Movement-building, the capitalist crisis and the South African elections

17 04 2009
Dale T. McKinley (2009-04-16)
Source: Pambazuka
Despite a sense of euphoria among significant sections of South Africa’s poor and working class that a Jacob Zuma presidency will usher in the long awaited better life for all, writes Dale McKinley, socialists know that Zuma will not dismantle the alignment of class forces consolidated by the ANC since the early 1990s, but rather further entrench them. Since social movements are not in a position to present an alternative parliamentary option to the masses, the Anti-Privatisation Forum is calling on communities, workers, the unemployed, youth and students not to vote in the national elections on 22 April 2009, rather than ‘wasting their vote and time on parties that have no intention of bringing about real fundamental changes’ and that do not ‘represent the aspirations and interests of the poor and working class communities’.

Read the rest of this entry »





Media: Women Farmworkers Threaten Election Boycott

16 04 2009
Davison Makanga
28 March 2009
Source: All Africa

Cape Town — Women from South Africa’s three Cape provinces have marched to parliament in Cape Town to denounce the country’s “slow and unbalanced” land redistribution programme. The protesters said if they are not given greater access to land, they will not vote in the country’s Apr. 22 general elections.

Placard-waving women at the Mar. 26 protest criticised the country’s Minister of Land Affairs, Lulu Xingwana, for failing them. Read the rest of this entry »





Media: ‘Path of riches wasn’t for Biko’

15 04 2009

Poor People’s Alliance: No Land! No House! No Vote!

15 April 2009
Source: The Sowetan

Azapo today is a danger to black South Africans and stands for everything that Steve Biko rejected, according to Andile Mngxitama in his new book, Why Biko would not vote.

Mngxitama says that Biko would reject black consciousness parties because they “prostitute their blackness as a lucrative path to enjoy the privileges of whiteness”. Read the rest of this entry »





Open letter to the President of South Africa from John Minto

15 04 2009
Open letter to the President of South Africa
January 28, 2008

Tena koe Thabo Mbeki,

I understand a nomination has been put forward for me to receive a South African honour later this year, the Companions of O R Tambo Award, on behalf of HART and the anti-apartheid movement of New Zealand for our work campaigning to end apartheid in South Africa.

I note the particular honour is conferred by the President of South Africa and awarded to “foreign citizens who have promoted South African interests and aspirations through co-operation, solidarity and support”.

We are proud of the role played by the movement here to assist the struggle against apartheid and I appreciate the sentiment behind the nomination. However after the most careful consideration I respectfully request the nomination proceed no further. Were an award to be made I would decline to accept it either personally or on behalf of the movement. Read the rest of this entry »





Bio of famous New Zealand anti-apartheid activist who is to visit AEC communities today

14 04 2009

AEC Note: Famous anti-apartheid activist John Minto will be visiting Anti-Eviction Campaign communities on April 14 and April 15.  He will be sleeping on Symphony Way today (April 14) in solidarity with the Symphony Way residents.  He can be interviewed in person on Symphony Way between April 14 at 15h00 and April 15 at 10h00.


To interview Mr Minto and for more information, contact Ashraf at 076 186 1408 or Mncedisi at 079 305 1066 between the hours of 15h00 today and 10h00 tomorrow.

Short bio on John Minto:

John Minto is visiting to South Africa for two weeks from 12 to 26 April.

John is a political activist who was spokesperson for HART – the New Zealand Anti-Apartheid Movement during the 1980s and was the public face of the campaign to stop the 1981 Springbok tour to New Zealand. (He was arrested numerous times during the protests and has a medium-sized criminal record!)


Early last year there was public controversy when he wrote a letter to Thabo Mbeki rejecting a nomination for the Companion of OR Tambo Award as he said the anti-apartheid campaign was not waged simply to enrich a few black millionaires but to bring economic and social change to benefit all South Africans (M&G article).


He is very critical of the economic policies of the ANC, in particular it’s reliance on free-market strategies which wherever they have been applied bring wealth to the few at the expense of the many.


After completing a physics degree John trained as a high school teacher and has taught most of the last 25 years. However he currently works for Unite Union – a trade union for low-paid workers in New Zealand. He is a spokesperson for Global Peace and Justice Auckland and the Quality Public Education Coalition.


It is John’s first visit to South Africa. The main purpose of the visit is to see first hand the development of post-apartheid South Africa and meet with groups struggling for a better deal under ANC policies. For example he will visit groups such as Abahlali baseMjondolo (the Durban-based shack-dwellers movement), Western Cape Anti-Eviction Campaign, the Anti-Privatisation Forum and meet with union representatives and activists in Ditsela (Development Institute for Training, Support and Education for Labour). He will address two university-based seminars – in Durban and East London.


He will also be meeting with South African activists from the sports boycott era.

John is 55 years old with two teenage boys and lives in Auckland.





Four Day Rolling Picket by the LPM at the Johannesburg High Court

14 04 2009
Press Statement from the Protea South Branch of the Landless People’s Movement
Sunday, 12 April 2009

As the Protea South branch of the Landless People’s Movement we have been resisting forced removal totransit camps and to the human dumping ground of Doornkop, demanding basic services and organising a bottom up democratic poor people’s politics against top down oppression by councillors and the police that beat people on their orders.

