----- Original Message -----
From: "Ian Murray" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> [Patrick Bond, if you're 'out there' what's up with this? Ian]
> ANC fears union plot to launch rival party

(Can I advertise my book on this topic of the new "ultra-left" - we jokingly
call each other, "Hey, m'ooltra' to make it sound sexy - which came out this
week from University of Cape Town Press? "Against Global Apartheid: South
Africa meets the World Bank, IMF and International Finance"... details
available if you email me at [EMAIL PROTECTED])

There's no Workers' Party on the way (not for the next 5 years, I'd bet).
Instead, we're seeing a multiple, interlocking set of challenges to the
ruling regime on a variety of fronts. There is great paranoia amongst the
ANC neoliberal clique, because not only are Cosatu comrades very annoyed
about privatisation - and hundreds of thousands took off two-days' pay in
late August for a general strike -but in addition people on the ground are
flexing muscles.

Details around one example, electricity, are revealing. In a couple of hours
I'm off to Soweto to party at the Orlando East Communal Hall with the Soweto
Electricity Crisis Committee, and to see the premiere of the new 1/2 hour
video doccie, "People's Power: Sparks Fly in Soweto" (soon to be available
more generally, in prep for Rio+10 here in Jo'burg next September). Anyhow,
inspired in part by PEN-Ler Gene Coyle's excellent arguements about
discriminatory pricing in electricity market, the Soweto comrades and their
academic friends (http://www.queensu.ca/msp - see recent documents) argued
for free lifeline services (1 kWh/person/day free), and against the pricing
strategy of Eskom which has led to thousands of disconnections... and in
turn to massive urban rioting... and late last week, to the following
victory:

***

People's Power in Soweto!

 An End to Eskom's Electricity Cuts--
 but Related Struggles to Intensify

 Soweto Electricity Crisis Committee
PRESS RELEASE FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: 10AM, 18 OCTOBER

CONTACTS:  Trevor Ngwane, chairperson, 083-293-7691 and 011-339-4121
Dudu Mphenyeke, media officer, 082-953-9003 Virginia Setshedi, deputy
chairperson, 072-152-4220

 The Soweto Electricity Crisis Committee warmly welcomes the suspension of
cut-offs by Eskom. This is a victory for humanity, for development and for
the expansion of our constitutional rights to lead lives of dignity.
 The news comes on the eve of our launching major civil protests and legal
action against Eskom and municipalities which persist in denying
constitutional rights to low-income citizens. We will not rest, but will
intensify the struggle of poor and working-class Sowetans in related
socio-economic grievances. The Johannesburg Metro's iGoli 2002 plan, and
Johannesburg Water Company's plan to cut off water supplies and impose pit
latrines on poor people are now targets in our sights. But we will expand
our work into a variety of other socio-economic rights, including water,
healthcare, housing, the environment, employment and access to food.
 And in doing so, we will join people across Gauteng in our
Anti-Privatisation Forum. In six weeks' time, we will host similar groups
across South Africa in the National Exploratory Workshop. That workshop will
spread the lessons of how people's power can overwhelm unaccountable,
heartless officials from Eskom, other parastatal agencies, national and
provincial government departments, and municipalities. As we approach the
Rio+10 World Summit on Sustainable Development, the lesson will go out to
the whole world: only struggle by the masses for social justice can reverse
the tide of free-market economics and big-business interests that are
corrupting our hard-fought South African liberation.
 Eskom's incompetence when billing Sowetans is one of its most important
apartheid-era legacies. After 1994, the incompetence worsened, and was
accompanied in recent months by the most cruel and unusual measures to cut
peoples' supplies.
 In claiming victory, the Soweto Electricity Crisis Committee salutes the
many people who have been shot--at least two dead in the Vaal--by Eskom
security officials and outsourced mercenary companies, and the dozens of
people killed in electrocutions caused by inadequate Eskom and municipal
services.
 We believe that the drive to privatise--by milking more from the
poor--seemed to instill in Eskom the most anti-social, anti-environmental
strategies. We also believe that the tide has turned, internationally,
against privatisation. "Renationalisation" is now a popular sentiment.
 We also believe that People's Power is responsible for Eskom's U-turn. We
mobilised tens of thousands of Sowetans in active protests over the past
year. We established professional and intellectual credibility for our
critique of Eskom, even collaborating on a major Wits University study. We
demonstrated at the houses of the mayor, Amos Masondo, and local
councillors, and in the spirit of non-violent civil disobedience, we went so
far as to disconnect the electricity supplies of the mayor and councillors
to give them a taste of their own medicine.
 On Saturday, 14 October, Councilor Kunene's supply was cut by non-violent
protesters. On Monday at 4AM, the police raided two homes of SECC comrades,
but failed to arrest them. On Tuesday, five hundred Sowetans presented
themselves for mass arrest at Moroka Police Station, but the police were
overwhelmed by our unity.
 Yesterday, the councilors met Eskom, and we can guess what they had to say
about the company's terribly unpopular policies, and how those policies are
ruining the reputation of the ruling party and the government as a whole.
Finally, someone is knocking sense into Eskom's senior management.
 For us, the price has been high. But further battles remain, and we will
intensify our struggle with renewed confidence and momentum. Eskom is still
running its business
 We have won a temporary victory over Eskom, but our other demands remain
outstanding:

 . commitment to halting and reversing privatisation and commercialisation,
the scrapping of arrears,

 . the implementation of free electricity promised to us in municipal
elections a year ago,

 . ending the skewed rates which do not sufficiently subsidise low-income
black people,

 . additional special provisions for vulnerable groups--disabled people,
pensioners, people who are HIV+--and

 . expansion of electrification to all, especially impoverished people in
urban slums and rural villages, the vast majority of whom do not have the
power that we in Soweto celebrate.

We thank for their support, all the comrades in Soweto, all the media who
have covered our story and many which have editorialised against Eskom,
trade unionists who have vigorously fought privatisation, Wits University
Municipal Services Project and Wits Centre for Applied Legal Studies

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