Comrades this is the best analyses and  if we were to be honest our
movement has not able to be united since this problem started ,Thabo
Mbeki may have gone from the leadership of the organisation 
but even to day our organisation is still characterised by pro Mbeki
and pro Zuma.
As we approach the national general council in September  I think among
the discussion documents to this general council should include matters
in this documents for our movement to regain the confidence 
and continue to Govern.
 
this analyses comes as we are still fresh from the Gauteng provincial
congress where the were two list of the leadership to be elected .maybe
the question will be the two list was centered around  the Pros who?T.M
has come and gone but our organisation is still inflected with the wound
of his leadership .
To day we are sitting succession battle and if we are to check its
origin it comes from the pro Zuma Pro Mbeki era.
we need to deal with this new tendency in the ANC its destroy our
organisation 
this article ha provoke debates lets engage

>>> Castro Ngobese <[email protected]> 2010/05/10 08:27 PM >>>

'Do not look where you fell, but where you slipped'RANJENI MUNUSAMY:
COMMENT - Oct 25 2006 
In his political report to the African National Congress's (ANC)
national executive committee (NEC) earlier this month, President Thabo
Mbeki warned that strategic proposals conveyed recently by the South
African Communist Party's (SACP) Blade Nzimande would result in the
"destruction of the ANC and the rest of the democratic movement". 

Considering the poisoned atmosphere, it is only natural that the
president would worry about the "destruction" of the ANC and the
democratic movement.

But how did we get here?

A proverb of the Vai people of Liberia advises how to determine the
source of trouble: "Do not look where you fell, but where you slipped."

In 1994, Mbeki, then ANC deputy president, authored an internal party
document titled From Resistance to Reconstruction: Tasks of the ANC in
the New Epoch of the Democratic Transformation -- Unmandated
Reflections.

Mbeki said "forces" would try to "destroy the ANC from within â€| [and]
create contradictions and conflict between the ANC and other formations
in the democratic movement".

He warned that the objective of these forces would be "splitting the
ANC around the issue of leadership". Opposition forces would attempt to
break the tripartite alliance by encouraging the SACP to project itself
publicly as the "left conscience" and the Congress of South African
Trade Unions (Cosatu) would be encouraged to project the pursuit of
political and socio-economic objectives different from those the ANC had
set itself as a governing party, Mbeki wrote.

"Change also demands that the ANC and the democratic movement as a
whole should be able to shed some of its 'members' regardless of how
this might be exploited by our opponents to discredit the movement."

Unmandated Reflections remained like a dirty family secret in the
privileged possession of a few senior ANC leaders who feared its release
would cause outrage in the ranks of the alliance. Those who did read it
at the time were dumbfounded by the grave predictions.

CONTINUES BELOW 



Looking back now, it is almost eerie how the president was able to
script the future. Does our president have psychic powers or is it
possible that some in the ANC knew that the trajectory they were
charting would result in the schism we now find ourselves in?

The course of events -- perhaps not all related -- over the next 11
years provides the answer as to where we "slipped".

In 1995 we saw the fall from grace of iconic ANC leaders Winnie
Madikizela-Mandela, Allan Boesak and Bantu Holomisa. The ANC fumbled in
response, as it continues to do today.

The government's adoption of the growth, employment and redistribution
(Gear) macroeconomic policy in 1996 saw the rupture with organised
labour and the SACP.

That year also saw
 ANC secretary general Cyril Ramaphosa, who was
outmanoeuvred for the position of Nelson Mandela's deputy in 1994,
quitting politics for business. 

In 1997, despite the skirmishes over Gear, Nzimande, at the time the
SACP's chairperson, said ahead of the ANC's 50th national conference
that the party did "not want the conference to degenerate into a war
over Gear" and was "approaching the meeting in a spirit of unity".

