We seriously need political intervention, it doesn't help to delay while 
African are busy killing one another.

Let's forget about racial issue and fight the enemy which is class struggle.

It is very disappointing to see poor people fighting among themselves instead 
of working together to eradicate poverty and build strong community.

The enemy (capitalists) is happy and enjoying to see poor people killing one 
another because they don't want to see unity among poor people, they lost 
government because this unity are they don't sleep everyday but they rather 
strategize how to divide us.

Let's be united

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

-----Original Message-----
From: VC <[email protected]>
Sender: [email protected]
Date: Tue, 20 Mar 2012 10:32:38 
To: <[email protected]>
Reply-To: [email protected]
Subject: [YCLSA Discussion] Cape’s day of race shame, Cape 
        Argus


Cape Argus


*Cape’s day of race shame*


*Murray Williams and Ilse Fredericks, Cape Argus, Cape Town, 20 March 
2012 *

The mob was baying for blood. Not just any blood – black blood. And they 
found it. A young man was caught in the wrong place at the wrong time on 
Monday as pitched street battles raged in the Grabouw suburb of Pineview.

A rumour spread like wildfire: “the blacks” wanted to burn down the 
nearby high school, attended mainly by coloured pupils from the 
community. And the mob was determined to defend this school by force.

The violence escalated after three classrooms were vandalised at 
Groenberg Secondary, where protesters tried to set alight a textbook 
storeroom. Coloured residents blamed their black neighbours.

This, overcrowding at a predominantly black school and a coming 
by-election have all been cited by residents as reasons for the 
situation coming to a head on Monday.

Armed with golf clubs, sticks, planks, hockey sticks, steel rods – 
anything – coloured residents roamed the streets hunting for prey.

Then this young man was spotted – not part of any group of protesters, 
but black.

He was circled and set upon by enraged coloured residents. He was struck 
several times and, as blood spurted from his scalp, he fell into a ditch.

But while his assailants wanted more blood, other members of the 
coloured community screamed for the man to be shown mercy.

This latter group wrenched him free and dragged him in the direction of 
a screaming siren.

A police van came careering into view, and the man’s rescuers lunged 
forward with the man to deliver him into police care.

Bundled into the police van, the man was raced away to the nearby 
community clinic.

These were the ugly scenes which played out across the suburb for hours 
on Monday as the coloured community marshalled their men to “defend” the 
school from the supposed black threat.

The air was thick with racial slurs, screamed if someone of a darker hue 
was spotted.

The police, hopelessly outnumbered, did their best to avert clashes, 
firing tear gas canisters whenever mobs developed and threatened to move 
into range of conflict.

On Ou Kaapse Weg, a black teenager lay bleeding after one of many 
stand-offs and bystanders said she had been shot with a rubber bullet.

Around her, branches and rubble were set on fire in the street. Rocks, 
street signs and public telephone booths lay strewn across Gaffley Street.

There was chaos when police used rubber bullets and gas to bring the 
crowds under control.

Protests started a week ago over overcrowding at Umyezo Wama Apile 
Combined School. The Western Cape Education Department decided to close 
the school until next term.

One black resident said coloured residents were angered after Groenberg 
Secondary was vandalised.

“Why do they want to take our children’s education away?” a coloured 
resident wanted to know.

“They (blacks) want to take over everything,” another said.

Another local said: “There’s going to be a bloodbath here.”

Some residents said coloured and black people in Grabouw usually worked 
together as seasonal workers in apple factories and on fruit farms.

At one stage, there was also a stand-off between black and coloured 
residents in Bosbou. They started hurling stones and bottles at each other.

Community members and witnesses said the scene all over Grabouw 
resembled a civil war, as roving rival gangs of coloured and black 
community members fought pitched battles at several points in the town.

In ensuing confrontations, people had their skulls smashed with rocks 
and they were beaten by residents armed with numerous weapons, including 
sticks and spades, while police and civic association leaders tried to 
negotiate peace.

Coloured residents told the Cape Argus they would defend their school 
“with their lives”.

They claimed the black residents were trying to burn it down.

The Cape Argus witnessed a coloured mob beating a number of black men 
who they suspected were trying to infiltrate the school area.

Some said the tension was over a coming by-election in Grabouw.

John Michaels, chairman of the Elgin Grabouw Civic Organisation, said 
protesters would march to Cape Town if Education MEC Donald Grant didn’t 
come to Grabouw on Monday.

Three schools – Kathleen Murray PS, Pineview PS and Groenberg Secondary 
– were closed in order to protect the safety of pupils.

Several Grabouw residents said they had been unable to go to work.

Many businesses in the town also closed their doors. There is no 
indication of when the clashes will end.

Police spokesman November Filander said they had arrested 15 people who 
would all appear in the Grabouw Magistrate’s Court today in connection 
with public violence.

[email protected] - Cape Argus

**
*From: 
http://www.iol.co.za/news/crime-courts/cape-s-day-of-race-shame-1.1260118*
**
*

*

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