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View Full Version : South African Unions to widen strike and cut ties with ruling party



maskerade
1st September 2010, 16:13
This is great news - if COSATU and the SACP split up the tripartite alliance perhaps some real progress can be made in South Africa. Neoliberalism has made South African workers worse off than what they were before the end of Apartheid, thanks mostly to GEAR (growth, employment and redistribution), a project designed to speed up development (read: demonstrate commitment to Washington Consensus).

S African unions 'to widen strike'
Public workers threaten to cut ties with ruling party and expand strike if demands unmet.

South African labour unions have said that they will cut ties with the ruling party, and widen a national public sector strike, unless their pay demands are met.

There were no signs of a resolution on Friday, nearly two weeks after more than one million public sector workers walked off the job, shutting down many hospitals and schools.

The Congress of South African Trade Unions (Cosatu) said it filed seven-day strike notices on Thursday so that all its two million members could join the state workers strike, which they said would also target the mining and manufacturing sectors.

The labour unions were key supporters of the ruling African National Congress (ANC) and Jacob Zuma, the country's president, helping him win the last election.

"We cannot sustain the status quo. We cannot allow the situation that nobody does nothing about the current situation within the alliance..." Sdumo Dlamini, president of Cosatu, said.

Alliance threatened

The latest comments by union leaders were some of the strongest signals to date that organised labour may be ready to cut, or change, its relationship with the ANC that was forged in the struggle to end apartheid.

The unions have set a deadline of September 2 for the government to provide a 8.6 per cent rise in salaries and a 1,000 rand ($138) monthly housing allowance.

The government is offering a seven per cent pay hike and 630 rand for housing, saying that it cannot afford the workers' demands.

Themba Maseko, the government spokesman, told Al Jazeera that the strike had raised concern and efforts were being made to resolve it.

Government services and the economy have been disrupted by the strikes, but the country's currency has suffered no major impact.

Workers frustrated

Zwelinzima Vavi, Cosatu's general secretary, said that the federation had not wanted a strike and had recommended civil servants accept the government's offer.

"We have to be loyal to our members. If they say this deal is not good enough, we have to march with them," Vavi told reporters.

"They are earning 4100 rand as a minimum wage, the lowest paid. They see a [government] minister issuing a statement about 'We must save the children' when [his] children are in a private school and he is driving a 1.3m rand Mercedes or BMW."

While the strike intensified, Zuma was in China leading a delegation of cabinet ministers and business people searching for business partnerships.

South Africa has been hit hard by the global recession, losing 900,000 jobs last year on top of already high unemployment.

The government has said it wants to devote funds to creating new jobs, not just raising the salaries of those already working.

http://english.aljazeera.net/news/africa/2010/08/20108274048650332.html

gorillafuck
1st September 2010, 20:59
This is wonderful news.

Lolshevik
2nd September 2010, 22:07
I hope this move, if it happens, goes toward building a *real* political vehicle for the workers & not towards economism..

I wonder what the Communist Party thinks about these developments.

maskerade
3rd September 2010, 14:08
I hope this move, if it happens, goes toward building a *real* political vehicle for the workers & not towards economism..

I wonder what the Communist Party thinks about these developments.

I know that the SACP has already begun questioning their dedication and participation in the Tripartite alliance - there was a thread about it a while ago.

COSATU + SACP would be a powerful combination for real progress, though I don't know how strong the relationship between the two is.

RotStern
3rd September 2010, 20:10
YES!!!! This is excellent! I have a feeling the SACP is going back to it's golden age.
Total bullshit that they can't afford their demands, when every single MP drives a Lamborghini!

bricolage
4th September 2010, 14:57
YES!!!! This is excellent! I have a feeling the SACP is going back to it's golden age.
I'm sure the South African workers will be more than happy to forgive them for the post-apartheid betrayal...


Total bullshit that they can't afford their demands, when every single MP drives a Lamborghini!Including those of the SACP.
"Life looks different when you are being driven around in a BMW with tinted window. You move so fast sometimes you can hardly see the shacks anymore. You almost forget." -- Philip Dexter
(Note: I know Lamborghinis are different to BMWs...

maskerade
6th September 2010, 09:25
I'm sure the South African workers will be more than happy to forgive them for the post-apartheid betrayal...

