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New Left Review 22, July-August
2003
South Africa as vanguard of post-colonial
neoliberalism, and laboratory of its social consequences. From the townships
around Johannesburg, rebellion against the
privatizations of the anc regime, and the enrichment
of a new political class.
TREVOR NGWANE
SPARKS IN THE TOWNSHIP
Where were you born and brought up,
and what was your family background?
I was born in 1960 in Durban. My father
and mother were medical nurses. My grandfathers were both Presbyterian preachers,
from Zululand. My father was an anc supporter. He spent some time in Dar es Salaam
when I was small. I’m not sure that he went because of politics: people got
out for lots of reasons, for opportunities
or dignity. He came back for the sake of the family. But anyone who had been
abroad was targeted by the Special Branch once
they returned to South Africa. Although he was not really active, they used
to visit him every week or so when I was a
child; he died more or less a broken man. He definitely had an influence on
me. I remember him showing me some political
books: there was one in a brown-paper cover, so I never knew the author or
title. When I was six we moved to Zululand.
My parents worked in a hospital there run by a Scottish missionary, who tried
to work along progressive lines. There was a
black Jesus in the chapel, for example—that was something in those days; we
used to point him out to each other. At that
time, Buthelezi was considered quite a hero—he refused to accept ‘independent
homeland’ status for Zululand, toured the country
speaking out for black people and met with the anc.
Even my father was fooled when he set up Inkatha with the colours black,
green, gold: ‘It’s the colours of the anc!’
he told me; only the older people knew that then.
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After my parents separated my brother and
I were sent to a Catholic boarding school, run by the Dominicans, near Durban.
My mother thought it was the best school around
but it had a really strict regime, with punishments for everything. The food
was terrible, too. I was there for four years—I
was expelled after the school strike in 1976. Not that I was particularly
political: more of a rebel in a generic sense,
getting caught out of bounds, or drinking. But there was a spontaneous strike
at our school after the police massacres in
Soweto on June 16, 1976. The situation was very tense. Some students came
in to talk to us; they had more experience
and were at the forefront of the boycott. I didn’t play much of a part but
these things quickly affect everyone. We felt
under very strong pressure. We were all expelled, sent home. A month later
the school authorities handpicked the ones they
wanted to return. But they told my brother and me not to come back—they had
some problem with me. After that I transferred
to a township school in Newcastle, on the other side of Natal, where my father
was living. I matriculated there.
In 1979 I started at Fort Hare, in the Eastern
Cape. It’s the oldest black university in South Africa; Nelson Mandela and
Oliver Tambo went there. I studied sociology,
although at first I was enrolled for a BA in Personnel Management. When I
arrived, there was the normal hullabaloo about
which course to take. We were shoved around and didn’t get proper guidance,
and this was a special new syllabus that they
wanted to recruit students to. We studied sociology, industrial psychology,
statistics, other social-science subjects.
It made a big impact on me—at first, not politically: I was just fascinated
by the ideas, and a whole new world opened
up. It must have been around this time that I stopped believing in God.
Sociology was a bit better than some of
the courses: there were a few black lecturers who tried to put the other
side; Eastern Cape was a political place and
Fort Hare has that prestige. We read dependency theory as well as the classics:
Durkheim, Weber. There was a special course,
‘development policy and administration’, where we learned about the Group
Areas Act and apartheid policy. It was meant
to train young blacks in apartheid administration but it was taught by a
good teacher, Mike Sham, who tried to give us
a different perspective. He used to lend me books. But there was also the
baptism by fire of the grading system. Many
of the courses that were strategic for black students—statistics, anthropology,
accounting—had something like a 10 per cent
pass rate. Some people got a low mark on their first test and never recovered.
But each one counted, and if you didn’t get
around 50 per cent overall, you failed the course. Come September, all those
who didn’t make the year mark had to face the
ritual of returning home. Typically, some of them were your friends. It was
the expulsions, I think, that made for the solidarity
among us, when there were outbreaks of defiance.
What was the political atmosphere like?
The country wasn’t yet on fire, but there
were things going on. When Mozambique got its independence in 1980 there were
student demonstrations and class boycotts in
support of frelimo. A group of students put
up a manifesto, signed with a popular name—something with a bit of mystique,
like ‘The Wolf Man’—and we all read it. This
happened three or four times. Then there was a meeting in the Great Hall.
Everyone came to listen to the debate; it was
quite democratic. I wasn’t really political yet, but the atmosphere was
so highly charged: not only in the country,
in terms of people striving for freedom, liberation; but with frelimo showing the way, the possibility. There
was hope. But also we felt, at least myself and my friends, that we were
so oppressed in that university. Everyone shared
a sense of relief and wanted to support the boycott; there was no question
of breaking it—perhaps one or two people might
have tried, but it was too strong. So we were all expelled for ‘political
disturbances’, as they were called. The same
thing was happening at every black university. After a month you could reapply
and the authorities would select who they wanted.
