*YCLSA statement on the ANC and NUM’s response to the call for
nationalisation*

*07 July 2009*

As the YCLSA, we welcome the ANC’s willingness to engage on the transfer of
wealth to the people as a whole in a form of nationalization and/or
socialization of our mines and banks. However, the ANC cannot lead society
from a watered-down interpretation of the Freedom Charter and its own
resolutions.

We are concerned that the ANC’s interpretation of the Freedom Charter is
just equated to the Mineral and Petroleum Resources Development Act.
Transfer of the minerals in the hands of the state does not necessarily mean
actual transference of the wealth to the people. There is a difference
between legal state ownership and people’s real ownership of our mineral
wealth. Legal ownership does not mean people will have control of what they
own.

In fact, under the Act had  the state elite has been the using the state’s
ownership of our mines  to transfer our supposedly public owned resources to
black elite such as Motsepes, Macozomas, Sexwales of this world who have
ravaged our communities under shoddy BEE schemes.  Our people have not had
control whatsoever of our mines. It has been the state elite and its black
and white business partners that have more control over our mines.

This has also set conditions for the fight of control of the ANC as
necessary conditions to gain control of the state, which in turn is used to
allocate mining rights to a few politically connected elite.

We are aware that many of the ANC leaders may find it difficult to implement
the Freedom Charter in its progressive form not because it is not viable,
possible and noble, but because new economic interests are entrenched
amongst our leaders.  Many of our leaders are mining bosses; and
nationalization and socialization of the mines will deny them an opportunity
to be flirty rich by ripping off the poor.

*Response to NUM  *

It is our considered view, that the comments attributed to the NUM General
Secretary, Comrade Frans Baleni are worse than the ANC’s problematic, albeit
measured response. He has been quoted in Times [07 July 2009] as having said
‘Clearly if you annex private assets you will have a problem unless there is
a willingness to sell. We are saying ’do these things in a dynamic way
rather than through imposition’.  This is tantamount to calling for
willing-buyer-willing seller model of wealth transfer - a model that has
blocked the transfer of land to the people - a model that has never worked
anywhere in the world.

Indeed, this is shocking for us because NUM should know better than anyone
else that, there has never been any transfer of wealth from the capitalists
to the workers without any form of force or ‘imposition’. There is no way in
which the exploiters and oppressors of the working class shall surrender our
wealth without being forced to do so.

NUM should know better that as long as capitalists own the mines, the
working conditions of the workers would be worse because the capitalists are
interested in profits. And improvement of workers’ conditions means lesser
profits for the capitalists – there is no win-win situation between workers
and business.

*Our call *

As the YCLSA, we are calling for the nationalisation, and eventually
socialization of the mines and banks, NOT out of sheer ideology as our
detractors suggests. But it is out of concrete struggles waged by our
communities against the brutal theft of our resources in areas such as
Maandaagshoek and Baphaalane-Ba-Mantserre.

These struggles have taught us it is only through people owned and
controlled economic resources that we can eradicate poverty.

As the YCLSA we will comradely engage the NUM as well as the ANC and society
in general on these questions.

*Bail outs for business*

We are also concerned that the Industrial Development Corporation will be
dishing out R7 billion to the unprofitable companies. Why should private
business losses be socialised, whereas their private gains are always
privatised? This money should be used to bail out the poor. For instance, it
should be used to pay ESKOM electricity infrastructure programme, which will
enable the poor to get access to electricity for their own economic
activities.

Issued by YCLSA Head Office

1 – 5 Leyds Street, COSATU Hse, Braamfontein

Contact:

*Castro Ngobese*

*YCLSA National Spokesperson – 082 567 3557*

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