SACPblackStar.jpg

 

South African Communist Party, 6 January 2016

 

 

Statement on the 21st anniversary of the death of

 

Joe Slovo

 

As delivered by General Secretary

 

Comrade Blade Nzimande

 

 

Today we are gathered here once more, as we do annually do in commemoration
of the death of Comrade Joe Slovo and celebration of his revolutionary
contribution in our struggle for national liberation and socialism.‎ We have
come together at the time when the working class must step in and provide
leadership to the problems and challenges that we are facing. The fate of
the working class is in the hands of the working class itself and no one
else. This role the SACP will play in mobilising the working class is to
give leadership as a working class Party. 

 

Dear comrades,

 

It was exactly during the occasion of the 20th commemoration anniversary of
the death of Comrade Joe Slovo and celebration of his contribution to our
struggle for national liberation and socialism, on 6 January 2015 at this
same venue, Avalon Cemetery, Soweto, that as the SACP we sharply raised our
concerns about racist social media trolling and comments in internet-based
media outlets such as the comment sections. It was important for us as the
SACP – the first political organisation to introduce the principle and
practice of non-racialism in South African politics – to continue our
vanguard leadership in this important area of economic, social and political
life of our society. 

 

We called on media houses to reflect on the problem of racism in all its
platforms and structures - including ownership, management control,
newsrooms and content - and take full responsibility by dealing with the
problem. 

 

What was to follow?

 

A barrage of distortions of our position characterised most of the media and
political responses. The concerns that we raised and the way forward we
proposed to deal with the problem were distorted. We have reason to believe
that some may have done so deliberately. Meanwhile, the problem continued.

 

It was only after a while that we saw some media houses taking correct
decisions to deal with the abuse of comment sections in their internet-based
media outlets. To this end some comment sections - which were or would
otherwise have been used to post offensive and racist comments and spread
hate speech - were entirely closed down. 

 

There are still many internet-based media comment sections that nevertheless
continue to accommodate comments that are racist, sexist, offensive and
contain insults and hate speech. We called on and wrote to the South African
Human Rights Commission to investigate the problem. We will consistently
follow up with the commission in the interest of our constitutional vision
of a non-racial South Africa! 

 

If left unattended, racist internet media trolling will cause other, and
much bigger, problems.

 

We therefore reiterate our call to all media houses that still allow hate
speech and insults against other people, racist and sexist comments in their
internet-based comment sections to take initiative and proactively deal with
the problem. 

 

We call on Parliament to discuss this problem too. We cannot - in a
constitutional programme of transformation to build a non-racial society -
allow a Member of Parliament (MP) to propagate hate speech and racist
trolling using social media. The SACP has consistently exposed the character
of the so-called Democratic Alliance (DA) as a party full of racists that
continue to protect white privilege!

 

The DA was trying to fool the public when it suspended its MP, Dianne Kohler
Barnard for sharing a racist social media post calling on the former
President of apartheid: “Please come back, P W Botha – you were far more
honest than any of these (ANC) rogues”. At that time the SACP said Dianne
Kohler Barnard expressed the views that are built into the DNA of the DA.
When DA reinstated her last month it clearly confirmed what we have said
from the onset. 

 

As if that was not more than enough, again from within the DA, emerged one
Penny Sparrow with racist comments referring to black people as monkeys. And
of course the DA is trying to fool the public again by suspending her.
Evidence exists beyond any reasonable doubt that there is home for such
racism in the DNA of the DA. 

 

In contradiction to the DNA of the DA, never again must we allow our country
South Africa to be a haven where racists are harboured and are a resource as
an electoral base. How can the DA be expected to do away with its own DNA?
That party of racist-acquired white privilege must never be trusted
especially when it comes to the fundamental principles of our constitution -
important principles such as the principle of non-racialism.

 

Wealth in this country still reflects racial inequality to the historical
disadvantage of the black majority. Ownership, management control and highly
paid positions in industry are still held on the same basis. The workplace
remains a pyramid that is predominantly white and mainly males at the top
and black at the bottom. This social engineering is not a product of the
acts of nature but a long process of racist exploitation and privileges. It
is this that the DA and its like are defending in opposition to democratic
transformation, including affirmative action to redress the imbalances of
the past - which continue to this day. 

