Well written Sive, you raise some key questions. 

I have to agree with you on the education part and the fact that this 
nationalization must be not be an individual thing or a yl thing but different 
sectors of society need to be involved.

Regards,   
Sent via my BlackBerry from Vodacom - let your email find you!

-----Original Message-----
From: Dominic Tweedie <[email protected]>
Sender: [email protected]
Date: Thu, 30 Jun 2011 22:33:03 
To: <[email protected]>
Reply-To: [email protected]
Subject: [YCLSA Discussion] Educate to nationalize, not nationalize to exploit
 - Sive Gumenge

 
 Educate to nationalize, not nationalize to exploit 
   
   
 Sive Gumenge, CPUT graduate and SASCO, ANCYL and Young Communist League member
   
 The ANC Youth League’s call for the nationalization of mines has overlooked 
the real phenomenon concerning “economic freedom”.  The ANCYL was interested in 
missing it, for reasons known by them. 
  
 Everyone is conscious of the economic situation in South Africa. The 
unemployment rate released recently by the Labour Force Survey sky rocketed 
25.3%, meaning 4.41 million people are jobless. 
  
 ANC YL President Julius Malema should not flatter South African working class 
and the poor with calls that he, more than them, has a direct interest in. The 
call for economic freedom was long ago made and even the desire to nationalize. 
This was long before Malema could begin technical drawings in his woodwork 
class. It must not suddenly be escalated beyond other things because some fat 
capitalists in the mining industry are feeling the belt is loosening down. 
  
 To be quite frank, Malema is only representing the interests of those in the 
mining industry within the ANC leadership when he shouts and screams 
nationalization of mines and of course concern about the little stake he will 
get if it succeeds. 
  
 Therefore, he should not even attempt to exploit the name of young people 
because young South Africans are far from being interested in nationalization 
of mines besides demanding free quality and decent education and training which 
will marshal decent jobs. The youth of South Africa is not narrow-minded to be 
calling for nationalization of a dead industry that will not bear any worthy 
fruits for them except wasting their energies, time and skills. 
  
 The youth of South Africa, recognizes very well that access to decent 
education and training is essential for the completion of the liberation 
struggle, whose foundation must usher economic freedom as Minister of Higher 
Education and Training promised in his budget vote of 2011/12.  
  
 What Malema does not understand is that mining includes a number of skills 
which the country is still grappling with and falling short of. It must be made 
known that abolishment of technical colleges could be one of the significant 
blunders of the South African government in terms of skills training and 
development. Malema should have been raising this now ahead of nationalization 
of mines. The Universities of Technology are still far from producing South 
African artisans with engineering science, planning and structural drawing and 
all other engineering-related skills. 
  
 Consequently, as young South Africans or youth of the working class we must 
ask ourselves: In whose interest is this nationalisation? We have seen that the 
National Planning Commission of South African government is not fond of it, let 
alone the ANC itself. 
   
 I think that beyond the Youth League’s lack of an economic advisor, Malema 
should in any case have consulted the Ministry of Minerals and Energy, The 
Mining Qualifications Authority and COSATU in terms of workers’ exploitation in 
the mining industry. Malema should also have consulted the Ministry of Higher 
Education and Training on the role being played today by merged institutions 
such as those of Technology in producing skilled artisans with capacity and 
ability of sustaining the mines of the country through skills production.  The 
ANC YL insults every person who has a different opinion to them. But these 
institutions are better placed to inform us as a country whether we are ready 
or not. 
  
 In line with the latter, they should have engaged the Progressive Youth 
Alliance partners such as SASCO on the model of free education they demand and 
its link to skills development, and the YCL in its call for Jobs for Youth, as 
to where do you they see a job market for young people. Then engaging ESKOM in 
detailing future energy possibilities with the mines being nationalized to 
avoid deaths in the mines one day when blackouts arise would have put the 
cherry on top before screaming and kicking in our ears. Thus, the working class 
youth should follow the ideas of Joe Slovo when he said, “It is, in any case, a 
basic maxim of working class revolutionary strategy that, at every stage, it is 
necessary to maximize the forces which can be mobilized against the ruling 
class around a principled common immediate programme”. 
  
 Hence therefore, I think the nationalisation of mines issue should be engaged 
by the greater part of society rather than Malema threatening the leadership of 
ANC to support the capitalist bailout programme. Thus I say if Malema was 
genuine, he would be first raising key issues relating to nationalisation of 
mines such as protection of workers in the mines. How do you nationalise mines 
if workers are not fully protected? Workers in the mines, everyday complain 
about being exploited and low salaries, yet the Malema thinks we think his call 
is legit. 
  
 Karl Marx argues that, “the history of all hitherto existing society, is the 
history of class struggle”. Thus it will not change workers being exploited in 
the mines even if the state could own 60% and private ownership 40%. This 
percentage sharing is about capitalists being protected by the state, even if 
their mines are collapsing. Therefore they will do whatever it takes to sustain 
their mining proceeds and exploitation of workers will therefore not stop 
because of nationalisation. 
   
 Reality is that young people today are interested in decent jobs than working 
in the mines because of what they witnessed on their fathers, uncles, etc. 
  
 Basically, Malema’s interest is to exploit the youth for his own capitalists 
interests rather than educating it for better nationalization. There are 
nationalised parastatals here such as SABC, SAA and ESKOM, we must ask the big 
question as to, what is happening with them? Their boards are collapsing 
everyday and their CEO’s are resigning everyday with golden handshakes instead 
of the money being given to workers for salary increases. Even within the 
mining industry, there are companies such as AURORA which Malema is silent 
about. Everybody knows that mines are in debt and yet Malema wants South Africa 
to waste its money and energy in such an industry. 
  
 Let us therefore as young people of South Africa take the debate to the public 
and seek to understand what you people want from the ANC. Is it nationalised 
mines or nationalised decent education which will lead to decent job? 
  
 For Socialism, 
  
  
 Sive Gumenge 
 Cape Town 
 Western Cape 
 0768945800 
 CPUT graduate and SASCO, ANCYL and Young Communist League member 
  
 
   
 

-- 
You are subscribed. This footer can help you.
Please POST your comments to [email protected] or reply to this 
message.
You can visit the group WEB SITE at 
http://groups.google.com/group/yclsa-eom-forum for different delivery options, 
pages, files and membership.
To UNSUBSCRIBE, please email [email protected] . You 
don't have to put anything in the "Subject:" field. You don't have to put 
anything in the message part. All you have to do is to send an e-mail to this 
address (repeat): [email protected] .

Reply via email to