SACPblackStar.jpg

 

South African Communist Party, Johannesburg, 28 February 2016

 

 

SACP Thirteenth National Congress Central Committee

 

Fifteenth Plenary Session, Statement

 

 

The SACP Central Committee met in Johannesburg over the weekend of 26th to
28th February.

 

There was extensive discussion of the political report which focused on the
current challenges facing our country and our movement. Over the past five
years, the SACP has consistently warned that the multi-faceted global
capitalist crisis, with its destructive impact on jobs, human security and
environmental sustainability, is far from over. This global capitalist
crisis has impacted upon the already problematic structure and
vulnerabilities of South Africa's political economy.

 

In this context the key task of the present is to ensure a unified South
African response that defends our democratic transformational mandate and
our national sovereignty against both internal and external destabilising
forces. In particular, as the SACP we call on calm heads to prevail within
government and across our movement. The reckless role of shadowy forces to
subvert sensitive, strategic public institutions for entirely unpatriotic
ends, while our economy stands on the brink, must be immediately halted.

 

For the SACP, monopoly capital with its ties to imperialism remains the
major strategic adversary in the struggle for national democratic
transformation. However, it is impossible to address monopoly capital's
massive and ongoing expropriation of our national resources through
super-exploitation of workers, through tax base erosion, capital flight,
transfer pricing and much more, if sensitive and strategic public
institutions like the capacity within the South African Revenue Service to
deal effectively with high-income individuals and corporations are attacked
and undermined for entirely parasitic ends. While our liberation movement
should certainly be vigilant about the role of external forces, and while we
should learn lessons from imperialist projection of "soft power" in many
parts of the world to undermine national sovereignty through so-called
"Colour Revolutions" and the like - we should always remember that the
entry-point for this destabilisation is inevitably corruption, parasitism
and bureaucratic complacency.  

 

Against the background of insufficient collective leadership and
consultation resulting in the December shuffling and re-shuffling of finance
ministers, and in the further context of a threat of a junk status
downgrading, the door has been opened for a renewed neo-liberal offensive,
calling for aggressive shock therapy austerity measures, whole-sale
privatisation, and the rolling back of hard-won labour gains. 

 

This is the context in which the CC expressed its support for the broad
direction of the budget delivered in Parliament on Wednesday by cde Pravin
Gordhan.  Tabled in an exceptionally difficult situation, the budget
succeeded in providing for tax changes that are mildly redistributive, an
increase on VAT was avoided and, while lower income earners were provided
relief from fiscal drag, higher earners received no such relief. The budget
wisely confirmed a postponement of proposed reforms to worker provident
funds in the face of widespread trade union and worker concerns. The
question of safeguarding retirement funds must be discussed within the
broader context of a more comprehensive social security policy and social
wage interventions.

 

While there was a reduction in real spending, the budget correctly committed
to sustaining our state-led infrastructure build program, active industrial
program interventions, and support for small and medium productive
enterprises. The SACP further supports in principle the review of public
entities and particularly a consolidation of multiple, often poorly managed,
development finance institutions, notably those in provinces. While the
proposal to consider co-financing of state-owned companies should not be
rejected out of hand, great caution needs to be exercised to ensure that
this does not become the entry-point through which the private profit motive
overwhelms the developmental, public interest mandate that should be the
bed-rock of our state owned companies.

 

In addressing public sector spending, while there is a reduction in real
spending, the budget's main emphasis correctly focused not on slashing
economic and social programs, but rather on wasteful and corrupt
expenditure, and on tightening supply chain processes to guard against
parasitism and corporate capture, through, amongst other things,
strengthening the Chief Procurement Office.

 

University students and campus workers have the right to protest to
articulate their concerns and grievances. The SACP supports in particular
legitimate students and workers struggles both in principle and practice.
However, both students and workers  have a duty to articulate their concerns
peacefully in a manner that respects the rights of others. The past week's
disruptions at the University of Free State, the University of Pretoria,
North West University and the University of Cape Town, and elsewhere,
clearly indicate that there are minority, fringe elements seeking to
destabilise our institutions. They have no interest in actually achieving
their demands, they are simply intent on disruption, shifting from one to
another demand. These minority elements seek to impose their political
agenda on the overwhelming majority through intimidation and violence. They
seek to exploit every problem to hijack legitimate student and worker
concerns. It is notable that the issues are often not common across
campuses, the one common factor is a tiny minority of the same fringe
forces.

