Masoga,

Brother, the rest of africa is reacting!  

Will south Africa be comfortable again in isolation?

Right now, none of South African citizens can dare say, in a foreign country, 
that they are south African, the pride is gone and violence is knocking at your 
door. 

And all these because of a 'king'? I pity you. 

Cheers.

  Original Message  
From: Mphiri Masoga
Sent: Sunday, April 19, 2015 12:26 PM
To: PAYCO [email protected]; [email protected]
Reply To: [email protected]
Subject: [PAYCO] WHAT WENT WRONG WITH AZANIA (SA) BURNING by Bulayo News on-line


What went wrong with SA independence to turn their anger and hate on foreigners?
by Nomazulu Thata
18 April 2015 | 1887 Views
What went wrong with South African independence to turn their anger and hate on 
foreigners? Naomi Klein chronologies some facets of a stolen revolution: "Shock 
doctrine"

"Reconciliation means that those who have been on the underside of history must 
see that there is a qualitative difference between repression and freedom.  And 
for them, freedom translates into having a supply of clean water, having a good 
job, to be able to send your children to school and to have accessible health 
care. I mean, what's the point of having made this transition if the quality of 
life of these people is not enhanced and improved? If not, the vote is 
useless."  These are the words of Archbishop Tutu verbatim, Chair of South 
Africa's Truth and Reconciliation Commission, 2001. Taken from the book: "Shock 
doctrine" by Naomi Klein.

Naomi Klein, the writer of "Shock Doctrine" follows the economic and political 
developments that took place in South Africa following the release of Nelson 
Mandela from prison in 1990. Her analysis on SA could give us some clue as to 
what happened to the revolution in SA? Who benefited from the independence, why 
do people feel betrayed, do they know they got betrayed?  Now it seems the 
betrayal, the hate and anger are openly, is nakedly vomited on the foreigners. 
They are to blame! They must leave South Africa or else they will be killed!

When Mandela was released from prison in 1990, February the 12th, he came to a 
world that had changed from what it was in 1963 before he went to prison. He 
arrived to a new generational South Africa, New Africa and a new world order. 
The socialist revolutionary movements the whole world had ceased to exist. The 
Berlin Wall had fallen and as a result the cold war over. Che Guevara had died 
long back, President Salvado Allende of Chile died in a coup in 1973, President 
Samora Machel of Mozambique died of a plane crash in October 1986. The 
repression at Tiananmen Square was crushed and communism in China collapsed, 
says Naomi in her "Shock Doctrine." But what Mandela still had firm in his mind 
when he left the prison door of Robin Island, was power of the Freedom Charter, 
policies that he had worked on with other ANC stalwarts before he went to 
prison and the document spread like fire to almost all peoples of South Africa, 
everyone in the revolution was convinced that it was a document to free the 
people of South Africa from political and economic oppression. ANC policies had 
its roots, its values its principles enshrined in the Freedom Charter, a live 
and timeless document adopted in 1955. The objectives of this noble document 
were, 

 - Landless people and dispossessed people should be given land
 - Workers should be given livable wages and shorter working hours
 - There should be free and compulsory education for all 
 - Right to freedom of movement irrespective of color race, creed and 
nationality
 - Share the country's wealth of land, gold and diamonds
 - Banks mineral wealth monopoly of industries shall be controlled to assist 
the wellbeing of the people

Before South Africa's democratic independence in 1994, South Africa had an 
economic system that perpetuated racism, and it implemented economic returns 
that were only to be enjoyed by the few white elite. The cheap labor they got 
forcefully from the black population nurtured the economy and it boosted, 
making South Africa the largest economy in the African continent. White people 
were paid ten times more than blacks doing the same job description. According 
to Naomi Klein, South Africa was a country with California living standards for 
the whites and Congo living standards for the black people. Mandela's release 
from prison could have sparked an economic collapse and civil war at the same 
time. He had to balance those forces never to be out of hand and explode into 
total civil war and chaos. The National Party of F. W. De Klerk provoked this 
scenario to prove that blacks were not capable of governing such a huge economy 
like South Africa. It was a two lane negotiation process; political and 
economical. Mandela and Ramaphosa, together with his ANC team had to negotiate 
the political independence from the hands of the few whites to the majority of 
South Africans. It is in this period when Mandela really shone out to the whole 
world, politically he was spot on, he had the subject knowledge in his 
fingertips.  Block by block he managed to get all the political power he had 
envisaged as leader of ANC for all those 27 years in prison. But it was 
something else with the economic liberation of South Africa. Mandela admitting 
his out of touch with the world developments that transpired in his absence, he 
gave the authority to engage with Apartheid South Africa to Chris Hani, who was 
known to be left oriented, and the then a young turk, Thabo Mbeki, an economist 
in Sussex University educated, bright and astute. For some reason, Chris 
Thembisile Hani was eliminated physically and otherwise, from the negotiating 
process, leaving speculation he may have been killed for his leftist ideas and 
the preservation of the ideals of the Freedom Charter. Chris Hani made it clear 
to all that he wanted to give relevance to the values and principles of the 
Freedom Charter in all economic transfer negotiations. If he had lived South 
Africa would be different from what it is now in terms of black economic 
empowerment and development, certainly not these cosmetic trickledown economics 
to empower blacks whose principles and values are the Washington Consensus, 
whatever that means.

