An interesting read Ma Afrika!!!!!

 <http://www.marikana-truth.com/marikana-massacre/> Marikana Massacre: All
this to protect an Oligarch?

Posted on  <http://www.marikana-truth.com/marikana-massacre/> September 5,
2012 by  <http://www.marikana-truth.com/author/admin/> Arthur Mackay 

Amidst all the confusion after the shooting of 44 protesting miners at
Lonmin's Marikana platinum mine in South Africa, we should not lose sight of
the astonishingly simple underlying issues.

We are told the workers are demanding that their wage be raised to R12,500
per month (about $1,500) but the workers claim their salary is already at
this level. They say they are sub-contracted by a company owned by
billionaire South African oligarch Cyril Ramaphosa. He only pays them R5,400
or less and pockets the rest paid out by Lonmin.

If this is so then agreeing to the workers' demands would cost Lonmin
nothing and the whole dispute is between the workers and Cyril Ramaphosa.
Instead of saying this however, Lonmin has placed itself between the two and
taken responsibility for negotiating a pay rise which no one has asked for.
Doing this, Lonmin is placing Cyril Ramaphosa's private interests above
those of its common stockholders and is neglecting its fiduciary duties. It
is also leaving itself open to litigation.

Cyril Ramaphosa in fact owns 9% of Lonmin but was paid out $304m in cash by
the company in 2010 in a deal backed ultimately by Xstrata. By comparison
common shareholders have received only $60m in dividends in the last two
years and have incurred over $2.5bn of paper losses. What the workers are
requesting is that Ramaphosa share with them about $18m which he is taking
from their wages.

When Cyril Ramaphosa bought 50.03% of Lonmin's Black Economic Empowerment
partner Incwala Resources in 2010, Lonmin put up the $304m in cash which he
needed. Lonmin funded this with a share issue to which, according to Lonmin,
Xstrata was the key subscriber. Since then a further $51m of credit has been
extended to Ramaphosa.

Ramaphosa's company also provides all of Lonmin's welfare and training
services and for this he may have been paid at least $50m in 2011 alone.
Based on the worker's demands and their living conditions, we can guess at
how much of this reached its stated purpose. Companies linked to Ramaphosa
were also paid "advance dividends" by Lonmin of $20m in the last two years.

All-in Lonmin seems to have paid Ramaphosa and his related companies well
over $400m since he bought into the company. This is about 25% of Lonmin's
current market value and is a very large amount for a man who was supposed
to be doing the paying when he bought his stake.

And this is not all.

The Marikana conflict is portrayed as a dispute between two unions, the
hegemonic NUM and a small new union, the AMCU. But the NUM has been Cyril
Ramaphosa's vehicle since he founded it in 1982. He was its Secretary
General until 1998, the year he went into private business to become a
billionaire. This has led to claims that the ANC has instituted a form of
modern day slave labour. The workers' employer and their union are
effectively the same person. Is it surprising that the workers worry that
their union is not wholeheartedly defending their legal rights?

All this casts the Marikana conflict in a very different light to what we
have heard so far.

The dirt-poor Marikana workers, many from Lesotho, living in slums, wearing
rags, are asking for an extra $750 per month from one of the most powerful
figures in the ANC and one of the richest men in the world, and they are
openly calling him an exploiter.

Such a debacle, which calls into question not only Lonmin, Xstrata and
Ramaphosa but also the whole ANC hierarchy, the reality of the "New South
Africa" and the credibility of the ANC's many foreign supporters, not least
those in the United States, helps to explain the speed and the savage
brutality of the reaction.

On 16th August, 6 days into the strike, the police opened fire injuring 112
and killing 34.

Local witnesses claim the workers were not charging at the police but were
fleeing from them as tear gas was thrown at them by another police
detachment. Autopsy reports apparently confirm many were shot in the back.

At the time Jacob Zuma, President of South Africa, was in Mozambique at an
SADC meeting. He returned to South Africa but only one day later. He visited
Marikana briefly but stayed away from the main area. A full five days passed
and only then did he return and visit the crime scene. On the day of the
attack Ian Farmer, the CEO of Lonmin, was diagnosed with a "serious illness"
and still has not returned to work.

A few days later the 270 men who were arrested were charged with committing
murder. They allege that they were stripped in their cells and beaten with
sticks. Once an international outcry began and it became apparent that the
publicity of a trial could be counterproductive, they were quickly released.

Even with the above illumination, some crucial questions still remain.

How could Cyril Ramaphosa exercise such influence over Lonmin's Executive
Board to be able to effectively bend it, and potentially the Board of
Xstrata too, to do his bidding? And what truth could the South African
government have been so desperate to hide that it was judged better to risk
everything and open fire on its own people, rather than let it see the
light?

