SASCO.jpg

 

SASCO's Response to the So-Called "Vote No Campaign"

 

 

What Ronnie Kasrils and Nozizwe Madlala-Routlege are:

 

A Disappointment of our Times

 

 

21 April 2014

 

South African Students are extremely disappointed and highly agitated by the
recent call made by Uncle Ronnie, Mam Nozizwe and the rest, to mobilize
South Africans against the ANC. We find this as not only reckless but
profoundly adventurous and counter-revolutionary. We wish to make it clear
from the onset that the students of this country will never be misled to
abandon the National Democratic Revolution that we dedicated ourselves to.

 

We are disappointed because the last time we checked Uncle Ronnie and Mam
Nozizwe were supposed to be tried and tested cadres of the movement. Uncle
Ronnie remains one of the most senior veterans of uMkhonto Wesizwe (MK),
SACP and the ANC. We have learnt to appreciate his commitment to the
struggle and the discipline that MK cadres upheld during difficult times in
the struggle. Mam Nozizwe has always been known to us as a committed Marxist
feminist, a cadre of the ANC and the Party. We have known her to be a brave
leader who at the face of the brutal apartheid regime dared to work for the
underground structures of the ANC.

 

We labour to mention these credentials to illustrate our disillusionment and
disappointment that cadres of such calibre could play to the hands of
counter revolution. Being a founder member of MK Uncle Ronnie would be
expected to display the highest form of discipline and commitment to
struggle. We expect him to be an embodiment of the true values of a
revolutionary; sadly he has chosen to do the direct opposite.

 

We want to make it clear that as SASCO we remain equally concerned about the
economic trajectory of our country. We have consistently raised our
discontent with neo-liberal macroeconomic policies pursued by the government
since the introduction of GEAR in 1996 under the leadership of Uncle Ronnie,
Mam Nozizwe and others.

 

As early as in 1996 SASCO marched against Gear and warned against economic
policies that maintain the structure of our economy and thus fail to
redistribute wealth to the people and truly realize the vision of the
Freedom Charter of an egalitarian economy. Without wanting to blow our own
horn, as SASCO we have remained the most consistent left voice within the
alliance, at most we felt the silence of 'communist' like uncle Ronnie and
Mam Nozizwe within the ranks of the movement. We at some point were called
and some continue to call us adventurous youth who are excited by Marxist
ideology and do not understand the configurations and complexities of
governance.

 

We did not walk away from the movement in 1996, we were told by amongst
others Uncle Ronnie to contest space within our broad church movement. We
were taught by them to engage and hegemonise our ideas, because it is only
through the National Democratic Revolution that we can truly transform South
Africa. We wish to make the point that when they were at the helm of
government, Uncle Ronnie and them, presided over an economic path that
failed to yield the much needed jobs in South Africa. Unlike them, we take
responsibility for the failures of the movement; we don't stand on top of
hills and point fingers at the movement.

 

On the issue of corruption that has been raised by Uncle Ronnie and the
rest, we agree that corruption remains one of the issues that our country
must confront. What worries us though is that the 'communists' in the name
of Uncle Ronnie and the rest fall to the fudging of the media and opposition
about corruption. We hear little class analysis of this phenomenon from
them, they are blinded by headlines. We wish to remind Uncle Ronnie and the
rest that the system of capitalism is corrupt in itself, and that is where
our analysis should begin.

 

It steals from the wage labourer through surplus value and inculcates values
which promote greed and inequality. Seemingly in order to flirt with the
liberal media, so that they can listen to their own sound bites, they have
ignored the importance of exposing capitalism as the main culprit. They,
like the media and opposition, wish to reduce corruption to one individual,
Jacob Zuma. This is very convenient for their cause and exposes for all the
truth of their 'conviction', to weaken the post Polokwane ANC.

 

The media and the DA do not begin today to call the ANC corrupt; they did
the same during the Arms Deal scandal. What is interesting is that both
Uncle Ronnie and Mam Nozizwe were once Deputy Ministers of Defence during
the procurement of arms and in the term that succeeded, respectively.
Arguable the biggest scandal to confront the ANC and government, both Uncle
Ronnie and Mam Nozizwe were amongst those who in the defence line and others
alleged they were rewarded with Minister Positions (we don't agree with
this).

 

Many within the movement were unhappy with how the movement dealt with this
matter, yet they did not leave the movement. Today these comrades claim to
be anti-corruption champions and voices of reason 'from within the ANC',
this newly found conviction comes conveniently post their tenure in
government and ANC leadership.

 

We as South African students are aggressively opposed to the opulence and
greed that characterizes the whole Nkandla development. We view this as one
of the devastating realities that characterize many projects that the state
engages in at all levels, where public funds are splashed recklessly at the
face of poverty and in equality in our country. We refuse to fall to the
liberal trap of viewing Nkandla in isolation with the rot of corruption
within the state and in the private sector.