The shrewd F. W. De Klerk managed to convince the ANC-team, then without Hani, 
that the economy of South Africa was going to be run at the behest of the 
Washington Consensus. That meant that trade policy, central bank, international 
trade agreements, innovations, constitutional and structural adjustment 
policies would be run by impartial experts such as the World Bank, IMF, GATT 
and the National Party and not elected law makers. The central bank was going 
to be independently run. ANC agreed! They failed to see the trick set against 
them by the Nationalist Party of F. W. De Klerk. The Freedom Charter was 
rendered useless overnight. According to Naomi in her book "Shock Doctrine" the 
monetary institutions, initially, were supposed to serve the new government and 
its noble goals enshrined in the Freedom Charter: growth, employment, 
redistribution of wealth. The ANC was then not going to implement the 
aspirations of the Freedom Charter because the central bank of South Africa was 
out of reach of the lawmakers from the onset. It was running as an autonomous 
entity from the State of Republic of South Africa and that was to be enshrined 
in the new constitution. It was first going to be run by Chris Stals as central 
bank Chef and Derek Keyes as Finance Minister. ANC agreed.

By the look of things, economic transition in South Africa was a horse trade 
scenario and consequences of which were never thought through by the ANC-Team. 
To put it crudely, ANC was outmaneuvered by the ruling National Party of F. W. 
De Klerk. Apparently ANC did not have the negotiating skills based on the 
economic transfer knowledge of a colony of 400 years to an independent South 
Africa. But it seems the Nationalist Party of F. W. De Klerk had rehearsed this 
scenario long back and they were smart from the onset of the negotiations. By 
surrendering unknowingly to give up the monetary institution, ANC got stuck 
into a web and never was able to untangle themselves out of it. It was still 
ringing in Mandela's mind that they needed to negotiate to offer the black's 
majority what they promised long back during the liberation struggle, well 
documented in the Freedom Charter. It was this rude shock to find that their 
hands were tied, they could not. They had all the political power but not the 
economic power to implement policies that were pro-poor. They needed money to 
build houses, give clean water and sanitation, free education for all and raise 
minimum wages, free health care. They were going to get the money by 
nationalizing the most important industries and assets: the mines and the land. 
Did ANC not know all these years of freedom struggle and all the precedence 
around them that the struggle for independence is economic power mostly? 

The most interesting events happened during those negotiations. The government 
of South Africa had its sanctions lifted and it meant that there had credit 
lines opened to monetary institutions: the World Bank and IMF. Behind the back 
of the coming ANC government, Apartheid South Africa borrowed money from the 
international monetary institutions, clandestinely. Overnight SA had an extra 
debt of just less than a billion US dollars, ($850 million) to be added to the 
already existing $4 billion dollars. It is this money that got looted by the NP 
and the debt was put paid on the lap of the new government of ANC. Naomi Klein 
says "it was the nature of democracy that was altered in the negotiation to set 
up a new system that was going to be impossible to untangle if the black 
government came to power." Banks, mines, 70% of the best lands, monopoly 
industries remained firmly in the same hands of those few whites and corporate 
national and international owners, who also controlled 80% of the Johannesburg 
Stock Exchange, very little or nothing changed significantly.  Indeed Mandela 
tried to negotiate; please raise the minimum wage, the answer was flat no. The 
money institutions talk of wage restraint, "you will shake the market 
confidence," again SA had signed a GATT making it illegal to subsidize 
factories and industries. Those commitments should be adhered to. What 
commitments? Did ANC realize that it was the Washington Consensus dictating the 
modus operandi, how the coming dispensation will function? Mandela wanted money 
just to improve housing, give electricity to all urban dwellers and clean water 
at least for black disadvantaged communities. Again it was no, those services 
should be in private hands.