 

We support the ANC’s view that racism and expression of support for
apartheid must all be criminalised. For instance, in Germany it is a crime
to praise or comment positively about the holocaust. Nevertheless, the
campaign against racism must be taken up as a mass campaign, with the
working class at its head, to be waged in all key sites of power - in
workplaces, in our communities, in the media. 

 

Most importantly we need to intensify the struggle for economic
transformation as part of a broader struggle against capitalism - as
capitalism and racism are always twins, and terrible twins at that. 

 

Intensifying the struggle against racism and capitalism is one of the best
ways to honour the memory of Comrade Joe Slovo - a communist who not only
hated but actively fought against racism.

 

Our campaign against racism in the media is but only one of many strategic
objectives. Our overall strategy as the SACP is to achieve complete
transformation of the media, including ownership, management control,
diversity of perspective and robustly independent accountability.  

 

Dear comrades, fellow democratic and peace loving South Africans, 

 

This year, the 21st anniversary of the death of the intellectual giant that
Slovo was, coincides with the 20th anniversary of the adoption of our
country’s first democratic constitution. 

 

We are commemorating Slovo’s death, but at the same time we are also
celebrating his dedication, commitment and outstanding intellectual and
practical contribution to our struggle for national liberation and
socialism. 

 

Let us remind ourselves who Joe Slovo was. 

 

Comrade Slovo was born in Lithuania in the former Soviet Union in 1926, and
moved with his parents to South Africa when he was only 9 years old. He
joined the Young Communist League (YCL) in the early 1940s. When Hitler
attacked the Soviet Union in World War 2, the SACP, as the rest of the
international communist movement did at the time, decided to encourage its
members to join the war against Hitler and other fascists. 

 

On his return from the War, on being offered a bursary to study, an
opportunity given to returning white soldiers, he went to Wits University
where he studied and graduated in law. 

 

In memory of Comrade Joe Slovo, the SACP takes this opportunity to
congratulate all the matriculants who have done well in 2015. We wish them
well. To those matriculants who come from poor backgrounds we want to say to
them, be like Joe Slovo and grab with both hands the assistance you will get
from government in the form of the National Student Financial Aid Scheme
(NSFAS) to study hard and pass. 

 

To those matriculants who have not made it, be aware that going to
university is not the only post-school opportunity. Repetition is the mother
of learning for those who are eligible for a second opportunity or would
like to try again. To those who would like to further their education and
training there are alternatives to success. Please explore colleges, Sector
Education and Training Authority (SETA) learnership, apprenticeship and
internship programmes or other workplace skills opportunities.

 

We also wish to encourage the YCL to continue with its Joe Slovo Right to
Learn Campaign, in honour and memory of this giant.

 

Comrade Slovo was a founder member of both the Congress of Democrats - an
organisation of democratic whites committed to the liberation to the black
majority - in 1953. He also was a co-founder of people’s liberation army,
uMkhonto weSizwe, representing the SACP as MK was a joint project of the ANC
and SACP, led by comrades Nelson Mandela and Slovo. He served the MK in
various capacities with distinction ending up as its Chief of Staff.

 

When Comrade Moses Mabhida, who was the General Secretary of the SACP passed
away in 1986, Slovo was elected SACP General Secretary, a position he held
until 1991 when he stepped down and was replaced by Comrade Chris Hani, so
that he could concentrate on, amongst other things, the negotiations leading
to the adoption of our interim constitution and our democratic breakthrough
in 1994. At the time of his death in 1995 he was the National Chairperson of
the SACP, ANC National Executive Committee member and Minister of Housing.

 

Comrade Slovo was both a leading theoretician of the SACP as well as a
practical revolutionary. He also had a great sense of humour and used to
tell lots of jokes about socialism and the Soviet Union.

 

Today, we recall that it was when everything came to a standstill at the
negotiations to agree on our current constitution that it were the brains of
the likes of Slovo that intervened. At that time, in the early 1990s, our
country was sliding toward a civil war. Many lives were being lost,
including that of our former General Secretary Comrade Chris Hani who was
assassinated on 10 April 1993. The assassination of Comrade Chris drove our
country to the brink of civil war.