By this stage I was starting to develop
a more conscious critique of apartheid; there were a couple of guys who used
to challenge us to think more constructively.
But we weren’t discussing politics all the time. For us, it was a question
of surviving the courses, passing, failing—and
then, if there was a student strike, a boycott, we all went for it; there
was a lot of solidarity. In 1982 there were
more protests and they expelled us again. But this time we decided, nearly
all of us, that we would not go back because
we were so poorly treated. We knew they would exclude all our leaders, the
so-called agitators. So we stayed out, apart
from a few. They are still known as ‘the defenders’. Someone should write
a book about them: the black guys who now defend
the corporate world betrayed us even earlier.
What did you do after the expulsion
from university?
I moved to Soweto. I phoned a research agency
that I had worked for during the June holidays and got a job there. Meanwhile,
I carried on with my degree by correspondence
course through the University of South Africa. The agency turned out to
be the research wing of a government parastatal
for apartheid engineering, developing personnel management strategies—aptitude
tests for mineworkers, supervisors and so on.
The pass laws were still in force—they’d ask for your pass and arrest you
if you didn’t have it—and the 8 o’clock curfew.
When I arrived here I didn’t have anywhere to stay. I squatted around in
different parts of Soweto, including the Salvation
Army, until I found a place. First I was living in a backroom, then I graduated
to a backyard garage. That was bigger, but
there were insulation problems, what with the roll-down door and everything.
This was the time of the 1984–86 township
rebellions. What was your involvement with the movement, and what were its
effects on your own political development ?
Soweto was burning—it affected everyone.
At that stage I was doing a full-time masters degree at Wits University,
in downtown Johannesburg. I worked there as
a tutor, then junior lecturer, till 88 and it was in those years that I became
a Marxist. There was a small group of us who
are still close comrades, who would read and talk things through; they’ve
seen me through a lot. Though I was only in
my twenties I had my own course, ‘Class and Nationalism’, lecturing on the
youth of the anc, the Pan-African Congress,
Afrikaner nationalism and the South African Communist Party. Our orientation
was towards the anc: we supported the workers
who wanted to fashion it as a weapon of struggle, and always argued against
the two-stage theory. ‘We unban the anc!’ was one of our slogans. But at that point
the link for me was more of an intellectual one than actual involvement on
the ground. For example, some youths came to
demand my car—that’s the kind of thing that would happen—but my room was so
full of posters about the struggle that I convinced
them I knew their leadership, which saved the car. And I did have Winnie
Mandela in one of my classes. Each week, one
of the students would present and teach a class and on Winnie’s day, she
came dressed in full anc regalia with a prepared speech about the movement.
We even managed to use banned material in my course reader—Marx, Mao,
Ho Chi Minh, Slovo, the whole lot. During the wave
of mass arrests when the State of Emergency was declared in 1986 one of
my students, Pascal Moloi, got detained. So
we took his course work and all this material into jail. It was a popular
thing.
Those were heady days for me. We had radical
ideas about reading policy and the role of education. I decided I didn’t
want to make the students go through the exam
system; I would hand them the question papers two or three days before, against
regulations. We watched a video once a week,
read books, used the amazing library. Then an ex-mine worker who’d come to
the department for the ‘Sociology of Work’ programme,
a Lesotho politico, started showing the videos to the university workers,
who’d been cleaning the blackboards for twenty
years but could barely read or write. Being political, he would give a short
talk, before or after; then the workers started
interrupting to say their bit. Soon we commandeered the tea room to start
teaching them to read and write; my students
all joined in. This was what mushroomed into the Wits Workers Literacy Project—it
grew and grew, and started attracting railway
workers, shop workers. I’d got squeezed out of my department, though there
was a big campaign for my reinstatement, so
I started teaching at the Literacy Project instead.
What was your assessment of the negotiations
that followed Mandela’s release from jail in 1990, and the unbanning of the
anc and sacp? To what extent were the rank and file privy
to what was going on—or did they simply want to trust the anc regardless?
I remember turning on the radio and hearing:
‘The anc announced today that the armed struggle
has been suspended’. We couldn’t believe it—it was like chopping off an arm
and a leg. Of course, they never did anything
much but we used to romanticize it; that little bomb at the Wimpy Bar won
them so much support in the country. People
wanted to trust them, naturally, but there was opposition to the direction
the negotiations were taking. Mandela used
his gigantic stature to contain it. In January 1990 he’d announced—in the
note smuggled out from Pollsmoor Prison—that
nationalization continued to be the policy of the anc; ‘growth through redistribution’ was the line.
By September 93 he was touring Western capitals with the National Party Finance
Minister, Derek Keys, speaking at the un, pleading for foreign investment and guaranteeing
the repatriation of profits and capital-protection measures.
Without detracting from those twenty-seven
years in jail—what that cost him, what he stood for—Mandela has been the
real sellout, the biggest betrayer of his people.
