his cooperation in enhancing security for the Bishop and his family.

The SACC will not allow threats such as these to deter us from pursuing our calling to fulfil the gospel imperatives to be in solidarity with the poor and marginalised and to provide moral leadership to the nation.

– ends –

Issued by the Office of the SACC General Secretary
For more information, contact:
Rev. Mautji Pataki, General Secretary (082 862 4396)

iSACC Ikhala Ngodlame Lokuhlasela Kwentando Yeninigi

ISACC IKHALA NGODLAME LOKUHLASELWA KWENTANDO YENINGI

ISACC (South African Council of Churches) okuyinhlangano ongumzimba wamabandla aseNingizimu Afrika, ikhala ngokuhlaselwa kwamalunga omphakathi ohluphekayo futhi ongahlomile ohlala kuKennedy Road, eThekwini owaziwa njengaBahlali baseMjondolo. Kusithusile ukuhlaselwa ngonya kwabaholo balenhlangano. Isono salomphakathi ukumelana nokususwa kulendawo nokulelwa indawo abayibiza ngamakhaya. NgoMayo ka2009 bahambisa isikhalo sabo kwiNkantolo yoMthethosisekelo. Lokhu kwakuqhakambisa ukuzimisela kwalomphakathi ukuzimisela kwabo ukuthi izikhalo zabio zihlaziye ngendlale yentando yeningi kanye nehambisana nomthethosisekelo.

NNgomqgibelo wangomhlaka 27 Septemba 2009 ababehlomile – bezenza inkampani yezokuphepha – bahlasela abaholi baBahlali baseMjondolo kanye namanye amalunga omphakathi akuKennedy Road. Am,aphoyisa atshelwa ngokwenzekayo ngalokukuhlaselwa futhi acelwa ukuthi angenelele, kodwa ahluleka ukuvikela nokuqanda udlame nokucekela phansi okwenzeka cishe usuku lonke. Abantu abambalwa labulawa futhi inqwaba yabantu bashiwa bengenazo izindawo zokuhlala kwadingeka ukuthi babaleke nalokhu ababekugqokile.

Omunye wababehlaselwa wathi “isono esasenza ukuthi sihlale sibhikilisha ngokuthula nangendlela yentando yeningi ukuze izingane zethu nabathandiwe bethu bahlale bephephile.”

Umbhishobhi Urubin Phillip ongusihlalo weSACC iKwaZulu-Natal Christian Council kanye nombhishobi webandla laseAngican ukhulume wathi “Ngadabuka kakhulu ngenkathi ngiqala ngizwa ngisihluku esenzeka emijondolo ekuKennedy Road. Uke wachitha isikhathi esiningi kulomphakathi futhi uyaqhubeka nokubalthela izinkonzo. Ianglican Archibishop yaseKapa, uThabo Makgoba, naye unelene nokuhlaselwa kwabantu bakuKennedy Road.

“Lokukuhlasela kubonakala njengokuhlasela intando yeningi”, kusho uEddie Makue weSACC. “Siyasethusa ukubona imiphakathi ezabalazayo yenziwa izigebengu. Abahlali bseMjondolo bahlale befuna ubulungiswa ngendlela efanelekile futhi ehambisana nentando yeningi”.

Laba abahlasele umphakathi waseKennedy Road bebengakabanjwa. Esikhundleni salokho, abaholi balomphakathi ababoshiwe. Ngakho-ke iSACC iyamxhasa uMbhishobhi uPhillip uma ethi “ukumenywa kwabazokuvikela abazimele ikhona okudngeka kakhulu kulesisimo.”. Amaphoyisa aseSydenham ahlulekile ukuvikela abantu baseKennedy Road.