A constitutional task team under the national conference preparatory
committee submitted the following constitutional amendment for adoption
at the Mafikeng congress: "The ANC president shall be the state
president when the ANC has the parliamentary majority. The provincial
chairperson shall be the provincial premier in cases where the ANC
enjoys a majority in the provincial legislature. The coincidence of the
ANC presidency with the state presidency and provincial chairmanship
with premiership should be phased in from April 1999."

Despite the proposed amendment being viewed generally as harmless and
being canvassed in ANC structures, it was never formally put to the
conference and therefore not adopted. The reason was never explained.

Mbeki and Jacob Zuma were elected ANC president and deputy president
respectively at the conference.

Addressing Cosatu's central committee in 1998, Mbeki said: "We must not
fall victim to the easy temptation to label one another as this or that
school of thought, and thus close the dialogue among ourselves."

But when he addressed the SACP congress later that year, the gloves
came off: "Most remarkably, the SACP believes that we of the ANC
represent this 'most serious threat'. Evidently, we having resorted to a
call which constitutes what your documents describe with self-assured
and superior sarcasm as a 'bureaucratic closing of ranks' in the face of
an imagined rather than a real counter-revolutionary threat â€| We must
not allow the situation such that we engage in fake revolutionary
posturing so that our mass base â€| accepts charlatans, who promise
everything that is good, while we all know that these confidence
tricksters are telling the masses a lie."

Also in that year, Tokyo Sexwale resigned as premier of Gauteng.

In the run-up to the 1999 election, the ANC's failure to secure
outright majority in KwaZulu-Natal and the Western Cape provinces saw
fervent horse-trading for power-sharing agreements. The failure to
strike a deal with Inkatha Freedom Party president Mangosuthu Buthelezi
over the premiership of KwaZulu-Natal led to Zuma being appointed deputy
president of South Africa.

The year 2000 was a nightmare for the ANC, having to navigate a
minefield of controversies over its ridiculous approach to the crisis in
Zimbabwe, international outrage over Mbeki's questioning of the causal
link between HIV and Aids and the allegations of irregularities in the
arms deal. The national general conference in Port Elizabeth that year,
however, pioneered a novel concept of the "new person", roughly
described as a highly skilled, disciplined intellectual -- the prototype
of the new-age ANC cadre. The old-guard "comrade" was put out to
pasture.

At an NEC meeting in October that year, Mbeki roasted Nzimande for
saying at the Cosatu congress that the scientific view that HIV causes
Aids should be accepted. This opened the floodgates for other members of
the NEC to tear into Nzimande -- as they did earlier this month.

But it was in 2001 that all hell broke loose, beginning with a bang
when an explosive letter Madikizela-Mandela wrote to Zuma complaining
about Mbeki was leaked to the media. Media houses were awash with
rumours from ANC sources that there were two "camps" in the organisation
- one around the president and the other loosely associated with Zuma.
The sources claimed Mbeki and Zuma were barely on speaking terms.

Then came the plot allegations. Former safety and security minister
Steve Tshwete was under extreme pressure to expose a police intelligence
investigation based on information
 from the eccentric Mpumalanga youth
league leader James Nkambule. On April 22 2001, I wrote the following as
the Sunday Times lead: "An official police investigation is under way
into claims that President Thabo Mbeki is in 'physical danger' from
high-profile leaders within the ANC who are plotting to oust him."

I wrote further: "Tshwete, a close ally of Mbeki and one of the ANC's
main trouble-shooters, is heading up a [ANC] tribunal investigating,
among other things, allegations by Nkambule that the [former Mpumalanga
premier Matthews] Phosa faction has teamed up with Deputy President
Jacob Zuma and with senior business leaders against Mbeki."

Two days later, Tshwete went on national television and named
Ramaphosa, Sexwale and Phosa as the alleged plotters.

Although Zuma was not implicated, he later issued an intriguing
statement declaring he was not interested in the presidency.

The Mail & Guardian's editorial on April 26 2001 read as follows: "This
is low, low stuff. It is the stuff of the Soviet Union under Josef
Stalin ... It was proceeded by weeks during which we on this newspaper
heard repeated stories of leaks to the SABC intended to embarrass Deputy
President Jacob Zuma, emanating from individuals associated with the
presidency." 