 

University managements need to take decisive action against elements bent on
turning higher education campuses into sites of violence and vandalism. We
cannot tolerate destruction of property and threat to lives and we call on
the South African Police Services to protect the lives of students, staff
and workers. Criminal actions must have consequences.

 

The struggle against racism including short-sighted anti-white chauvinism
must be intensified. The transformation of the racist and colonial legacy of
universities is a critical task, but when this degenerates into anti-white
chauvinism it simply helps to organize right-wing white racism. In this
context SACP cadres on campuses, the YCLSA and Progressive Youth Alliance,
and NEHAWU have particular responsibilities to play a leadership role in
isolating fringe elements, in condemning violence and anarchy, and in
consolidating a determined struggle for the democratic transformation of
higher learning.   

 

As part of strengthening and deepening the Financial Sector Campaign the
Central Committee invited the Minister of Justice, cde Michael Masuthu, and
comrades from Housing Class Action working under iLungelo Lethu Human Rights
Foundation, and progressive lawyers active in anti-eviction struggles. South
Africa is the global leader in home evictions, with evictions now running at
around 20,000 to 30,000 households a year. South Africa's repossession laws
are among the most backward in the world allowing for all manner of abuses.
Abuses are frequent in the processing of court eviction orders and in the
auctioning of repossessed homes, with those affected often left in the dark.
International practice for auctioning of repossessed homes typically forbids
initial sales at less than 95% of the market value. In South Africa
repossessed homes are frequently sold off at less than 20% of their value.
We are even aware of cases of repossessed homes being sold off at R10. These
practices are being led by corrupt estate agents and property developers
with the connivance of officials. Criminal syndicates, often linked to drug
trafficking, are behind the barbaric evictions of flat dwellers in central
Johannesburg and elsewhere, with the Prevention of Illegal Evictions Act
simply ignored by authorities.

 

The SACP will be actively taking up these concerns in the course of the
Financial Sector Campaign towards the NEDLAC-convened Financial Sector
Summit in the second quarter of this year. We have also agreed with COSATU
to ensure that we intensify campaigning around the many other financial
sector issues that are causing unbearable stress on a wide array of South
Africans - the unsustainable household debt crisis, the abuse of garnishee
orders, the abuse of social grant recipients, and mashonisas small and big.

 

The SACP CC took note of the Constitutional Court ruling in the IEC matter.
The SACP fully supports all attempts to ensure free and fair elections. But
if the ruling is that voter lists must have regular residential addresses,
then it will result in the disenfranchisement of hundreds of thousands if
not millions of South Africans living in informal settlements and rural
villages, including some members of our own Central Committee.  Other ways
need to be found to guard against electoral abuses. 

 

We believe that these challenges require the effective revitalisation of the
modus operandi of national Alliance leadership structures, and the ability
to act together on the ground in addressing factionalism. In some cases ANC
provincial structures have simply blocked national alliance decisions to
hold joint interventions to stabilise areas of conflict.  

 

The CC reaffirmed its support for our alliance partner the ANC in the
forthcoming local government elections. However, on the ground in many
localities the SACP will not be able to support ANC candidates imposed on
communities in flagrant disregard of the ANC's clear rules against
branch-membership gate-keeping, against slate politics, against the use of
money to pervert candidate selection. We call on the ANC leadership to deal
decisively with these abuses so that we ensure an overwhelming ANC-led
alliance electoral victory.

 

The SACP expresses its deep sympathies with the families and fellow-workers
of the three trapped workers at the Lily Mine in Mpumalanga.

 

 

Issued by SACP Central Committee

 

Contact:

Alex Mashilo, National Spokesperson, 082 920 0308

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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