USolwazi Maluleke, uMongameli weSACC, uzwakalise ukukhalisana nalabo abalahlekelwa izihlobo zabo kulokukuhlaselwa. “Akunabulungiswa kukodwa-nje ukuhlupheka kanye nokweswela, kodwa ukuhlaselwa nokubulawa ngokuzabalazela ukuhlupheka kanye nokweswela kubi kakhulu. Sizokhuluma nezikhulu zombusazwe ukuqinisekisa ukuthi amathemba abantu entandweni yeningi awecekelekile phansi. Siphakamisa ukuthi uhulumeni weprovinsi wenze konke okusemandleni awo ukuqeda lokukuhlasle okungena ngqondo,” kusho uMaluleke. Imema bonke abakholelwa kwintando yeningi ukuthi baxhase abantu bakuKennedy Road esikhwameni esiqalwe nguPhillip.

Unganikela ku: Diocese of Natal Trust Account, First National Bank, Account number: 509 3118 7386, Midlands Mall Branch, Pietermaritzburg, South Africa.

Ngeminye imininingwane, ungaxhumana no: Mnu. Eddie Makue, uNobhala Jikelele.

Statement by the South African Council of Churches

http://www.sacc.org.za/news09/kennedy.html

SACC APPALLED BY VIOLENT ATTACKS AGAINST DEMOCRACY

The SACC is appalled by the violent attacks against defenceless and poor members of the community of Kennedy Road, Durban – known as Abahlali baseMjondolo. We are shocked at the savage attacks on their leadership. The sin of members of this community is resisting relocation and fighting for a place to call home. In May 2009 they took their plight to the Constitutional Court. Such actions amplify the commitment of this destitute community to seek redress through democratic and constitutional means.

On Saturday night (27 September 2009) armed bandits – apparently masquerading as a registered security company – launched savage attacks against the leadership of the Abahlali baseMjondolo and wider community of Kennedy Road. Police were alerted to the attacks and called to intervene, but inexplicably failed to provide protection and to quell the violence and destruction that lasted for twenty-four hours. Several people were killed and scores of people were left homeless and had to flee with only the clothes on their backs.

One victim claimed that “the only sin we committed was to engage in peaceful and democratic actions to secure a place for our children and loved ones”.

Bishop Rubin Phillip who is the chairperson of the SACCs provincial structure, the KwaZulu-Natal Christian Council, and Anglican Bishop of Natal stated that “I was torn with anguish when I first heard of the unspeakable brutality that has raged down on the Kennedy Road shack settlement”. He has in recent years spent many hours in the settlement and continues to provide pastoral support to this community. The Anglican Archbishop of Cape Town, Thabo Makgoba, endorses the condemnation of the Kennedy Road attacks.

“This horrific attack can only be construed as an attack on democracy”, Eddie Makue of the SACC asserts. “We are alarmed by the way in which legitimate community struggles are being criminalised. Community members who are asserting their rights can not be treated as criminals. The Abahlali baseMjondolo has been seeking redress in a responsible and democratic manner”.

Those who launched the attacks on the Kennedy Road community have not been apprehended. Instead, community leaders have been imprisoned. Therefore the SACC supports Bishop Rubin in calling for “a credible and independent force to be deployed as a matter of urgency”. The Sydenham Police failed to provide the security that the people of Kennedy Road deserve.

Prof Maluleke, the SACC President, expressed his condolences with those who lost their relatives during these attacks. “It is unjust enough to be poor and destitute, but to be attacked and killed for struggling against poverty and destitution is worse. We shall approach political authorities to ensure that the people’s hopes in democracy are not destroyed. We appeal on the provincial government to do everything within their power to put an end to the senseless violence”, said Maluleke. “We call on all who believe in and support democracy to demonstrate support for the people of Kennedy Road by contributing towards the relief fund started by Bishop Rubin”.

Donations can be made to: Diocese of Natal Trust Account, First National Bank, Account number: 509 3118 7386, Midlands Mall Branch, Pietermaritzburg, South Africa.

For more information, contact: Mr. Eddie Makue, General Secretary (082 853 8781)