Including those of the SACP.
"Life looks different when you are being driven around in a BMW with tinted window. You move so fast sometimes you can hardly see the shacks anymore. You almost forget." -- Philip Dexter
(Note: I know Lamborghinis are different to BMWs...

how many MPs are actually from SACP? I know that COSATU and SACP can field candidates through the ANC, but I was always skeptical to the ANC and their ideologically bankrupt politics

bricolage
6th September 2010, 11:38
It's hard to tell, SACP members operate as duel SACP/ANC MPs so they are normally a member of the former and an MP of the latter. They can have quite a lot of influence though, for example I seem to recall they were quite influential in bring Zuma to power.

Ocean Seal
6th September 2010, 14:55
The time is coming. South Africa rebels against neo-liberalism. The collapse of the global market has made the workers of the world lose trust in neo-liberalism. However, in the United States it has been blamed on the socialists. The people must be corrected, and a global revolution might be on the rise.

ckaihatsu
6th September 2010, 15:04
However, in the United States [the collapse of the global market] has been blamed on the socialists.


Um, yeah, that was me. Sorry 'bout that...!

I picked the wrong avatar to use here at RevLeft in early '08, and, well, the rest is history...!


x D

maskerade
6th September 2010, 15:30
The current general secretary of the SACP is a minister of higher education, I just read on wikipedia.

The SACP was influential in bringing down Mbeki and bringing in Zuma, but Zuma was a compromise. Workers and I'm sure many members of the SACP came out very strongly against the neoliberal face of the ANC, and Zuma was the populist who rode on that wave of dissent. He was in no way chosen by workers, as far as I know.

There is a lot of workers action in Southern Africa at the moment. In Mozambique, strikes turned into riots as bread prices are set to rise by 30%. And Mozambique is pretty much South Africa's pawn, along with all the other members of the SADC (South African development community). Unfortunately, I don't think there is much unity between unions in Mozambique and South Africa, but something could very well develop as South Africa continues

bricolage
6th September 2010, 15:36
Workers and I'm sure many members of the SACP came out very strongly against the neoliberal face of the ANC,
Perhaps. I think it is more useful to look at what the SACP as an organisation has done though which since the end of apartheid has been to either tacitly or even overtly support neoliberal reforms (eg. GEAR).


and Zuma was the populist who rode on that wave of dissent.
Yes this seems likely.


He was in no way chosen by workers, as far as I know.
What national leaders ever is!
I think the key point here is that he was chosen by the SACP, illustrating the gulf between the SACP and ordinary workers.


There is a lot of workers action in Southern Africa at the moment. In Mozambique, strikes turned into riots as bread prices are set to rise by 30%. And Mozambique is pretty much South Africa's pawn, along with all the other members of the SADC (South African development community). Unfortunately, I don't think there is much unity between unions in Mozambique and South Africa, but something could very well develop as South Africa continues
Indeed. The area is a hotbed of activity.

maskerade
6th September 2010, 16:47
Was browsing for some news and came across this. It's a well written article which outlines the relationship between the ANC, SACP, and COSATU.

http://www.cpgb.org.uk/article.php?article_id=1004074




The comrades of the Young Communist League, on the other hand, did not quite understand the need for restraint and conciliation. Unlike its parent body, the YCL condemned the police shooting of workers as “highly unacceptable and barbaric”, reminiscent of “apartheid-style tactics to suppress or intimidate workers” and “in total contravention of our constitution and workers’ right to take mass action in their struggle for a decent living wage and better working conditions” (August 19).

On August 22 it was furious at the government’s use of the courts: “We view this as antagonistic and affirmation that the state still serves and protects class interests of an elite few to the detriment of our people”. And the YCL’s Gauteng region went further: it was “not surprised that the capitalist state resorts to using its repressive apparatus to counter the genuine demands as tabled by organised workers”. It went on: “The attempts to sow divisions amongst the working class by the capitalist state must be vehemently condemned. The manner in which this government is acting is in no way different to the way the apartheid state drove a wedge between unions and community organisations during stayaways at the height of the struggle against apartheid.” Responsibility “should be placed squarely on the shoulders of a government that refuses to jettison its capitalist and anti-poor policies” (August 24).

More “irritable insults”, I suppose.
The SACP’s back-handed scabbing was not lost on Cosatu leaders, including its general secretary, Zwelinzima Vavi, himself an SACP member. He said Cosatu was “extremely unhappy” that communist leaders were “preoccupied” with their positions in government instead of doing the work of the party. Directly contradicting SACP policy, comrade Vavi announced on August 26 that Cosatu was no longer prepared to offer blanket support to ANC candidates. In next year’s local elections, “We will refuse to campaign or support candidates known to be thieves or lazy.” Not exactly a clear class line, but at least it is a start.

as capitalism wreaks more havoc in South Africa, a split in ANC seems more imminemt