*M­arikana Commission: Dali Mpofu drops new torture bombshell*

   - Sipho Hlongwane


31 October 2012 13:22 (South Africa)
<http://dailymaverick.co.za/article/2012-10-31-marikana-commission-dali-mpofu-drops-new-torture-bombshell>

On Wednesday, Dali Mpofu told the Marikana Commission of Inquiry that six
men arrested by the police in the last weeks were brutally tortured while
in custody. We also got an update on why Legal Aid is refusing to fund the
legal fees for the wounded miners. By SIPHO HLONGWANE.

The Marikana Commission of Inquiry has heard that six men arrested in the
past weeks have been savagely tortured by the police. Dali Mpofu, the
advocate for the 78 miners wounded by the police on 16 August, said that
the men were released last night and told him of their ordeal.

To rea article:
http://dailymaverick.co.za/article/2012-10-31-marikana-commission-dali-mpofu-drops-new-torture-bombshell
Workers Gathering After Amplats
Protests<http://allafrica.com/stories/201210311197.html>
<https://www.siteadvisor.com/sites/http://allafrica.com/stories/201210311197.html?pip=false&premium=true&client_uid=3207531162&client_ver=3.5.0.229&client_type=IEPlugin&suite=true&aff_id=0&locale=en_us&ui=1&os_ver=6.1.1.0>
You +1'd this publicly.
Undo<https://www.google.com/search?hl=en&gl=us&tbm=nws&q=South+Africa#>
AllAfrica.com-22 minutes ago
*South Africa*: Workers Gathering After Amplats Protests. By Jenni Evans,
31 October 2012. Johannesburg — Almost 2000 fired mineworkers were
gathering *...*
 +
Show moreShow less


<http://sacsis.org.za/s/>
The South African Civil Society Information Service

A nonprofit news agency promoting social justice. Seeking answers to the
question: How do we make democracy work for the poor?


Our Newsletters

   -

Related Articles

   - Who Murdered NUM Branch Secretary Daluvuyo
Bongo?<http://sacsis.org.za/site/article/1471>
   - The Road to Marikana: Abuses of Force During Public Order Policing
   Operations <http://sacsis.org.za/site/article/1455>


Wise Words

Democracy is the road to socialism
Karl Marx

War is Upon Us
By Richard Pithouse <http://sacsis.org.za/s/stories.php?iUser=20> · 30 Oct
2012
<http://sacsis.org.za/site/article/1474/print#><http://sacsis.org.za/site/article/1474/print#>
 
<http://sacsis.org.za/site/article/1474/print#>9<http://sacsis.org.za/site/article/1474/print#>

[image: Picture credit: Adapted by SACSIS from various
sources.]<http://sacsis.org.za/s/story.php?s=1474>
Picture credit: Adapted by SACSIS from various sources.


*to the fragrance of lemon blossoms
and then to the ultimatums of war*
*- Pablo Neruda, Right Comrade, Its the Hour of the Garden, Isla Negra,
Chile, September 1973*



When COSATU and the Communist Party have to rely on the police and their
stun grenades, rubber bullets and, by some accounts, live ammunition to
force their way into a stadium against the opposition of striking workers
it is clear that their assumption of a permanent right to leadership is
facing a serious challenge from below. It's equally clear that the ruling
party and its allies intend to force obedience rather than to seek to
renegotiate support or enable democratic engagement, that the police aren't
even making a pretence of being loyal to the law rather than the ruling
party and that this is the way that Blade Nzimande likes it.

The misuse of the police to defend the authority of the ruling party in
Rustenburg is no exception to a broadly democratic consensus. In fact it
has become a routine feature of political life. At the same time as the
drama was unfolding in Rustenburg on Saturday a meeting with technical
experts to discuss a plan to upgrade the Harry Gwala shack settlement on
the East Rand was summarily banned by the police on the grounds that it was
a 'security threat'. The settlement is in urgent need of services as basic
as water and refuse removal but millions have been spent on a pavilion in
memory of Oliver Tambo adjacent to the settlement. As the ANC's role in the
struggles against apartheid is memorialised that memory is simultaneously
desecrated as it is mobilised to legitimate the increasingly violent
containment of popular dissent.

