ANC Today.jpg

 

 

Internationalism versus Xenophobia

 

 

Thulas Nxesi, ANC Today, Johannesburg, 30 April 2015

 

The recent xenophobic attacks were a national shame which undermine our
traditions of democracy, working class solidarity and Ubuntu. The vast
majority of South Africans agree - and they showed this by joining the
unions and the Alliance in sending a clear message that this xenophobic
violence - that is not who we are as South Africans.

 

The ANC-led government has mobilised on an unprecedented scale to bring the
violence to an end and to address underlying challenges. Indeed the recent
SADC Summit on Industrialisation welcomed the measures taken by the
government of South Africa.

 

Ministers and Members of Parliament were deployed to go back to communities
and constituencies to engage, to calm the situation and to listen to the
people - all of the people.

Many important lessons have been learnt. Firstly, mass migration is an
international phenomenon - as millions of desperate poor people flee poverty
and oppression - usually the inevitable results of monopoly capitalism and
imperialist machinations.  

 

Secondly, unlike in most of Europe where inward migration has led to the
rise of violently anti-immigrant right-wing parties; South Africa has no
organised political support for xenophobia. The bourgeois media commentators
and political opportunists didn't notice this. There is one reason for this
- the democratic anti-racist traditions of our national liberation movement
and the continued hegemony of the Alliance.

 

Of major concern is the divide and rule strategy of South African bosses in
pursuit of cheap labour and to undermine organised labour. In the days
before the Durban violence, employers in Isipingo employed foreign workers
to break a strike. Our job as unionists and communists is to educate those
strikers that the enemy is the bosses - not the desperate foreign workers.

 

Uncontrolled immigration is a concern. Government is currently engaging in a
process to border control systems so we are able to properly document,
process and account for who is in the country. Corruption at any level
during this process must be defeated.

 

Working together with organised labour, the Department of Labour must
increase its inspectorate to enforce basic conditions and legal minimums -
to prevent the exploitation of foreign workers.  In cases where buildings
that have been taken over by criminals - whether South-African or non-South
African - these must be reclaimed by the state.

 

Only the liberation Alliance offers a radical economic programme to address
the root causes of unemployment, poverty and inequality. As Labour and the
SACP we have a proud history which should guide us at this time:

 

.    Clements Kadalie - leader of the ICU (Industrial and Commercial Workers
of Africa) in the 1920s - was an immigrant (from Malawi);

 

.    Many of the early communists and trade unionists were immigrants -
fleeing persecution in Europe (Ray Alexander, Joe Slovo);

 

.    The mighty NUM - in an industry built on immigrant labour - organised
all workers in the mines. That is the perspective we bring as labour and as
internationalists.

 

On May Day we celebrate proletarian internationalism and we pledge our
solidarity with the struggles of oppressed peoples - and those fighting
imperialism in all parts of the world.

 

Today let us remember the plight of the Palestinian people - who have been
subjected to land grabs, illegal occupation and the denial of human rights
by the Zionist regime for nearly 70 years. Indeed, for a South African
government minister to visit a Palestinian minister requires the permission
(and a visa) from the Zionist jailers. Such is their arrogance, backed by US
imperialism, that they see no problem in openly advertising this denial of
sovereign rights to the Palestinians.

 

The Israeli Foreign Minister accused the SACP of supporting the Palestinians
because 'like attracts like'. The minister of this racist regime thought he
was insulting us. But he was right: we stand for the same things, the same
struggle - against racism, occupation and imperialism, and for national
liberation. 

 

We have not forgotten the very close relationship between the Israeli
government and the apartheid regime. It's true: 'like attracts like.'

 

On this May Day - as we resolve to strengthen and unite the South African
working class - let us never forget our international duty to support all
those who struggle against imperialism and oppression.

 

'An injury to one, is an injury to all'

 

 

From: http://www.anc.org.za/docs/anctoday/2015/at16.htm#art2

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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