When it came to the crunch, he used his status to camouflage the actual agreement
that the anc
was forging with the South African elite under the sugar-coating of the
Reconstruction and Development Programme. Basically
the anc was granted formal, administrative
power, while the wealth of the country was retained in the hands of the
white capitalist elite, Oppenheimer and company.
Mandela’s role was decisive in stabilizing the new dispensation; by all
accounts, a daring gamble on the part of the
bourgeoisie.
I was working with the Transport Workers
Union at that time, between 91 and 93, as a political education officer;
I’d joined the anc
in 1990. The feeling in the trade-union movement was triumphant: we were really
hitting the bosses, now they felt forced to
invite us to sit down, to give us all sorts of things. The reality was just
the opposite: because the bosses were on the
back foot they had gone on the attack. They deployed the ideology of tripartism—the
golden triangle of labour–government–capital—to
trap the unions in ‘codetermination’ discussions on how to maximize
company profits and productivity. The way they did it
was supremely flattering to the middling union officials. Don’t
forget South Africa had one of the most unionized working
classes in the world—something like 23 per cent of the economically
active population in 1994. Between them, the two independent
trade-union federations, fosatu
and cosatu, had 3.2 million members and 25,000
elected shop stewards. Their role was going to be vital in stabilizing the
new order, supporting what they called the
‘export-oriented economy’. Of course, the collapse of the Soviet Union had
made a big difference—a disarming and disorienting
world event which the bourgeoisie took full advantage of to argue that there
was no alternative.
At the same time, there were big struggles
going on inside the trade-union movement, between the more ‘workerist’, plant-based
fosatu faction
and the ‘populist’, udf-aligned cosatu, with closer ties in the communities. Sometimes
it got physical. There were also real fights between the black consciousness
forces and the anc;
blood was flowing. The returning anc leadership
had to graft itself onto the mass democratic movement. They started by closing
down the other structures, in the name of unity:
‘Why do you need your own Youth Congress? We have the Youth League’; ‘Why
do you need the Transvaal Federation of Women?
We have the Women’s League’. There was also a lot of destabilization
going on: the dirty war organized by the security
forces, provoking bloodshed. That strengthened the hand of those calling
for ‘unity’.
There was opposition in the trade unions
to the line the leadership was taking. But, to quite a large extent, this
was either bought off or repressed by the
anc–sacpcosatu officials. For instance, I wrote a paper
in 1993 called ‘Is Holding Hands with the Bosses the way for New South Africa?’
that was critical of cosatu’s codetermination policies. I was expelled,
then reinstated after a big campaign, then expelled again in 1995. That’s
carried on. John Appolis, the Chemical Workers’
leader, has just been fired by the union for his role in the anti-privatization
struggle. Whereas Alec Erwin, once a big trade-union
figure and defender of workers’ democracy, is now Minister of Trade and Industry,
pushing neoliberal policies. Moses Mayekiso
from the Metalworkers’ Union, who was once the socialist leader,
has been promoting every World Bank initiative through the National Civic
Organization, sanco. Now he’s
caught up in an investment-company scam.
The first one-person, one-vote municipal
elections in South Africa came a year and a half after the anc’s watershed victory in 1994. You were elected
as a councillor for the Pimville ward in Soweto, on the anc ticket. What space was there then for progressive
politics at the municipal level? How much of a change, with the ending
of apartheid?
It was a real change after apartheid. Before
that, local government had been run strictly along black and white lines,
so Soweto had its black local authority, Sandton
a white one. In 1995 that was reorganized so that the black areas were no
longer isolated: Soweto was divided in two,
with Pimville and Orlando East joined to Randburg, in the north, and the
rest linked to the Central Business District,
so that redistributive policies became a real possibility. The same went for
the other townships; Alexandra was linked to
Sandton. The Johannesburg Metro, a city-wide municipality, was superimposed
overall. The Reconstruction and Development
Programme had a component of ‘people-driven development’: local labour had
to be used for building projects and each
community had to come up with its own development objectives. My first job
in the Pimville ward was to call public meetings,
with representatives from the civic, the community organizations, the anc, to draw up a participatory budget where the
local people could list their own priorities.
We ran into problems within a matter of
months. The contractors tried to turn the local-employment policy against
the working class by using casual labour, undocumented
migrants. We dealt with that by enforcing a minimum wage of 50 rand per day,
around $7, on every contract tendered: ‘You
can employ casual labour but you have to pay the minimum wage’. The employers
complained to the Metro council, claiming this
was an ‘obstacle to development’. I was ‘investigated’ over the 50-rand wage;
there was a bit of a witch-hunt. They would
bribe local leaders to soften the rules, so they could pay less. It soon
became clear that the bureaucracy was frowning
on community control. Officials would talk about ‘the contradiction between
development and democracy’ and the councillors
weren’t strong enough to question that. A lot of them were naïve and
well-meaning but didn’t really know what they
wanted to do. The bureaucrats had an interest in undermining them—they would
prepare the agendas, decide how many meetings
there should be. Of course, this couldn’t have happened without the anc’s tacit consent. The mood changed within the
ruling anc caucus: robust debates became
muted; decisions were taken away from councillors and we were discouraged
from participating in local community forums.