The collapse of the ruling party's hegemony on the mines in Rustenburg is
not the first time that the ANC has lost control of a territory where it
once took its right to rule for granted. In early 2006 the ANC was, despite
a large police presence and a large contingent of supporters bussed in from
elsewhere, unable to go ahead with a rally to be addressed by S'bu Ndebele,
the then Premier of KwaZulu-Natal, in the Kennedy Road shack settlement in
Durban. Some years later the ANC eventually took that space back with the
open use of violence organised through party structures with the support of
the police. But despite the announcement, made by a senior SACP member,
that the state had decided to 'disband' the movement that had won popular
support in Kennedy Road, and despite tremendous intimidation and the gross
misuse of the police and the criminal justice system to try and effect this
ban, that movement, Abahlali baseMjondolo endures. The rupture in
Rustenburg may also cohere into an enduring force. And there will be more
ruptures to come.

There are important respects in which the politics developed in and around
Marikana is very different from that developed in and around Kennedy Road
seven years earlier. But one of the things that these two points of rupture
do have in common is a firm insistence on the right of people in struggle,
people who have decided to take their future into their own hands, to speak
for themselves. This shared suspicion of authorised forms of local
representation, and the consequent desire of people to represent themselves
where they live and work, could, along with other points of connection,
ranging from familial links to a shared experience of repression, provide
common ground for linking struggles in urban shack settlements and on the
mines. It has, in itself, no predetermined political character but, amongst
other potentials, some of which could well be marked by a dangerous
counter-brutality, the rejection of the ruling party's local mechanisms for
sustaining political control does carry the possibility for a renewal of
democratic possibility.

The path that winds from Polokwane to Kennedy Road and on to Marikana and
Nkandla and then up, past the reach of our gaze and over the horizon, is
not taking us towards anything like the kinds of societies imagined in the
Freedom Charter or the Constitution. The only visible transition on offer
is one in which liberal democracy is increasingly replaced with a system in
which the political class is treated as if it is above the law, the state
is openly used as an instrument for the political class to accumulate
rather than to redistribute wealth and power and people engaged in certain
kinds of popular dissent are treated as if they are beneath the law. Police
violence, including torture and murder, as well as state sanction for
political violence by ANC supporters and political assassination have all
become familiar features of our political life.

And powerful figures and forces in the ruling alliance from Jacob Zuma to
Sidumo Dlamini, the Communist Party, MK veterans, SADTU and others are
openly speaking the language of war. They may say that the war is on the
enemy within, enemy agents, neoliberals, imperialists, criminals, enemies
of the national-democratic revolution and counter-revolutionaries but what
they really mean is that they do not intend to accept popular dissent as
legitimate or to engage it through democratic institutions. Instead it is
proposed that dissent be dealt with by the police and on occasion the army,
as well as counter-mobilisation that aims to destroy rather than to engage
and which is already often armed, and, in Sidumo Dlamini's view, MK. War,
generally not the war of open manoeuvre that we saw in Marikana and which
we've seen, although with nothing like the same degree of murderous intent,
in shack settlements across the country in recent years but rather the
scattered, often secretive and frequently highly territorialised violence
of low intensity war, of counter-insurgency, is upon us. The Kennedy Road,
eTwatwa, Makause and Zakheleni shack settlements have all experienced this
since Polokwane.

The figures in the ANC that talk of a return to principled leadership have
no material base from which they could make a serious attempt to challenge
the capture of the party and, thereby, the state by factions that are both
predatory and authoritarian. For this reason their discourse functions,
irrespective of their intentions, to legitimate the party rather than to
organise or represent a last ditch attempt to save it. And, with the
exception of the metal worker's union, Marikana has marked the end of
COSATU's claim to democratic credibility and moral authority. If there is
to be a renewal of democratic possibilities it will have to be undertaken
against the ruling party and its allies.