How easily we forget. 

Under a hail of condemnation from, among others, Cosatu and the SACP,
and after the investigation concluded that the allegations were hogwash,
Tshwete recanted. 

Meanwhile, the Aids controversy was escalating, with government trying
to fight off pressure to provide antiretroviral treatment to pregnant
women. A bizarre, rambling 114-page document entitled Castro Hlongwane,
Caravans, Cats, Geese, Foot & Mouth and Statistics: HIV/Aids and the
Struggle for the Humanisation of the African did the rounds. The
document, which staunch Mbeki defender the late Peter Mokaba claimed to
have authored, declared that antiretrovirals were poisonous and had
killed, among others, former presidential spokesperson Parks
Mankahlana.

In August 2001, frustration had built up in the trade union movement
over privatisation to the point that Cosatu called a two-day national
strike of more than four million workers - more than twice the
federation's formal membership. 

Another ANC document, Through the Eye of the Needle, warned of
"individuals who operate in the dead of the night, convening secret
meetings and speaking poorly of other members, should be exposed and
isolated".

Around that time, another oddball character, Bheki Jacobs, who claimed
to be Mbeki's personal intelligence adviser, went around media houses
liberally dispensing false information about the arms deal as well as
various ANC leaders.

In March 2002, Mandela's attempt to raise his concern in the NEC about
the government's dithering on antiretroviral treatment was seen as an
affront to the ANC's leader. He was heckled as he spoke and was later
ruthlessly attacked in a treatise by the late NEC member Dumisani
Makhaye -- best described as an Mbeki fanatic.

Makhaye's pen was equally poisoned when he responded to the SACP's
Jeremy Cronin's views about the over-centralisation or "Zanufication" of
power in the ANC, calling him a "white messiah" and a "factory fault".

Addressing the ANC's policy conference in September 2002, Mbeki said:
"Our movement and its policies are also under sustained attack from
domestic and foreign left sectarian factions that claim to be the best
representatives of the workers and the poor of our country. â€| The
issue of the offensive of the ultra-left against our movement is also
important because this ultra-left works to implant itself within our
ranks. 

"It strives to abuse our internal democratic processes to advance its
agenda â€| We are permanently interested in increasing the size and
strength of our movement. Nevertheless, I am convinced that we must also
pay particular attention to the principle -- better fewer, but better!"

Two months later, a few weeks before Zuma was to be re-elected deputy

president at the ANC's 51st national conference in Stellenbosch, this
newspaper revealed that he was under investigation in connection with
the arms deal. 

Up to this point, there was no "Jacob Zuma crisis". The crossfire,
tensions, obfuscation and calamities had nothing to do with him. The
events that followed have been hammered into our consciousness - former
National Prosecuting Agency (NPA) boss Bulelani Ngcuka's
"off-the-record" briefing with editors, his "prima facie" statement, the
spy allegations, the Hefer commission, the Schabir Shaik trial, the
"hoax e-mails", the firing and charging of Zuma, and the two trials
against him. 

All these resulted in the democratic forces lining up to condemn the
use and abuse of state institutions in power battles. But the ANC, as it
careened from one disturbing episode to another, remained silent,
witnessing its character and cultures being redefined.

Now, debates and power struggles rage in the ANC and the alliance
structures in an atmosphere of suspicion, fear and treachery.
Journalists, editors and analysts have chalked this up to a "camp-war"
between Mbeki and Zuma and those loyal to them. These commentators have
either a puerile understanding of issues or short memories. They should
seek to expand their knowledge beyond the events of the past three
years.

Of course, recent incidents and the succession battle have inflamed
tensions, but the genesis clearly lies elsewhere.

In fact, the course of events was accurately prophesied 12 years ago.
If we are falling, it is because we began slipping a long time ago. The
question is: Who pushed us? 

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