CHARLES MOLELE AND MMANALEDI MATABOGE JOHANNESBURG, SOUTH AFRICA - Oct
21 2011 00:00, M&G Online

The ANC Youth League's economic freedom march has split the leadership
of ANC ally, the Congress of South African Trade Unions, with the
labour federation's general secretary Zwelinzima Vavi saying the march
should be supported, while president Sdumo Dlamini says it should not.

Each leader gave detailed but varied reasons why the march should or
should not be supported.

Just two weeks after Cosatu national spokesperson Patrick Craven
confirmed in the media that the union federation would join the march,
Dlamini told the Mail & Guardian that Cosatu had made a formal
decision not to join it.

"Ordinarily, Cosatu does not have a problem with working with the
youth league on a campaign where we share common views, but no
decision has been taken by Cosatu to support it in this march,"
Dlamini said.

Though the league had been trying to arrange a meeting with Cosatu's
office-bearers to discuss the march, it had not taken place because
Cosatu was not ready for it, said Dlamini. "We are not going to hurry
into a meeting with the ANC Youth League on any matter," he said.

Yet, in spite of Dlamini's protestations, some Cosatu affiliates,
including the National Union of Metalworkers of South Africa (Numsa),
have thrown their weight behind the march.

Dlamini said this was not the way to proceed. "It's wrong. We've been
trying to say: 'let's talk with one voice'. Anyone attending that
march will do so in their personal capacity."

He said Craven's confirmation of Cosatu's participation in the march
was also wrong. "That statement was not informed by the decision we
took in the office-bearers' meeting that we will not be part of that
march."

Dlamini said Cosatu was not opposed to the issues the youth league was
raising, but several political matters had clouded the march.

"It's a matter of great concern that such issues are also linked to
the ANC leadership issue [to be settled in Mangaung next year], which
is a closed matter. If Cosatu is being drawn onto a platform and these
issues are raised, there is a problem."

'Desisting from trailing individuals'
Dlamini said the fact that Malema had been referring to the ANC
leadership in his speeches recently in spite of the ruling party's ban
on such practices, was uncomfortable for Cosatu.

However Vavi justified why Cosatu should join the youth league march.
He told delegates at the South African Democratic Teachers Union
KwaZulu-Natal provincial congress this week that communists should
"desist from trailing individuals".

"They refuse to become prisoners to personal loyalties but are always
willing to become willing slaves of the only revolutionary class in
our society -- the working class!

Vavi said the youth league march had created a "poisoned environment"
that had led to unnecessary controversy. "We see no reason why we
should not support them when most of their demands are identical to
ours," he said.

Vavi said Cosatu supported "all efforts by any section of the
oppressed to highlight their plight through peaceful demonstrations.
When we hold marches, we seek the support and participation of the
youth and all formations that identify themselves with the plight of
the working class".

Also on Wednesday, the secretary-general of Numsa, Irvin Jim, said
prevarication over the march was proving "divisive" and "destructive"
for the alliance at a time when the left should be focusing on the
transformation of the South African economy and society.

"Since when has mass mobilisation been a problem? We will join this
march because it is aimed at championing the policy positions of the
poor and the working class. Support for the ANCYL struggle for
economic freedom in our lifetime is perfectly consistent with support
for the ANC government and its president, comrade Jacob Zuma. Such a
campaign cannot therefore undermine the president or the government."

Run-up to Mangaung
South African Communist Party general secretary Blade Nzimande has
openly criticised the march, which he believes is aimed at President
Jacob Zuma's government in the run-up to the ANC's Mangaung
conference.

Addressing an SACP provincial congress in KwaZulu-Natal last weekend,
Nzimande said his party would not support "any march whose intention
is malicious and to undermine the authority of the ANC government".

SACP spokesperson Mhlekwa Nxumalo echoed Nzimande's views, suggesting
that the march had an unstated agenda.

"This march is not a completely honest march on jobs and poverty as
the youth league claims," he said.

"We choose to focus on our Red October campaign, which is
long-standing. When was the last time the youth league convened
anything that brought young people from different organisations
together to talk about issues that affect them?"

The Young Communist League will also snub the march. It is hosting a
jobs for youth summit at the same time as the demonstration.

League spokesperson Floyd Shivambu said the march would be led by
Malema from the Johannesburg CBD to the Johannesburg Stock Exchange,
before heading to the Union Buildings in Pretoria for a night vigil on
Thursday night.

-- 
Kind Regards,
Thamsanqa Tu

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