 

The interventions that prevented that imminent war and unlocked the
negotiations were correctly premised on the principle that the agreements to
be reached at the negotiations to pave the way to a democratic breakthrough
we were to achieve in 1994 did not terminate our struggle for national
liberation and socialism. It was on this basis that the compromises widely
known as the “sunset clauses” which settled the negotiations were referred
to the course of the continuing struggle to address and ultimately resolve. 

 

Slovo played a crucial leadership and intellectual role including strategic
and tactical thinking in moving things forward to our democratic
breakthrough during that process. The history of our 1994 democratic
breakthrough can never be written without the role played by the Communist
Party, the leadership of Slovo and his contribution to the transitional way
forward!

 

It is on the ground of the many lives that we lost during the entire history
of the course of our struggle that we become irritated when organisations
harbouring racists - of whom many, if not all were on the side of apartheid
and enjoyed its benefits - claim they have fought against racism and
national oppression. Some of these organisations are today giving our
constitution their own, anti-majoritarian liberal interpretation. 

 

This, the year of the 21st anniversary of the death of Comrade Joe Slovo, a
leading communist cadre who played an active role in unlocking the
negotiations that had almost collapsed with devastating consequences for our
people in the early 1990s; 

 

This, also being the year of the 20th anniversary of the adoption of the
constitutional settlement that was agreed upon at those negotiations, Is the
year for us to assert the progressive content of our country’s constitution.
We must clearly reflect on the necessary comprises that took us one step
forward and the conditions under which our constitution was agreed upon. 

 

The sun must rise! This is the time for us to intensify our struggle to move
beyond those necessary and transitional compromises. This is the time for us
to decisively tackle the liberal anti-majoritarian distortions of our
country’s constitution. This is the time to deal with all other forms of its
monumentalisation meant to hold us back and postpone the final victory of
our revolution. 

 

This is one of the reasons why, as the SACP, we are saying:

 

This is the time for a second, more radical phase of our democratic
transition!     

 

When the ANC became the governing party in 1994, the SACP said plainly that
this was the end of our old task to dislodge the apartheid regime but the
beginning of a new task to implement our medium-term vision expressed in the
Freedom Charter, the vision of creating an economy independent of external
control and in which the commanding heights would be under democratic public
ownership. Such an economy is an economy that, together with basic wealth
and resources, are free from internal manipulation by any elitist groupings
for their own ends, be they black or white or black and white. 

 

Unfortunately, by 1994, the world’s pendulum of the balance of power had
been swayed under the dominance of Western imperialism in its phase of
neoliberal globalisation led by the United States. The aftermath produced
one complex crisis after another and thus the devastation of life affecting
millions of people the world over. But all this in the context of internal
problems exploited by imperialism.

 

During the occasion of the COSATU National Congress held in November 2015,
as the SACP we highlighted four major failures of national liberation
movements after ascending to power: Failure to transform the (post-colonial)
state; Inability to address the national question; Failure to transform the
colonial and imperialist-based domestic economy; Betrayal of the principal
motive forces of the national liberation struggle. 

 

Problems also occur in post-colonial societies when liberation movements
concentrate too much on providing services, on doing things for the people -
as important as these things are - rather than also and more importantly
concentrating on building production, developing and diversifying the total
national productive capacities and making sure that the benefits of
production are distributed among the most deserving people. As production
develops, more people will be in productive work and our capacity to deliver
social programmes will be greatly increased. These strategic tasks are
mutually reinforcing. The absence of lack of economic transformation will
inevitably lead to problems in the sphere of social delivery.

 

“From each according to his ability, to each according to his needs” is
indeed the slogan in which the principle of communist society is embedded.
But we must never forget that the principle of the earlier stage, that of
socialism, is “From each according to his ability to each according to his
work.”

 

Over the past 21 years in South Africa we have made huge advances in the
area of social delivery. Millions of our people have benefitted from free
houses, massive electricity and water expansion. Education has been expanded
massively across all levels. All these and other social advances are now
being threatened by a lack of economic transformation, international
economic crisis and deliberate destruction by monopoly capitalists and
imperialist forces working together with their local agents - among others
this through hostile local and foreign economic dominance including unfair
international trade regimes. Foreign political machinations involving
support for bogus “revolutionary” or some of the so-called pro-democracy
organisations including certain NGOs are being set up and used. In the
extreme, economic blockades such as is the situation faced by Cuba from the
United States, sanctions and foreign military aggression are being employed.