There were issues we couldn’t discuss.
The crunch came when they announced a big
financial crisis for Johannesburg; they had ‘just realized’ the city was in
the red. This was in 1997, a year after the
national currency crisis, when the anc effectively
ditched the rdp for gear, the Growth, Employment and Redistribution
programme—a thorough-going privatization–deregulation strategy, involving
savage public-sector cutbacks, loosened exchange
controls and a regressive sales-tax policy. All the Johannesburg anc councillors were called to an emergency caucus
meeting—you could see it was a coordinated effort—for a long PowerPoint presentation,
followed by three minutes of questions. All
the ‘people’s budgets’ had to be frozen. I argued, ‘But comrades, when there’s
less money, all the more reason to be democratic’.
But they didn’t want to hear that. The next budget was put together by
experts, special whizz kids. Again, the plan
was unveiled with PowerPoint—we joked about how ‘the words fall from the
sky like rain’; one hour’s presentation and
a couple of questions. After that they started to target people more systematically,
or coopt them for well-paid committee jobs.
In 1999, just after the second general election
confirmed Mbeki in power, the council introduced their comprehensive privatization
plan for the city, Igoli 2002. There would
be massive cutbacks, around twenty thousand job losses, and everything would
be put out to tender—water, electricity, garbage
collection, sewage. Igoli is the Zulu word for Johannesburg. I called
it E. coli 2002, because the water privatization soon had sewage leaking
into the water table. At this time, Mbeki was
using the phrase, ‘The people have spoken’, to imply that if people had voted
for the anc they
must support its neoliberal policies and shouldn’t now oppose them. I wrote
a piece for the newspaper called ‘The People
Have Not Spoken’, a debate between the city manager, the trade union—samwu, the municipal workers’ union, had come out
against the plan—and myself, putting the views of my constituents. The piece
was by invitation, though I didn’t write it
without discussing it with my comrades. I decided it had to be done.
Within three days, the anc suspended me from all my positions, including
those in the Council. I faced a disciplinary hearing for bringing the Party
into disrepute. They then tried to make a
deal, saying, ‘ok, if you publicly recant
your statements, we’ll reduce the two years’ suspension to nine months’.
The timing was calculated to coincide with
the local government elections in 2000. They were offering me the chance
to run again. I went to my constituents, and
they said ‘No, you can’t apologise’. It was then that I became an independent.
What sort of problems were Sowetans
facing at this stage? What did the city’s restructuring programme entail?
The privatizations envisaged in Igoli 2002
were premised on ‘cost-recovery’: that is, once the basic infrastructure
had been set up—with corners often cut in the
process—the citizens were supposed to cover whatever costs the utility companies
demanded for maintenance and supply. The problems,
and the pace of privatization, varied according to the utility. Take electricity.
eskom—the Afrikaans
acronym for the Electricity Supply Commission—had been established as the
engine for the apartheid state’s mining–mineral
complex. It absorbed over half the World Bank’s $200 million credits to
South Africa during the fifties and sixties,
supplying cut-price power to white-owned industries while the majority of
blacks went without domestic electricity.
To this day, most poor blacks rely for their lighting, cooking and heating
on paraffin, coal and wood—you can smell the coal
smoke over the settlements when the evening meals are being cooked.
Electricity only really reached the townships in the eighties.
The main dwellings were supplied with cables and metres,
and the backyard shacks and garages would have to run a wire from
there.
Under the apartheid regime there was a fixed
payment for services. But under the anc, as
eskom was readied for privatization,
they began to charge per kilowatt hour. In 1999, Soweto electricity prices
rose by 47 per cent. In Soweto, average bills
in the summer are around 150 rand per month, or $20; in the winter they soar
to 500 rand, nearly $70, when the average monthly
income for over half Soweto’s households is only 1,500 rand, just over $200.
From the spring of 2001 eskom started to implement a drastic cut-off strategy
for households overdue on payments—the company’s ‘debtor book’ was apparently
scaring off private buyers and there was disapproving
talk of the townships having a ‘culture of non-payment’, a legacy of
the rent and service boycotts of the eighties. In
some cases, the Johannesburg Council further tightened the screw by cutting
off people’s water too.
Was this when the Soweto Electricity
Crisis Committee was formed?
It had begun earlier, in June 2000, when
we ran a series of workshops on the energy crisis; then we started having
mass meetings in the township. We got some
research done by Wits University, a project organized by Patrick Bond, Maj
Fiil-Flynn and other comrades. Their survey,
‘Electricity Crisis in Soweto’—it’s on the web at www.queensu.ca/msp—showed
what we already suspected: that most of the
residents were working-class pensioners or unemployed, with lots of grannies
as heads of households; that most of them did
try to pay their bills, though there was such poor service at the local eskom offices that they often had to queue all day
on payment days. But the prices were out of their range: 89 per cent of them
were in arrears, 61 per cent had had their
power cut off by eskom in the past year alone—they
couldn’t cook or run refrigerators, it was back to coal and paraffin to heat
and light their homes. The draft report came
out in April 2001, just when eskom was stepping
up the cut-offs to around 120,000 households a month nationwide. The anc had been boasting that they’d brought electricity
to millions of black households, but by 2001 more people were losing access
every month than were gaining it. We called
a Soweto-wide mass meeting and people came in their hundreds.
