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South Africa: COSATU to hold Special National Congress as Right Wing
retreats<http://www.marxist.com/south-africa-cosatu-to-hold-special-national-congress.htm>
Written by Vernie MorkenFriday, 20 September 2013
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The Congress of South African Trade Unions (COSATU) will hold a special
national congress to deal with divisions that have ravaged South Africa's
largest labour federation for the last period. The announcement came on
August 19th after the three day meeting of the Central Executive Committee
(CEC) meeting that was held in Johannesburg. This was after nine affiliated
unions wrote to the CEC, requesting such a congress. This represents a step
in the right direction for the federation. COSATU's constitution states
that for a special congress to be held, at least one third of affiliates
(seven) must make such a request. The president of the federation then has
14 days to deal with the logistics of holding the congress, including
setting a date.
Divisions

[image: 
COSATULogo]<http://www.marxist.com/images/stories/south_africa/COSATULogo.jpg>The
immediate background to this was the suspension of the federation's general
secretary, Zwelinzima Vavi by the CEC on 14 August after he admitted to
having an extramarital affair with a junior colleague. In a previous
article we explained that the reason for Vavi's suspension had nothing to
do with his personal indiscretions, but rather with the politics and
contradictory forces in the Tripartite Alliance (ANC, SACP and COSATU).The
decision to suspend Vavi has plunged COSATU into the deepest crisis since
its formation. Unions have now lined up against each other, representing
right and left wings of the federation. At the time of Vavi's suspension,
the General Secretary of the Food and Allied Workers Union, Katishi
Masemola warned: “COSATU won't be the same. The first thing is that there
is going to be two camps within the federation. Each and every affiliate
will be affected by instability of sorts. Unity of each and every affiliate
is not guaranteed."

Since then events have proved him right. But the divisions run much deeper
than just within COSATU. The origins of the federation's troubles are
rooted in the Tripartite Alliance, and reflect the conflict between those
who are closer to the government and thus enjoy the “fruits of office” and
those who are closer to the shop floor and are much more in touch with
workers. The whole campaign to oust Vavi is actually an attempt to silence
him because of his outspokenness against corruption, anti-working class
policies, and his criticism of the fact that SACP and COSATU leading
members joined the ANC government where they implement these policies. The
General Secretary of the Metalworkers Union, (NUMSA), Irvin Jim, directly
accuses the secretary general of the ANC and the general secretary of the
Communist Party of being behind the divisions. Addressing workers at a
march in Randburg, Jim said: "Him [Mantashe] and Blade (Nzimande of the
SACP) are doing everything to divide COSATU unions".

For their part, Mantashe and Nzimande upped the ante by launching
blistering attacks against the pro-Vavi faction. Addressing members of the
police officers union (POPCRU), Nzimande  even referred to them as the
enemy: "If some union leaders think that they are going to take affiliates
out of COSATU, then they will find the Communist Party first. Those who are
threatening to walk out, they will first have to open this red door. Those
who are planning to do so; they are part of the enemy that wants to destroy
our revolution. There can be no problem that is bigger than the unity of
COSATU." This is quite typical of Nzimande - taking up a defensive position
in public while dealing through intrigue behind the scenes. He also
defended the fact that SACP leading members are part of the government,
saying:"The 'liberal idea'(!!) that the state was inherently bad and
constantly had to be criticised had to be resisted. That is why in our
universities and in the media, in order to prove that we are truly
independent, we must attack the government and the ANC. Then you will get
kudos. Most of us here campaigned for this government in 2009.So this is
our government, no matter what problems it has. It is our government.”

What revolution is Nzimande talking about when the ANC government is firmly
committed to capitalist policies, privatization, tendering, etc.? What
revolution is he talking about when prominent ANC leaders sit on the
administration boards of the same mining companies that ordinary
mine-workers are fighting against and then when mine-workers go on strike,
the ANC government responds by sending the police to massacre them? Where
is the revolution? The real threat to the unity of the movement is posed by
those who have high-jacked it in border to serve the interests of the
capitalist class.

It is no surprise that Nzimande takes up such a position. After all he is
the Minister of Higher Education. But what Comrade Nzimande fails to
understand is that those leaders who criticize the government and its
policies only reflect the views of ordinary working class people. These
criticisms do not come from the media or the universities, but from the
townships, the mines and the factory floor. According to the latest figures
of the police, they “managed” more than 12,000 protests in the last 12
months. And according to figures from the Labour Department, the number of
strikes taking place all over the country is at a 5-year high.

These protests and strikes are the reasons why some union leaders are
criticising the government. It is a reflection of the growing anger that is
building up in society and reflects the crushing failure of capitalism in
South African society. The people that are protesting and striking are the
very people that have voted in this government and also feel that it is
"their government." It is capitalism that is the source of these problems
and by being in government while it is implementing these capitalist
policies, the leaders of the Communist Party are complicit in the suffering
of the working people. This is what conditions the criticisms of Ivan Jim
and Zwelinzima Vavi, not the attempt to score political points, what
comrade Blade refers to as getting "kudos".

What is really at the bottom of this conflict is the accumulated anger of
the masses of workers, peasants and the poor, those who carried the brunt
of the struggle against apartheid but nearly twenty years later, after two
decades of ANC governments accepting the capitalist system, see how their
living conditions have not substantially changed. This anger has been
expressed in regular general strikes and constant protests in the townships
over lack of service delivery. It has expressed itself, albeit in a
distorted form, in conflicts and clashes in all the organizations of the
mass democratic movement. It led to the removal of Mbeki, identified with
the most openly pro-capitalist wing of the ANC, and his replacement by
Zuma, in the hope that he was to pursue different policies. Very soon
workers realized that Zuma was continuing a capitalist policy.