The middle class residents, in their privatised bond houses, want to deny us the right to live here in Protea South. The councillor is, as they always are, on the side of the middle class. The councillor, together with the police, wants to deny us the right to organise here. Our marches have been banned and we have been assaulted. It has become clear that democracy will not be given to us by politicians and the police – democracy is something that we will have to build in our struggle against the politicians and the police.
Read the rest of this entry »





Another World is Possible

13 04 2009
Reflections and Criticisms in World Social Forum, 2009, in Belem, Brazil
Saturday, April 11, 2009

The road to Brazil

My long trip started on the 20th January 2009 when I traveled from Cape Town to Durban by bus. I spent 26 hours on a City to City bus, moving from Cape Town via PE, East London and Umtata and then to Durban. As much as it was a long journey I must say it I really enjoyed it. I think it was nice touring my own country, getting the opportunity to be exposed to different corners of South Africa from Cities and Townships to Rural areas where the poorest of the poor are located as a result of the past.

As the bus goes from one City to the other you get to know the reality of the country and all the divisions of our society are displayed. You just see the difference between those who have and those who do not have. The gap between the poor and the rich is displayed very clearly. Read the rest of this entry »





AbM: Siyanda to March on Housing MEC on Tuesday 14 April 2009

9 04 2009
Thursday, 09 April 2009
Press Statement from the Siyanda (A & B) Abahlali baseMjondolo Branch

At 8:00 a.m. on 14 April 2009 we will march from Garrupa Park (next to the V.N. Naik School for the Deaf) in Newlands to the Metro Police Station in KwaMashu.

We have been marching on Councillor Madondo, for quite long now. He has never answered our memorandums. We have confronted him and he has made it clear that he cannot answer our questions. In February last year we marched on Mayor Mlaba. We have received no answer to our memorandum. Late last year the Abahlali baseMjondolo branch in Siyanda Section C marched on Provincial MEC for Housing Mike Mabuyakhulu. They received no reply to their memorandum. Now Siyanda Section A and B, those living in self built shacks and those living in government shacks, will march on Mabuyakhulu. Read the rest of this entry »





‘Fighting Foreclosure in South Africa’

8 04 2009

An Open Letter to US Activists
By The Western Cape Anti-Eviction Campaign
April 7, 2009 – The Nation Magazine

Editor’s Note: As the worldwide economic meltdown continues, it’s becoming clear that the fight against foreclosures is not simply an American issue; it is a global issue. And as US activists come to terms with the human consequences of the crisis, there is much to be learned from activists elsewhere who have been grappling with these issues for years.

The following open letter to US activists is a response to Ben Ehrenreich’s “Foreclosure Fightback,” published February 9 in The Nation. It is a letter of support and solidarity from a group of South African activists who have considerable experience fighting for the rights of the poor and dispossessed in post-apartheid South Africa.

The Nation welcomes responses from community activists around the world about your efforts to fight foreclosure and protect the most vulnerable from economic disaster. Use the e-form at the bottom of this page to tell your story. We’ll publish as many of your responses as possible in our ongoing “Tell The Nation” series.

To: All poor Americans and their communities in resistance

The privatization of land–a public resource for all that has now become a false commodity–was the original sin, the original cause of this financial crisis. With the privatization of land comes the dispossession of people from their land which was held in common by communities. With the privatization of land comes the privatization of everything else, because once land can be bought and sold, almost anything else can eventually be bought and sold.

As the poor of South Africa, we know this because we live it. Colonialism and apartheid dispossessed us of our land and gave it to whites to be bought and sold for profit. When apartheid as a systematic racial instrument ended in 1994, we did not get our land back. Some blacks are now able to own land as long as they have the money to do so. But as the poor living in council homes, renting flats or living in the shacks, we became even more vulnerable to the property market.

It is chilling to hear many people today speak with nostalgia about how it was better during apartheid–as if it was not apartheid that stole their land in the first place. But, in an obscure way, it makes sense. Back then in the cities there was less competition for land and housing. Because many of us were kept in the bantustans by a combination of force and economic compulsion (such as subsidized rural factories), the informal settlements in the cities were smaller and land less scarce.

But in the new South Africa (what some call post-apartheid South Africa and others call neoliberal South Africa), the elite have decided it is every man–or woman or multinational company–for him or herself. And thus, the poor end up fighting with the rich as well as with themselves. The elite use their wealth and their connections to all South African political parties in the pursuit of profit. There is very little regulation of this, and where there is regulation, corrupt and authoritarian government officials get around it in a heartbeat. People say that we have the best constitution in the world–but what kind of constitution enshrines the pursuit of profit above anything else? They claim it was written for us. That may be. But it obviously was not written by us–the poor. Read the rest of this entry »





Women of St James Street in court to prevent eviction

7 04 2009

Woodstock AEC Press Release on behalf of St James Street

When: 8th April 2009
Where: Cape Town Magistrate Court @ 09h00 am
Who will win court case? It will be the Women of St James Street, as Steer & Co will definitely lose out.

ALSO: Gympie Street in court today 7th April.  See previous press release.

The tenants of St James Street, all women, received eviction letters from the landlord on the 18th September 2009 to vacate the property on the 30th November 2008. There’s a standing agreement between the lessee / lessor and the tenants pay their rent every month on time. If someone can evict you for paying rent on time, then I’m afraid this democratic system is only valid for the corrupt capitalists who always like to enrich themselves at the expense of the poor. It also seems that landlords around Woodstock simply ignore the Constitution of the Republic of South Africa’s section 26 (2 & 3). The 2010 World Cup has become our worst nightmare. We are being evicted and the rich are going to use the 2010 World Cup to become richer, while the poor become poorer. Across South Africa and Africa, including in St James Street, the poor are having their houses taken away, we are having our food taken away, and we are having our dignity taken away. We all are refugees of one system – the capitalist system.

We invite each and every one especially the Social-Movements, Cosatu, NGO’s, etc, to come to the Court in solidarity.

For further information contact:

Sharifa- 072 553 1326, Aysha- 073 132 8746, Zehir- 082 492 5207 / Willy- 073 144 3619 (WAEC)








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