The answer lies at the heart of the bitter fallacy of the South African
commodities boom and the emerging markets paradigm which we have lived in
the last 15 years. The sad truth is that nothing has changed, or, more
accurately, nothing has improved.

In the past there was one oligarch and one South African mining company.
They officially opposed the apartheid regime and were liberal but
conveniently continued to export gold and diamonds from South Africa up to
and beyond 1994.

Today there are five to ten oligarchs. They are black and they are African.
They too oppose apartheid and they too are exporting all of South Africa's
gold and diamonds at the present time. The reason Cyril Ramaphosa could
ransack Lonmin in the way he has is because he effectively is Lonmin. Lonmin
exists in many ways to serve his interests and its foreign shareholders
would do well to understand this. The whole debate about nationalisation is
therefore completely moot. South Africa's mines have already been
nationalised and given over to a ruthless tyranny, signed, sealed and
delivered by the many cheerleaders of the ANC overseas.

So what will happen next? In fact the next Marikana has already occurred.
Tear gas was fired and four workers were shot two days ago on a gold
property near Johannesburg controlled by another oligarch, Tokyo Sexwale.
The strategy of the ANC's opposition, which is correct given the extent of
the disenfranchisement since 1994, will be to now target every oligarch. It
will be demanded that they return much of what was taken. But this will
never be done voluntarily and so this conflict, just like the apartheid
struggle, will go on for many years.

Will this really be the lasting legacy of the post-apartheid era? Is this
what Nelson Mandela's years in prison, Bill and Hillary Clinton's ringing
endorsements, Bob Geldof's concerts and Bono's songs were meant to bring to
us? Will they all now leave the world in darkness, with a set of fearful
problems for a future generation to sort out? We will have to hope for the
best but prepare for the worst.

 

 

- Arthur Mackay is an analyst of global economic and political issues.

Posted in  <http://www.marikana-truth.com/category/uncategorized/>
Uncategorized |  <http://www.marikana-truth.com/marikana-massacre/#comments>
30 Comments 

 

  _____  

This e-mail is subject to the Columbus Stainless [Pty] Ltd Email Legal
Notices available at: http://www.columbus.co.za/EmailLegalNotice.htm.

  _____  

This e-mail message has been scanned for Viruses and Content and cleared by
MailMarshal 

  _____  

 

This email has been scanned for viruses and malware, and automatically
archived by Mimecast SA (Pty) Ltd, an innovator in Software as a Service
(SaaS) for business. Mimecast Unified Email Management T (UEM) offers email
continuity, security, archiving and compliance with all current legislation.
To find out more, contact Mimecast <http://www.mimecast.co.za/uem-ppc> .
itevomcid 

Important Notice:

Absa is an Authorised Financial Services Provider and Registered Credit
Provider, registration number: NCRCP7. This e-mail and any files transmitted
with it may contain information that is confidential, privileged or
otherwise protected from disclosure. If you are not an intended recipient of
this e-mail, do not duplicate or redistribute it by any means. Please delete
it and any attachments and notify the sender that you have received it in
error. Unless specifically indicated, this e-mail is not an offer to buy or
sell or a solicitation to buy or sell any securities, investment products or
other financial product or service, an official confirmation of any
transaction, or an official statement of Absa. Any views or opinions
presented are solely those of the author and do not necessarily represent
those of Absa. This e-mail is subject to terms available at the following
link: http://www.absa.co.za/disclaimer. The Disclaimer forms part of the
content of this email. If you are unable to access the Disclaimer, send a
blank e-mail to  <mailto:[email protected]> [email protected] and we
will send you a copy of the Disclaimer. By messaging with Absa you consent
to the foregoing. By emailing Absa you consent to the terms herein. This
email may relate to or be sent from other members of the Absa Group.

 

 

  _____  

This e-mail transmission contains confidential information, which is the
property of EOH Holdings Limited and its subsidiaries ("EOH"). No person,
other than the recipient (so indicated by the sender) may use or disclose
the contents of this message, links or attachments hereto, to any person
whatsoever. Unauthorised disclosure and/or use may result in civil and
criminal liability. Any views expressed in this message are those of the
individual sender, except where the message states otherwise and the sender
is authorised to state them to be the views of any such entity. The
disclaimer forms part of the content of this e-mail in terms of section 11
of the Electronic Communications and Transactions Act, 25 of 2002. Refer to
EOH Disclaimer <http://www.eoh.co.za/live/content.php?Item_ID=1746>  

  _____  

-- 
Sending your posting to [email protected]

Unsubscribe by sending an email to [email protected]

You can also visit http://groups.google.com/group/payco

Visit our website at www.mayihlome.wordpress.com

Reply via email to