How is the secc
organized on the ground and what has been the focus of its activities?
We have around 22 branches in Soweto, each
one with their own organizing committee—we reckon around 7,000 members in
all. We’ve had a debate about membership cards.
At the moment the position is, you can join and get a card for 10 rand a
year, or you can just be a member. I don’t have
a card—my position is, everyone is a member who wants to be. We have an agm every year on March 1st, and directly elected
officials: chair, secretary, treasurer. Every Tuesday there’s a committee
meeting of representatives from the branches,
around sixty people, where we get reports on problems, organize speakers
for meetings and so on. We’ve had funding from
War on Want, and this year we’ve got a us Public
Welfare Foundation grant which we’re going to use to employ an organizer and
open an office, even if it’s just for one year.
One of the first things we did was to launch
Operation Khanyisa—khanyisaeskom employees.
When we raised the question in mass meetings it would come as a relief to
everyone to find that their neighbours were
illegally connected too—they’d all been hiding it from each other. We turned
what was a criminal deed from the point of
view of eskom into an act of defiance. It
was good tactics and good politics. We organized a lot of protest marches,
including going to city councillors’ houses
to cut off their electricity, to give them a taste of their own medicine,
and to the mayor’s office in Soweto. When they
targeted our leaders for arrest after a councillor’s supply was cut, five
hundred Sowetans marched to Moroka Police Station
to present themselves for mass arrest; the police were overwhelmed.
means light—where
we reconnect people’s electricity supply when it’s been cut off. We trained
local people how to do this. Within six months,
over 3,000 households had been put back on the grid. We found that a lot
of people were already illegally connected,
through bribing
By October 2001 eskom had retreated: they announced a moratorium
on cut-offs. That gave us a victory under our belts. In December 2001 Jeff
Radebe, the anc
Public Enterprise Minister and a leading sacp
member, came to Orlando Hall in Soweto to offer a partial amnesty on arrears.
We said that wasn’t enough. Our demands are
electricity for everyone, including the urban settlements and poor rural
villages that don’t have any supply yet; scrapping
all arrears; the free basic supply the anc
promised in the 2000 municipal elections and a flat-rate monthly price that
people can budget for—a demand that we won in
the 1980s from the apartheid regime. It’s sad that Sowetans are now back
to fighting for this from their own democratic government.
We also oppose the privatization scheme that Radebe is still
trying to push through. Recently, eskom
has been installing pre-pay meters, a pilot scheme. That’s our current campaign:
marching to remove the pre-pay meters—or bypassing
them, if people prefer—and dumping them at the mayor’s office, at eskom, at the council. This is giving us new strength.
What led to the march on Mayor Amos
Masondo’s house?
Masondo had stood in the 2000 municipal
elections on Mbeki’s pledge of free basic water and electricity and though
only a few people went to the polls, that was
what they were voting for. By the end of the year they had got nothing. I
was on national tv
saying that the promises had just been an election ploy. People were beginning
to call them liars. So the anckombi—a
minibus—to the mayor’s house in Kensington and cut off his supply, to remind
him that he had to give us the free water
and electricity the next day. We know him personally because, though he
lives in the suburb now, he comes from Moletsane.
In fact, he left his mother there. Our movement has many pensioners,
so this is a humiliation for him. At the time, Masondo
downplayed the meeting to the press, but the next year, 2002,
when we went to his house again after the mayor’s office refused
to respond to our demands, he was still complaining
about it: ‘You guys, you’re undisciplined! It’s very bad when you come
to my house’.
announced that they would start a programme
on July 1, 2001. On June 30, we all took a
The comrades weren’t prepared to swallow
this. We reported back to the meeting in Soweto and a resolution was passed
that we would all go to his house the weekend
after Easter. We took a bus this time and, as fate would have it, we got
there in a mean mood, even the grannies and
the old people. Masondo’s bodyguard opened fire and we had to run for our
lives. After that, all hell broke loose. Oddly,
there was a truck of municipal workers there, collecting garbage, and they
let us help ourselves. The comrades poured rubbish
in his swimming pool, cut his water, cut his lights. In the end, eighty-seven
of us got arrested. They used the law that
allows them to keep us for seven days without bail, but we managed to mobilize
even more people, each time we appeared in
court. We became known as the Kensington 87. It was only in March 2003 that
we were finally cleared.
Could you tell us about the Anti-Privatization
Forum? Was this set up at the same time as the secc?
The Anti-Privatization Forum is a broader
coalition of several dozen groups, with secc
one of the most active. But both grew out of the campaigns against Igoli 2002.
