COSATU wishes ANC 101 more years of existence
                                                                                
                      
Zwelinzima Vavi, COSATU General Secretary, 10 January 2013 
 
The
Congress of South African Trade Unions has sent the following letter to the
Secretary General of the African National Congress.
Head Office
110 Jorissen Street
Braamfontein
2017
Johannesburg
 
P O Box 1019
Johannesburg
2000
Tel: + 27 11 339 4911
Fax: + 27 11 339 5080 
Internet: http://www.cosatu.org.za
 
08
January 2012
 
Comrade
Gwede Mantashe
Secretary
General
African
National Congress
Luthuli
House
Marshalltown
 
By
email
 
Dear
Comrade Gwede Mantashe
 
COSATU
wishes ANC 101 more years of existence
 
As we
mark the historic 101 years of the existence of the oldest liberation movement
in the African continent, the leadership of the federation, COSATU, on behalf
of its members in the farms, mines, factories, shops, and all workplaces across
the length and breadth of our beloved South Africa, extend its hand of
friendship, comradeship and solidarity to the leadership and membership of the
African National Congress.
 
We
wish the ANC the happiest anniversary and another 101 years of existence.
Today, after the yearlong centenary celebrations and the historic 53rd national
conference, which also took place in the centenary year, is one of the most
significant celebrations in the history of the ANC.
 
The
ANC has for 101 years led our people and inspired millions more across the
continent and the globe to fight for freedom and democracy. Guided by your
primary principle of selflessness you have been one of the finest examples of
progressive liberation movement.
 
It is
not by sheer luck that the ANC has survived over 100 years. It is where it is
today because it has been at the forefront of the struggles to emancipate the
poor. The ANC has been a fearless fighter against poverty and exploitation. It
has been a voice for the voiceless. It has stood shoulder to shoulder with
exploited workers. 
 
The
ANC must continue doing that. 
 
The
ANC has been the most powerful symbol of resistance and its leaders whom we
celebrate today have been shining examples of profound leadership and
sacrifice.
 
Today
we recall not only the contributions of leaders such as Langalibalele Dube,
Chief Albert Luthuli, Oliver Tambo, Nelson Mandela and others, but more so we
remember the millions of the unsung heroes and heroines without whom the 1994
breakthrough would still be only a dream.
 
We
remember the unparallel contributions of not only the toiling masses who
constituted the membership but those brave sons and daughters who swelled the
ranks of Umkhonto Wesizwe and defied death to confront the most powerful and
brutal regime in the African continent.
 
We
also salute the forebears of the ANC who defied the tribal, language and other
narrow differences, and came together to form the ANC on this historic day, and
also those who fought heroic battles against tyrants who dispossessed them of
their land before the ANC was formed. We salute our Kings and Chiefs who were
in the forefront of the wars of dispossession. Today we sadly mark the
centenary of the Native Land Act, which legalised theft of the land by an
invading foreign army that occupied our country by force. No stone must be left
unturned to reverse this ugly page in our history.
 
We
salute the youth – ovukayibambe – from the generation of Anton Lambede,
OR Tambo, and Nelson Mandela to the 1976 generation who inspired the generations
of the 1980s and 1990s to occupy the front rows and engaged in titanic battles
with the apartheid regime’s army and police in the streets of our townships and
villages.
 
We
also salute the role played by our mothers, who at the darkest hours of our
history defiantly told the regime that – ‘wathinta abafazi wathinti mbokodo’
- mobilised husbands and children to also join the struggle for dignity and
human rights. These brave women led countless marches, often serving as an
inspiration to the masses as whole to fight not only against national
oppression but also against women’s exploitation.
 
We
salute the religious leaders, the civic formations of many generations and
other organs of people’s power who, through issue-based struggles, mobilised
millions of our people for justice, decent houses, education, infrastructure,
etc. We celebrate the strides we have made under the ANC government to meet the
demands of our people for clean running water, sanitation, houses, electricity,
etc. We are fully aware that we must still do so much more to realise our dream
for a better life for all.
 
We
salute the peoples of Africa and those who formed part of the anti-apartheid
movements all over the world for their steadfast and unwavering support of our
right to self-determination. The only way we can pay back this international
solidarity, is to join hands with our African brothers and sisters as well as
with all progressive formations in the world to build a better and peaceful
African continent and a new world.
 
We
salute the workers and the working class as a whole who have always been the
backbone of the struggle for liberation. We are particularly pleased to note
that workers have always played a leading role and provided the finest leaders
to the ANC.
 
The workers
have been the backbone of all the defiance campaigns. It is the working class
that swelled the ranks of the glorious people’s army. It is no accident that
the very first MK soldier to be hanged by the regime was Vuyisile Mini, an
outstanding unionist. It is no accident that the first person to die in
detention was Looksmart Ngudle, a unionist.
 
It is
not by accident that the majority of those arrested in Rivonia were outstanding
working class activists in the form of Walter Sisulu, Govan Mbeki, Wilton
Mkwayi, Raymond Mhlaba, Elias Motsoaledi, etc.
 
The
history of the workers’ struggles and those of the ANC are not separable. The
struggle against national oppression, exploitation and women’s triple
oppression and exploitation is one struggle. It is a struggle to build a
democratic, united, non-racial, non-sexist and prosperous South Africa.
 
Our
country will never succeed in building a non-racial, non-sexist and prosperous
South Africa however, if the wealth of our country still remains in the hands
of a few. We will never realise this if we continue to allow the wealth created
by our minerals to be taken out of our country to develop economies in Europe,
America and Asia.
 
This
celebration takes place on the eve of two other milestones – the 20th
anniversary of democracy and the fifth national and provincial elections in
2014. The timing of the last conference could therefore not been better to help
not only the ANC but also the congress movement as a whole prepare for the
challenges that lie ahead.
 
COSATU
commits itself to work with the new leadership of the ANC and all its members
to confront the remaining challenges. In particular we seek to ensure that the
resolution on the second phase of our transition for radical economic
transformation is taken forward without any further delay. Our struggles for
transformation must ensure that our freedom is in total – economic as well as
political. In this context the unity of the ANC and the unity between the ANC
and the alliance, as well as with all democratic forces, is critical. So is the
need to continue to attack what are known as the sins of incumbency, so that
our broad movement inspires all our people and continues to be home of all
progressives in our country.
 
This
week sees the beginning of the strike by farm workers, who are demanding a
better salary than the pittance of R80 a day that they are earning. Throughout
this year we shall see more militant workers’ struggles, as part of our own
efforts to fight against poverty and inequalities and for policies that address
the underlying causes of the triple crisis of poverty, unemployment and
inequalities!
 
We
hope the ANC will provide concrete support to all of these struggles, which
will take us to the trenches in consistent struggles against poverty,
unemployment and inequality.
 
We
hope that the ANC will mobilise the majority of South Africans to realise all
the objectives it set for itself in its national conferences, in particular for
total economic emancipation. Power concedes nothing without a struggle!
The
next 101 years of the ANC must be characterized by heightened mass action for
the total emancipation of Black people in general and Africans in particular
from economic bondage. The ANC – the real congress of the people - remains a
home for all of these different segments and regiments of the people’s army for
an egalitarian society.
 
Happy
birthday to our movement and May you have more happy returns!
 
Long
Live Nelson Mandela Long Live the memory of Chris Hani and Joe Slovo.
 
Amandla!
 
Yours
comradely
Zwelinzima
Vavi
General
Secretary

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