'It cannot be right for us to make noise on lawlessness' how true, in our 
fight for our rights we must guard against turning our country into banana 
republic. well said Cde Tom.

Modisaotsile Kgosimore




From:
"Nndwamato Mutshidza" <[email protected]>
To:
<[email protected]>
Cc:
<[email protected]>
Date:
01/09/2009 13:42
Subject:
[YCLSA Discussion] YCLSA condemns the dismissal of soldiers by the 
Minister of Defence and Military veterans
Sent by:
[email protected]




Cdes,

While some of us sympathise with those provisionally dismissed, we need to 
get it clear that Dr. Lindiwe cannot just act out of anger to fulfil her 
task. You see cds, this tendency of YCL just from nowhere send 
condemnation without an analysis of the situation is problematic. For 
starters those soldiers who behaved like hooligans does not deserved to be 
called real workers as they seems not progressive and does not know what 
is right and wrong. If you are not granted permission to march the law 
should take its own cause period and they were aware of these 
quensequneces. SA has laws and as such people particularly those assigned 
responsibility to ensure that there law and order should be the first to 
guide this process. It cannot be right for us to make noise on 
lawlessness.

Now on the issue at hand, cdes it does not matter who put who in power, 
the Minister has a duty to ensure that things are done in order. You cdes 
seems to have memory lapse, in that you think that it has been long she 
has been in the help of the mess created by Terror when he was in charge. 
The root cause, which the Zuma Administration has prioritised are issues 
of taking care of our combatant, issue of recruitment and building loyalty 
to serve this country. All these principles are not displayed by these 
soldier you so dearly want us to defend. The issue of support for those 
that requires training and those that are HIV are issue of Social 
responsibility of the State to provide for. The issue of just hiring 
people who amongst other is fitness cannot be overlooked no matter which 
reactionary judge ruled. Just like in Mining Industry, if you blood 
pressure cannot allow you to go deep down we are not obliged to hire you 
and thats what we called progressive discrimination for someone else sake. 
The same applies to soldiers who are HIV/AIDS infected, they know and 
studies have shown that you cannot be at your peak in a war zone as SA is 
doing currently in Central Africa. Hence we should have a debate as to 
this issue of opening the gate for everyone is in the interest of whose 
family. I am rasing this view to show that it is not easy to implement but 
you have to carefully plan the implementation of the court order looking 
at your own capacity. Assume we rush the implementation and in a scale of 
1:10 you find that 5 are dying on this dieses as the stats shows, who take 
responsibility? The State through Tax payers and you want us not to have a 
say on this matter, maybe someone should educate me here.

Lets give the new Minister chance to look at the implications and then 
report to this members. I am not qualified to talk to Salaries as I do not 
know how much they earn and what grade are they supposed to be and I would 
like to advice other to do the same and leave the rest to the due process 
to resolve the impasse.

I remain

Cde Tom
>>> sipho shandu <[email protected]> 2009/09/01 12:10 PM >>>
Greetings Cadres,

I am of the opinion that our president made an error when choosing a
minister of defence as she cannot discuss issues. The soldiers are the 
most
underpaid civil servants in the country and yet they have chosen to guard
and put their lives at risk.

I believe that the ministers' decision to dismiss them was not well 
thought
and was very much selfish. The minister tends to forget as to who put her
and her bosses in government. She tends to forget her constituencies.

I feel that the minister should reconsider her decision as she was still
feeling a little bit sleepy at the time it was decided. We surely do not
want war. This decision also shows the manner that government treats us as
citizens and civil servants.

I strongly condemn the minister because she does not understand the
background of these soldiers. How does it now help that she has dismissed
them? Who is going to feed their families? Is this part of the NDR?

All cadres out there, let us rally behind our soldiers to get their jobs
back and after that to get a salary review. All ministers tend to forget
that we as the people elected them into those cushy positions and we could
easily cut them down to size.

If they want war, then war it that they shall get and that is not a 
threat!

AMANDLA MASOSHA OMZANSI!! AMANDLA!!!


On 9/1/09, Gugu Ndima <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> *YCLSA condemns the dismissal of soldiers by the Minister of Defence and
> Military veterans*
>
> *01 September 2009*
>
> The Young communist league of South Africa (UFasimba) would like to 
condemn
> the Minister for dismissing soldiers that were involved in the strike
> action. We believe that this does not help the matter but exacerbates it
> further. The YCLSA strongly opposes the violent nature of the action by 
the
> soldiers who are members of the South African National Defence Union.
>
> The YCLSA believes that there is no form of grievance that justifies
> violence and threat to national security. However, dismissing soldiers 
who
> are bread winners and heads of family households implies that the 
Minister
> is using dismissal as a political tool to avoid dealing with the gist of 
the
> matter.
>
>  We call on the Minister of Defence and Military Veterans not to solve 
the
> problem by avoiding it, but by urgently giving the soldiers a hearing. 
We
> believe that the concerns of the soldiers, especially related to wages 
and
> transformation of the military, are genuine and should be addressed.
>
> Labour practises should be applied to any worker irrespective of their
> occupation.  We condemn any attempt to try and bar soldiers from being
> members of trade unions, and do not agree with the sentiments made by 
the
> MKVA. We therefore call upon the Minister to meet with representatives 
of
> both unions and come to an amicable solution to the matter at hand.
>
> *Issued by the YCLSA Head office*
>
> *Contact*
>
> *Gugu Ndima (076 783 1516) *
>
> *National spokesperson*
>
>
> --
> Gugu Ndima
> +27 76 783 1516
>
> >
>



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