The apf really came together in July 2000,
when a lot of different organizations—the Anti-Igoli 2002 Committee, the
Municipal Workers’ Union, the Education Workers,
ngos, students, even the sacp to begin with—came together to protest against
a big international conference on privatization, ‘Urban Futures’, that was
being held at Wits University. We set up the
apfngos
and so on that saw their job as derailing anti-privatization struggles. The
anc instructed the union leaderships
to keep away, although the municipal workers stayed with us for longer.
with very simple
terms of reference: ‘We are not here to debate privatization, or find some
‘third way’ to finesse it. Everyone here has
decided that privatization is bad, and wants to do something to fight it’.
Because at that time there were a lot of think-tanks,
debates,
The main campaigns fought by the apf have been around water, electricity, evictions.
We have a central office at Cosatu House, in downtown Johannesburg, that
gets some funding from War on Want, and clusters
of affiliated groups in the communities. In Vaal, to the south, for instance,
there is the Bophelong Community Forum, the
Working-Class Community Coordinating Committee and three others. In the east,
we have the Kathorus Concerned Residents, the
United Physics of South Africa, the Vosloorus and Daveyton Peace Committee
Civic. Then there’s the Johannesburg cluster;
Soweto and Orange Farm, the Thembelihle Committee, two affiliates in Alexandra,
three new ones in the North West Province.
The apf Executive Committee meets
fortnightly, with a representative from each affiliated organization, and
we have a Coordinating Committee that meets
monthly, with five representatives from each group. We are trying to organize
regional solidarity committees so that people
can come out to support each other immediately they hear about an eviction
or a water cut-off. In Thembelihle, an informal
shack settlement of some 4,000 stands, they’re facing forced removals—often
at night. That’s when the City Council send
the security men in, the Red Ants as they’re known, from the colour of their
overalls. Two or three thousand people will
turn out to stop the evictions there, because the whole community is under
threat. The Council says they have to be moved
because the area is dolomitic; but the place they’re being shifted to,
ten kilometres out, is dolomitic too. Who knows what
the real reasons are—it might be class or race: the settlement’s
next to a middle-class community, largely Asian, that might
find the corrugated structures an eyesore.
Emily Nengolo, an activist in the Orange
Farm Water Crisis Committee, was shot in her home in February this year in
what seems to have been a politically motivated
killing. How much violence and harassment does the anc employ against the poor in the settlements,
and against anti-privatization campaigners?
If you want to shift people from the place
they’ve lived in for fifteen years—and from one shack to another, not to
proper housing—then you have to bring in the
Red Ants, the crowbars, the back-up police. With electricity cut-offs, violence
can be unavoidable. People chase away the eskom men who’ve come to do the work, and the police
are called; in Soweto, eskom employs its own
security company. As to harassing campaigners: they arrest us during marches—you
have to apply for permission and they can
turn you down, or give permission with restrictions. For instance, during
the Kensington 87 trials they said we could
picket, but only 200 metres from the court, out of sight. Then people defy
that, and the police are called. They use tear
gas, rubber bullets, water cannon. It’s not all-out violence, but you are
threatened with it the whole time—it’s always
there. Emily’s killing was clearly politically motivated, but that could
be the specificities of the area, rather than
the anc centre; the local leadership is
trigger happy.
To what extent do the apf and secc draw
on the townships’ established networks of resistance—or is this wave of struggles
something new?
It is a new wave, but it uses the traditions,
the fire, the experience of the old days. The secc
is becoming more like a civic; people come to us with their problems because
we are the official opposition in Soweto now.
The ancanc
in their speeches. When they call meetings—and it’s always councillors, never
the party that does so—we go along to picket
them; but they would never dare come to ours.
promote us, by attacking us as anti-
How has the city itself changed since
the apartheid era?
The most striking differences have been
the mushrooming of the informal settlements, the transformation of the Central
Business District and the new ‘edge cities’
where big business has relocated to the outer suburbs. In Soweto, the changes
have been more gradual: new home-loan developments,
in-fill building, more overcrowding with backyard shacks springing up behind
the old four-room council houses, now transferred
to private ownership; though the Council is trying to reduce the shacks to
two per yard. During apartheid, you were always
under the thumb of the township manager, inevitably an Afrikaner. A house
would be allocated to you; you had to register
each child as it was born to allow it to live there. At sixteen, the township
manager could say your son had to be sent
to a hostel. The idea was total control. A visitor had to have a permit.
The Metropolitan Police would check on the
Permit List and you could lose the house if their name wasn’t on it. They
clamped down on overcrowding—influx control,
they called it—by sending people back to the homelands. If a husband died,
the widow could be sent away. You couldn’t
put up a shack at the back then without the township manager knowing, though
you could get permission for backrooms and garages,
where people used to live. Once that repression lifted people started
to build where they could—families growing, people coming
in, or spilling over. Shack settlements grew up around Soweto.
The Sowetan residents would have first preference, or act as
landlord for a whole new area.