 

In South Africa, we have not yet transformed the colonial features of our
economy with its dependency on exports of raw materials and primary goods.
Our economy is still reliant on the import of finished goods or production
by multinational corporations, from the bathroom to breakfast, from
communication to transportation, from the clinic to the hospital, from the
classroom to the lecture hall, right in the workplace where we are importing
capital goods, and so on. 

 

Through its imperialist economic and political aggression the United States
now wants to ruin the meagre agricultural and farming sector that we have by
dumping its sick chicken legs, pork and other meats in our economy. This is
not only dangerous to the economy of our country but to the health of our
people. The SACP stands by our government in holding the fort against
economic and political aggression by the United States. Food health
regulations in the United States are universally known to be abominable and
are far below their allies in Western Europe or even those of South Africa. 

 

By the way the United States continues to subsidise its agricultural and
farming sector by way of insurances and payments linked to crop and
productivity. In contradiction, through the very same law, the so-called
African Opportunity Act (Agoa) that it is using to threaten South Africa it
considers state intervention in the form of subsidies and public ownership
in other economies such as South Africa as “government interference”. 

 

We have fought very hard for our democratic national sovereignty. We cannot
hand it over to imperialist control, including the United States’ political
and economic aggression. That is the faculty of the likes of the DA. That
party of white privilege has been serving foreign interests on this matter.
It has been condemning our national stances and commenting in favour of
hostile foreign interests that seek to destroy the health of our people and
our economy through dumping and most possibly food poisoning through
resistance to proper food health regulation.   

 

As the SACP we remain steadfast that it is time for the second, more radical
phase of our country’s democratic transition. The main, and therefore not
the only, content of this phase is economic transformation!

 

We cannot continue with the colonial and dependent capitalist accumulation
regime and not develop and diversify national production, collective
ownership and democratic public control and think that we will be able to
resolve the problems of persisting class inequality, unemployment and
poverty. 

 

All the raw materials that we are exporting come back in the form of more
expensive finished products through imports. Building collective ownership
and democratic national control as well as developing and diversifying
national production to manufacture finished products locally is a very
important economic transformation programme. This we must pursue. 

 

We must also move on with the implementation of our alliance’s shared
resolutions to develop our own, state-owned pharmaceutical and mining
companies and banks. 

 

As part of the second, more radical phase of our democratic transition, the
SACP has a dedicated campaign to achieve overall transformation of the
financial sector. This sector constitutes the backbone of modern capitalism.
It is the reason why investment in the productive sector has dwindled with
increased focus in the casino economy, speculation and financialisation. 

 

The financial sector is the sector behind the brutal evictions that have
wrecked the lives of hundreds of thousands of South Africans through
unscrupulous evictions connected to property fraud. This campaign we shall
heighten until bell of victory sounds. Our first step this is to prepare for
the second financial sector summit to be convened by the National Economic
Development and Labour Council. This summit will produce desired outcomes
only through intensified mobilisation in the streets. As trade unions say,
one cannot expect to win in the negations what s/he has never won in the
streets.  

 

We must deal decisively with the problems of corruption, patronage and abuse
of state resources. As the SACP we will also intensify our struggle against
parasites seeking to loot the state and public resources.

 

We are calling on all our alliance partners and the motive forces of our
revolution: 

 

“In memory of Comrade Joe Slovo, let us close ranks and unite behind the
perspective of the second, more radical phase of the national democratic
revolution”.

 

Let us unite not only for elections for their own sake – we must work
together in decision-making to direct the course of our shared revolution.
Let us unite in action behind the programmatic content of our electoral
manifestos. Let us mobilise our communities during the forthcoming local
government elections to achieve a decisive electoral victory - not for
ourselves - but for our people as a whole. Let us wholeheartedly serve our
people and not our private personal interests!

 

 

Issued by the South African Communist Party

 

Contact:

Alex Mashilo, National Spokesperson, 082 920 0308

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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