 

Nkandla is an amplified version of the price inflation that happen in the
majority of tenders that government gives out in our municipalities and
public institutions. We raised our concern with the construction of World
Cup stadia and we were vindicated when it was exposed that the construction
companies fixed prices, one of the worst corruption scandals in our country,
which enjoyed little media attention. South African students view Nkandla as
presenting an opportunity for our country to reflect not only on corruption
that is confronting our country, but also more importantly of the oppressive
system of capitalism that breeds this corruption and greed.

 

We must not endeavour to isolate the President even though the Public
Protector's report clearly finds no political involvement of the President
on the Nkandla issue. We should be saying as a nation, beyond this point
what is it that we need to do to ensure that similar events do not repeat
themselves. We need to focus on ensuring that we make an example out of
those who acted improperly in all of this, this is essentially the main
point that Public Protector's report makes, which clearly the media,
opposition and now Uncle Ronnie did not read. Nkandla is really a drop in
the ocean of corruption happening in South Africa in both the public and
private sector. We must deal with corruption holistically and honestly, not
for political point scoring, this will not help our country overcome this
challenge.

 

Again we must remind Uncle Ronnie, that we as SASCO raised our concern and
strong opposition to the use of public institutions to fight political
battles. This we did in 2005 when comrade Ronnie was Minister of
Intelligence and it became clear that intelligence was being used for
internal ANC matters. It is interesting that Uncle Ronnie only realizes now
that there is such abuse. We reaffirm our position on this matter and
believe that this is also happening in our judiciary. In as much as we
respect the rule of law we believe it is not class neutral and therefore not
immune to interrogation. We have noted with concern the fact that our courts
have been abused by the opposition and the broader liberal bloc in our
country to fight the National Democratic Revolution.

 

It is against the principle of democratic centralism for Uncle Ronnie who
having lost elections at the 2007 Polokwane Conference of the ANC, not to
accept leadership and decide not to renew his membership. This is
ill-discipline and is against all the revolutionary principles of the
movement. It is clear that Uncle Ronnie has failed to accept Polokwane
outcomes if in 2014 he still makes reference to this conference. If he
continued to participate in his branch, members of the ANC could have
re-elected him in subsequent conferences, many comrades who did not make it
in Polokwane were elected in Mangaung for instance. But we are taught in the
movement that there is no one member who is entitled to be in leadership.

 

In as much as we completely respect the right of the said individuals, we
believe it is equal to reversing the struggles of Walter Sisulu, Oliver
Tambo, Joe Slovo, Chris Hani, Solomon Mahlangu, Ruth First, Helen Josephs,
Lilian Ngoyi, Albertina Sisulu, Albert Luthuli and Nelson Mandela. These are
the cadres that fought to advance the National Democratic Revolution to
their death. In their honour we will work even harder to defend and advance
the NDR and ensure that we mobilize all of society to defend their
revolution.

 

We will continue to raise our impatience with the slow pace of economic
transformation, our opposition to corruption and inequality within the
movement because we understand that we are part of this democratic movement
which is the only hope for the working class of South Africa. To us, now is
the time to strengthen the movement, a vehicle created through blood and
sweat by our forbears, we will never betray their struggle, we will create a
better life for all.

 

As students we are witness to the good story of South Africa's 20 year old
democracy. Today we have more than nine hundred thousand students in
universities. Further Education and Training collages have expanded
opportunities for young people. In as much as we still struggle for Free
Education, our government is spending more than R9.6 Billion in student
loans and bursaries. Many of us are beneficiaries of NO-Fee Schools
delivered by the ANC government.

 

A number of us whilst in basic education benefited from the School Nutrition
Scheme and scholar transport. We have seen our government build more schools
for us and replace mud structures; we believe more still needs to be done.
Our families have benefited from free housing and land over the past 20
years. We want our government to radically transform our economy and create
employment opportunities for us. We want our government to fight crime and
corruption. We want our government to develop our rural communities. We want
our government to build a truly non-racial, non-sexist, democratic and
prosperous society, and we know only the ANC can deliver this.

 

What makes us agitated is the fact that the acts of Uncle Ronnie and the
rest is that they our former comrades are engaged in counter revolution.
They are engaged in acts directly opposed to the National Democratic
Revolution; they seek to reverse the gains of our revolution if not in full
certainly in part. This has led us to revitalize our campaign and made us
more vigilant of elements of counter revolution that seek to emerge in
society. We will go door to door, class to class to all our students to
educate them about the importance of voting for the African National
Congress.

 

Statement issued by the NEC of SASCO, April 21 2014

 

Ntuthuko Makhombothi

Luzuko Buku

 

 

From:
http://www.politicsweb.co.za/politicsweb/view/politicsweb/en/page71654?oid=5
97758
<http://www.politicsweb.co.za/politicsweb/view/politicsweb/en/page71654?oid=
597758&sn=Detail&pid=71654> &sn=Detail&pid=71654

 

 

 

 

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