The changes in the Central Business District
have been far more dramatic. That was an all-white area during apartheid,
very hostile, with a lot of harassment of blacks.
In the late eighties and early nineties there was a big shift of business
headquarters to Sandton, in the northern suburbs.
Symbolically, the Johannesburg Stock Exchange relocated there, although
the big banks have tended to stay in the centre.
Whites who had been living in the multi-storey apartment blocks moved out
in droves. The landlords made a killing, renting
out empty flats and offices to black working-class incomers from Ethiopia,
Nigeria, Mozambique, Somalia, Zimbabwe. They
could crowd ten people into a bachelor flat for 200 rand per month each,
without providing proper services. Some of
the buildings have been taken over by tenants’ committees. Some succeed;
others, where the committee takes over the
role of the landlord, have been a disaster.
Some people have rejoiced in the emergence
of an ‘informal city’ in central Johannesburg—Saskia Sassen, for instance—hailing
it as a ‘new space’. This seems to parallel
earlier claims that ‘black economic empowerment’ would sprout from the informal
economy.
Formal business has certainly decayed in
the city centre, with empty shops, boarded-up office blocks. Maybe a black
guy will buy a shop and start selling pap,
the local food, but there’s been no boom of black businesses—prices are
still high, and because of the Group Areas Act it’s
mainly Asians who own the shops and warehouses. There are plenty
of traders and hawkers in the streets now, ladies doing other
ladies’ hair for money and services like that. There
are big working-class taxi ranks because the public transport is so bad.
But the general economic tendency is very clear:
the rich have got richer and the poor poorer. Under the anc, South Africa has now surpassed Brazil as the
most unequal country in the world. According to Statistics South Africa,
the average African household has got 19 per cent poorer in the past five
years, and the average white household 15 per
cent richer. Unemployment is now running at 43 per cent of the workforce,
with youth unemployment up to 80 per cent in some
rural areas. We’ve lost more than a million jobs. Basic food prices
have been soaring. What with the public-spending cuts
and the Aids crisis, the situation in the health service is frightening.
As for the ‘informal city’, it may look
more colourful but power relations haven’t gone away. The banks and insurance
companies have held on to their real estate
there, and built themselves huge, fortified complexes with easy access to
the arterial freeways out to the suburbs. Now
the Council has decided it wants to clean up the Central Business District
again. They’ve targeted over eighty buildings
to clear out, through forced evictions. They’re trying to limit the traders
to certain streets and they are building huge,
multi-storey taxi ranks that look like giant prisons, for the kombis.
Once again, it’s a question of control. The hawkers will be given space inside
these blocks, so they can’t be seen. The Council
has set up a new Metropolitan Police Force—the most hated body from the
height of the apartheid era. They’ve got advisers
in from the nypd to train them in
Broken Mirror police theory: zero tolerance. The city is becoming a hostile
place again. The ordinary police will stop
you, especially if you look too dark, and demand to see your papers, just
like before. There’s a lot of hostility towards
undocumented immigrants. Sometimes the Red Ants are used to cordon off a
whole area and if you find yourself inside,
without id, you can get sent off to a detention
camp at Lindelani, 50 kilometres from Johannesburg, and processed for deportation.
They have trains from there to Mozambique
and other places. The camp is run by prominent leaders of the anc Women’s League and operated like a private
prison. The government pays per person processed.
How would you compare Mandela’s role
with that of Mbeki?
Mandela did what many African statesmen
try to do: play the role of Caesar. He has freed himself from formal politics
so that he can act the grandfather. He can
swan in and out, chide the government, cover for Mbeki’s stubbornness on
aids, publicly criticize George
Bush—which of course is what Mbeki should be doing. Mandela regularly pops
up on tv opening a clinic or a school in the
rural areas, sponsored by capital. It shows the great partnership between
the private sector, government and people. He
likes to behave like Father Christmas: above politics. But whenever there
is a crisis, Mandela will be there to oil, smooth
and con.
Their styles are very different. Mandela
used to run the national anccosatu, the sacp
and the South African Council of Churches lined up behind him. He has made
a series of blunders: Zimbabwe, aids, a corrupt
$5 billion arms deal, letting his insecurity and paranoia show in his attacks
on Cyril Ramaphosa and Tokyo Sexwale. His supporters
are getting worried. Mandela might have to come in and clean up. Because the
real point is that their politics are exactly
the same: they share a common project, an identical orientation.
meetings like a chief—he
would let everyone discuss, and then make the ruling. He’s famous for phoning
comrades at 3am and calling them ‘My boy’ in
Xhosa, which means you are uncircumcized; an insult, but he gets away with
it because of his charisma. Mbeki is much
stiffer. He was trained at the Lenin Institute and spent a long time bag-carrying
for Oliver Tambo in diplomatic circles in the
West. He thinks he is an intellectual but he just talks in convoluted sentences.