Popular struggle against a post-colonial state is a very different thing to
a national liberation struggle against an internationally discredited form
of domination. But the time has come when we have to, like the generations
that confronted the end of the illusions in postcolonial states elsewhere,
face a future in which defeat of democratic and progressive aspirations is
the most likely outcome of the ruthless intersection between elite
nationalism and capitalism. And while there are some examples of popular
struggles in the postcolony that have attained some critical mass in recent
years they have also, as in Haiti and Bolivia, had to confront serious
limitations. There is no easy route out of this crisis.

Nonetheless it is clear that the only viable resolution is one that
includes the majority of us. This could take the form of an authoritarian
and even quasi-fascist response to the crisis. But it could also take the
form of a democratic project that seeks to move beyond the liberal
consensus that reduced democracy to voting, court action and NGO campaigns
and to build the political power of the dispossessed from the ground up.
But if an insurgent project of this nature is to have any enduring success
it will have to understand that the line dividing the political from the
economic has been drawn to sustain both privilege and exclusion and that
wealth, power and the structures that sustain them need to be subject to
serious critique. This would put such a project at odds with most of the
media and civil society as well as the ruling party making it, to say the
least, a risky endeavour. But if political empowerment doesn't translate
into material empowerment – into land, housing, decent incomes and decent
education – it will be little more than a detour on the road that has
already taken us from Polokwane to Nkandla with our journey marked out in a
steadily accumulating record of intimidation and blood.

The challenges that confront us are tremendous. But when war is announced
there are only two real choices – to resist or to submit. The urgent
questions that we have to confront are these: What will be the nature of
our resistance and how will we carry it forward?
*Pithouse* teaches politics at Rhodes University.

Read more articles by Richard
Pithouse<http://sacsis.org.za/s/stories.php?iUser=20>.


This SACSIS article is licensed under a Creative Commons
License<http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.5/za/>.
You are welcome to republish this article as long as it is attributed to
The South African Civil Society Information Service (www.sacsis.org.za).
For more information about reprinting rights, please see our Copyright
Policy <http://sacsis.org.za/s/stories.php?iCategory=12>.

To receive an email notification when a new SACSIS article is published on
this website, please click here <http://sacsis.org.za/s/mailing.php>.

For regular and timely updates of new SACSIS articles, you can also follow
us on Twitter @SACSIS_News <http://twitter.com/#!/SACSIS_News> and/or
become a SACSIS fan on
Facebook<http://www.facebook.com/pages/The-South-African-Civil-Society-Information-Service-SACSIS/175189055829577>.


Read more articles filed under Democracy &
Governance<http://sacsis.org.za/s/stories.php?iCategory=1>.


Read more articles tagged with: marikana
massacre<http://sacsis.org.za/s/stories.php?iKeyword=706>,
police repression <http://sacsis.org.za/s/stories.php?iKeyword=285>, state
repression <http://sacsis.org.za/s/stories.php?iKeyword=711>.

You can find this page online at http://sacsis.org.za/site/article/1474.


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



------------------------------------

---------------------------------------------------------------------------
LAAMN: Los Angeles Alternative Media Network
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Unsubscribe: <mailto:laamn-unsubscr...@egroups.com>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Subscribe: <mailto:laamn-subscr...@egroups.com>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Digest: <mailto:laamn-dig...@egroups.com>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Help: <mailto:laamn-ow...@egroups.com?subject=laamn>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Post: <mailto:la...@egroups.com>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Archive1: <http://www.egroups.com/messages/laamn>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Archive2: <http://www.mail-archive.com/laamn@egroups.com>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Yahoo! Groups Links

<*> To visit your group on the web, go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/laamn/

<*> Your email settings:
    Individual Email | Traditional

<*> To change settings online go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/laamn/join
    (Yahoo! ID required)

<*> To change settings via email:
    laamn-dig...@yahoogroups.com 
    laamn-fullfeatu...@yahoogroups.com

<*> To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:
    laamn-unsubscr...@yahoogroups.com

<*> Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to:
    http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/

Reply via email to