President Mandela and the ANC had to be schooled to speak the language 
neo-liberalism of Milton Friedman. The economic negotiations were done in such 
a way that there was no departure from the Chicago School of neo-liberal 
thinking, genius unfetted capitalism. Thabo Mbeki's secret meetings with top 
businessmen may have sold the heart of the Freedom Charter, wholly 
unintentional, wholly unknowledgeable about the effects of neo-liberalism. The 
questions will insist, Mbeki is an economist, educated in UK's top University, 
was resident in London under Prime Minister Thatcher administration, how did he 
miss it at this crucial point of this great country's economic transformations, 
South Africa? His change of language changed from a revolutionary to 
Thatcherism. He, at one time said in 1996, you can call me Thatcherist if you 
want. He had managed to put together a neo-liberal document, a template that 
ANC would use to administrate the government of new democratic South Africa. 
"No taming of the free market, just feed it what it craves, only then, can 
there be growth unending." It will be interesting to know if he still believes 
in these words that came from him, verbatim. Mbeki did not stop there, he went 
further and he managed to convince President Mandela about the neo-liberal 
policies and jettison the Freedom Charter. The rhythm and grammar was that 
South Africa must speak the language of the global markets. Indeed the ANC 
dropped the party's manifesto the "Great Freedom Charter." Mbeki told Mandela 
that South Africa needed a new economic plan, which was shocking and bold. That 
was to be the neo-liberal shock therapy for South Africa, Naomi Klein wrote. 
Neo-liberalism means privatization, cuts on social spending, flexible labor, 
free trade and looser controls on cash flows – a market performance.  This is 
what South Africa's economy is based on despite all the deaths and sacrifices 
the people of South Africa have gone through the past 70 years of liberation 
struggle, they landed on neo liberalism as answer to their life long struggle - 
a curse, but Nelson Mandela lived it and he endorsed it. 

The Freedom charter was going to be a template for all other African countries 
in the continent if it was implemented successfully in South Africa under the 
great leader Nelson Rolihlahla Madiba Mandela.   

CONCLUSION
The bitterness comes from the fact that the new government of South Africa 
under ANC failed to meet the aspirations of liberation struggle. It is however 
not enough to go and vote for ANC. South Africa should never be fooled by one 
man one vote politics! South Africa should never be fooled by political power 
they possess. The neo-liberal policies of ANC that they adopted, how they got 
maneuvered by the NP in the economic transformations, makes black majority rule 
a lost out revolution completely. Archbishop Tutu says: "can you explain how a 
black person wakes up in a squalid ghetto today almost 10 years after 
independence. Then he goes to work in town which is still largely white, in 
palatial homes. And at the end of the day he goes back to his home to squalor. 
I don't know why these people can't say to hell with peace, to hell with truth 
and reconciliation commission."  According to Naomi's "Shock Doctrine," below 
are the facts that the citizens of the country should know and give thought; 
Since 1994 the year ANC took power, the number of people living on less $1 a 
day has doubled from 2 million to 4 million in2006.   Today 9% of the 
population live on just about $1,20 a day. Between 1991 and 2002, the 
unemployment rate for black South Africans more than doubled from 23 % to 48%. 
Of South Africa 38 million citizens only five thousand earn $60,000 a year. The 
number of whites in that income bracket is twenty times higher and many earn 
far more than that amount. The ANC government built 1.8 million homes, but in 
the mean time 2 million people have lost their homes. Close to one million 
people have been evicted from farms in the first decade of democracy. Such 
evictions have meant that the number of shack dwellers has grown by 50%. In 
2006, more than one in four South African lived in shacks located in informal 
shanty towns many without running water or electricity. The life expectancy of 
blacks in South Africa has dropped by 13%

The people of South Africa are advised to revisit the Freedom Charter, which is 
where the solutions to South African social problems today are shelved. South 
Africa is advised to launch a second liberation movement and re-address social 
issues embedded in the Freedom Charter. They should revisit the system of 
apartheid and re-negotiate the question of land, the role of multi-nationals 
who played a big role in boosting the Apartheid regime, the reparations. A 
holistic revision of history should be done. South African ANC government 
should stop paying Apartheid debt and that money should go and build schools 
and hospitals and homes for the young South Africans living rough in the 
streets of Soweto. In the mean time the Freedom Charter has long been 
forgotten. It is decorated in pillars that read: "South Africa belong to all 
who live in it, blacks and whites. The Freedom Charter in Kliptown mocks the 
very poor black people in the area. It is now a tourist attraction, nationals 
and international visitors come to see the monumental place that  seems to be 
saying the dreams of the majority of South Africans were lost here in Kliptown, 
ironically the place where the Freedom Charter was born, launched in 1955.

 Mandela was told rudely in G20 Leaders conferences that the "Marshal Plan that 
he envisaged in South Africa: the Marshal Plan that gave birth to West 
Germany's economy after WWII was no longer relevant in today's economic order, 
a new world order he was not sure of, he was 27 years out of all global 
developments, be it technological, political-ideological or economic, he was 
almost mistaking a microphone for a modern weapon of mass destruction! 

The crime rate is the most alarming development in South Africa. Unemployment 
is very high among the youth.  The prospects of a decent future seem to escape 
most of South Africa's young black population. Again the number of for
kind Regards, 

Mphiri Masoga 
SACWU PTA
Tel : 012 320 6472
Fax : 012 320 2179
Fax2Email: 0862254254
Cell : 0731822656

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