Internationally he is seen as the sober African
statesman, beloved of the World Bank, who is going to help pull the continent
up by its bootstraps. But he is quite widely
despised, inside the country. Our march at the World Summit on Sustainable
Development on 31 August last year was a
humiliation for him, it exposed his weakness in his own home-base—we got
20,000 and he could only muster 3,000 even
though he had
Despite the new groundswell against
their neoliberal policies, the anc can still
bank on its popular legitimacy from the anti-apartheid days. What are the
prospects of building an independent left alternative
and what elements might this contain? Are there any signs of cracks in the
anc–sacp–cosatu alliance?
We do need such a force, but this is still
a long way off. When Mbeki attacks the cosatu
leaders and the sacp, calling them ‘ultra-left’—as
he did when he felt threatened by the scale of the anti-privatization mobilization
around the wssd
summit—he is basically whipping them into line. And it works. The sacp immediately declared, ‘This is our government,
our anc. We will defend it’. The president
of cosatu, Willie Madisha, announced: ‘We
must not let our disagreements overshadow the many areas of agreement’. Mbeki
needs cosatu and the sacp to contain the working class and deliver the
votes. There’s no way he wants to break up the alliance; he just doesn’t
want them to cross a certain line. There was
some vague talk of the sacp running independent
candidates, though not in the 2004 elections—but what politics could they
stand on that would be distinct from the anc’s?
Nevertheless, workers are losing jobs and
the cosatu leadership are under
pressure to respond. That’s why they hold their yearly general strike—we now
call it an Annual General Meeting, because it’s
such a regular event. They always reassure Mbeki that they are not attacking
the anc but this year’s strike,
though smaller, was militantly opposed to the government’s privatization
policy. The workers burned pictures of Mbhazima
Shilowa—a former general secretary of cosatu,
now the premier of Gauteng Province, the industrial heartland—and shouted
him down when he tried to address them, despite
the cosatu bosses on the
platform chanting ‘Viva anc, Viva Shilowa’.
The leadership has captured the bodies of the workers but their souls are
wandering around. One day they will connect
with other bodies.
Some in the anti-globalization movement
say that the working class is finished, that the social movements or even
‘civil society’ itself are now the leading
force for change. But if we’re honest, some of these social movements consist
of nothing more than an office and a big grant
from somewhere or other. They can call a workshop, pay people to attend,
give them a nice meal and then write up a good
report. They build nothing on the ground. ‘Civil society’ can be even more
problematic, extending to the business sector
and to ngos tendering for contracts for privatized
government services. Of course the working class faces greater obstacles,
both political and organizational, with the
neoliberal turn of the anc and other mass
parties, and the casualization and de-unionization of labour. But it remains
a key component of any alternative left strategy.
The high level of unemployment is a real problem here. It does make workers
more cautious. We need to organize both the
employed and the unemployed, to overcome capital’s divide-and-conquer tactics.
What is your assessment of the World
Social Forum?
Many on the left here were quite sceptical
about the anti-globalization movement to begin with. Naturally, it came under
attack from the anc—people
like Trevor Manuel, the finance minister, dismissed it as bored rich kids
having fun: ‘What do they know about covert
struggle? They wouldn’t last a day in Robben Island’. But though the wsf has its strengths and weaknesses it is important
for us to link up to it: this is the movement of the millennium. Personally,
I found the discussion of different methods
of struggle at Porto Alegre a very useful one. It was an inspiration to
meet up with people from La Coordinadora in
Bolivia, Oscar Olivera and others, to find out about what’s been going on
in the fight against water privatization there.
That sort of solidarity can be very powerful in terms of keeping you going
through pauses in the struggle.
How would you define the main priorities
of the movement?
In terms of general questions, I think the
issue of political power remains crucial. Some people attack the idea of
targeting state power—the argument that globalization
undermines the role of the nation state gets translated into an excuse for
avoiding the fight with your own national
bourgeoisie. But we in South Africa can’t not confront the anc and Mbeki. American activists can’t not confront
Bush. The cosatu leaders, the sacp, are happy to fight imperialism everywhere
except here at home. It’s been good to demonstrate against world summit meetings
in Seattle, Genoa, even Doha, but there are
problems with following the global elite around—it’s not something poor people
can afford to do. What if they hold their next
conference on the moon? Only millionaire activists will be able to go there.
The point is, we have to build where we
are. We have had workshops on the World Bank, the imf, the wto and
we’ve got strong people working on those issues. We’ve set up structures
for the Campaign Against Neoliberalism in Southern
Africa. But in the end we had to get down to the most basic questions:
what are the problems facing people on the ground that
unite us most? In Soweto, it’s electricity. In another area,
it is water. We’ve learned that you have to actually organize—to
talk to people, door to door; to connect with the masses.
But you have to build with a vision. From Day One we argued that
electricity cuts are the result of privatization.
Privatization is the result of gear. gear reflects the demands of global capital, which
the anc are bent on pushing through. We cannot
finally win this immediate struggle unless we win that greater one. But still,
connecting with what touches people on a daily
basis, in a direct fashion, is the way to move history forward.
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