The fact that Vavi and NUMSA refused to wage a battle against Zuma at the
last congress of the ANC only served to encourage the right wing, which had
already purged the Young Communist League (YCL) and the ANC Youth League
(YL) of critical elements and decided to move against Vavi in an attempt to
bring COSATU under control. A lesson must be learnt. It is not possible to
fudge the struggle in the name of “maintaining unity” in the abstract.
Campaign for a special congress

Immediately after Vavi's suspension, the left wing of COSATU came out
fighting. At the front were the metalworkers of NUMSA. Irvin Jim of NUMSA
revealed that over the nine regions its members were "up in arms" about the
suspension of Vavi. The campaign had two fronts. The first was to take the
labour federation to court alleging that Vavi's suspension was procedurally
and substantially flawed. On the other hand, a campaign was launched to
call for a special congress of COSATU. The second one was the scenario that
the anti-Vavi faction wanted to avoid at all costs because the general
secretary is very popular amongst the workers. This campaign was led and
supported by the municipal workers union (SAMWU), the Communications
Workers Union (CWU), the retail workers (SACCAWU), the Food and Allied
Workers Union (FAWU), the football workers union (SAFPU) and NUMSA.

When the constitutional requirements were met and a special congress became
inevitable, the ANC formed a special task force led by its deputy
president, the former mine workers leader turned billionaire businessman
Cyril Ramaphosa, but also including Mantashe and ANC Chairperson Baleka
Mbete, to "engage" the federation and find solutions for the divisions.
Also, former trade union leaders Sydney Mufamadi, Alec Irvin and Enoch
Godongwana, separately tried to fix a deal on behalf of the ruling party
leaders. But these attempts immediately backfired. The deputy general
secretary of NUMSA, Karl Cloete, told Mr.Mufamadi and Mr.Godongwana in no
uncertain terms that they are "starting in the wrong place" and they should
start to heal the rift by "turning to their own party". Mr Cloete made it
very clear that the intervention by the ANC was not welcome: "It is the ANC
that wants a conveyor belt, a toy telephone, a labour desk, that is not
critical of anything...they must go to the NEC (of the ANC), it all started
there", he told NUMSA's political school in Benoni. Directly criticizing
the ANC general secretary, Cloete said:"That is the office that is meant to
build unity when there is disunity. That is an office that must give
guidance... Unfortunately, we cannot say that today."

It is clear that the right wing miscalculated in its attempts to oust Vavi
and make COSATU a compliant lapdog of the ruling right wing capitalist
bureaucratic clique. But even as it is forced to hold a special congress,
it is not at all attempting to go down without a fight. Already there are
rumblings that Vavi might face additional charges for allegedly breaching
the terms of his suspension because he addressed striking workers. This is
quite in tune with the mindset of a bureaucrat - try to resolve issues
behind closed doors in special meetings, behind the backs of workers. There
are also fears that the president of COSATU, Dlamini, could come up with
delaying tactics in holding the special congress which could lead to a
costly court battle.
Forward to the special congress!

In our previous article we wrote:"As was shown by the removal of Mbeki at
the Polokwane Congress of the ANC, the left wing is far stronger within all
the organisations of the movement, as it represents more faithfully the
interests of and views of the masses of workers and the poor who vote and
support the ANC." This was shown once again in this case. Within a short
space of time the left wing has managed to turn the guns around and they
are now facing the anti-Vavi faction. The holding of the special congress
is very significant because the workers will now decide the future of the
federation. This is the real meaning of “worker-led and worker-controlled”
which is the motto on which COSATU was founded. The president of COSATU and
other right wingers will now have to face the workers in a direct showdown.

But the mere staging of a congress is not enough. Nothing must be taken for
granted, least of all the opinions of workers. A mass campaign must now be
launched to win back the federation and bring it back to its revolutionary
traditions, to bring back the COSATU that took on the combined might of the
Apartheid state and the bourgeois class and forced them to make substantial
concessions. A  COSATU that will not be a conveyor belt of the ruling
party, but an independent and fearless federation that is worker controlled.

The crisis that has now engulfed COSATU is much broader than the
personalities that are involved. It is actually a crisis of reformism. It
is the price that has to be paid for wanting to manoeuvre within the limits
of capitalism and gradually wanting to reform society. But as is showed on
a global scale, reforms are impossible. Capitalism is now facing its
deepest crisis since the 1930's and probably the most severe crisis in its
history in terms of its scope. Nowhere is this better shown than in South
African society where poverty, inequality and unemployment have hit society
particularly hard.

The only solution to these problems is to fight for socialism. Only by
nationalising the commanding heights of the economy under workers control
and implementing a wide ranging agrarian reform can we address the problems
facing society. The prior condition for this is to fight for such a
programme. The struggle for socialism must be put at the centre of the
forthcoming COSATU congress. The issues have to be brought out clearly, so
that every worker can understand what is at stake. The forces of the left
are much stronger than those of the right wing because they represent the
genuine interests of the working masses and the poor. There is no objective
reason why the task of fighting for a socialist programme cannot be
achieved.

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