SACP with Red.png

 

South African Communist Party, Durban, 23 April 2016

 

 

Address by General Secretary, Cde Blade Nzimande at the people's march

 

 

Let us advance our own struggles as the working class:

 

No other class will fight for our interests!

 

 

As the two leading worker and working class formations of our country, we
are gathered here to say it is time for the working class to raise its voice
and start a process of intensified mobilisation to give more energy to
driving the second more radical phase of our transition. The capitalist
class (both old and new) has no solutions to the stubborn and persisting
challenges of unemployment, inequality and poverty. The old capitalist class
wants more of the same old intensification of the exploitation of the
working class, through casualisation, labour brokering and generally rolling
back workers gains as they did over the past 22 years.

 

Whilst some of the new sections of the capitalist class want to play by the
rules of the game (albeit capitalist rules), others are pursuing
accumulation through massive looting of the state. They equally have no
interest in the working class nor in our organisations other than for
purposes of capturing them and the state in order to enrich themselves.

 

Today we are saying to the workers of our country, let us mobilise in order
to provide leadership in confronting the challenges facing our country. It
is the working class that was at the head of the liberation of our country.
It is important for workers to stand up now in order to defend our gains and
drive an economic path that will create jobs. This is the beginning of
rolling mass activities by the working class to place our demands and
perspectives as part of driving a programme to realise a second, more
radical phase of our transition.

 

We are also gathered to declare our support for a decisive ANC victory in
the forthcoming local government elections. We firmly believe that it is
only the ANC that is best placed to lead a process of a better life for
workers and poor of our country. We however reiterate that we are not going
to support candidates who have been nominated through the corruption of ANC
processes. We fully support that candidate councillors must be approved by
communities, and that this must be followed to the letter.

 

Honour and treasure the memory and example of Oliver Tambo and Chris Hani!

 

We are gathered here, on the eve of the 23 anniversary tomorrow, 24 April,
of the passing away of President OR Tambo. Comrade OR died from a stroke two
weeks after the unrepentant and unremorseful murderers Janusz Walus and
Clive Derby-Lewis murdered our renowned leader, Comrade Chris Hani, in
cold-blood. President Tambo was seriously affected by the assassination of
Comrade Chris. There can be no doubt the murder contributed by no small
measure in deteriorating Comrade OR's ill-health culminating in his death.
Comrade Chris held President Tambo in high regard, particularly for his
sterling leadership of our movement.

 

Comrade OR led our movement during a difficult time. This was mainly the
period of illegality, underground organisation and armed struggle. It was
also a period of some of the most heroic uMkhonto we Sizwe (MK) campaigns
like the Wankie and Sipolilo campaigns through which our movement sought to
build a passage from exile to fight the enemy here at home. Comrade Chris
and other combatants retreated into Botswana after waging a heroic fight in
the Wankie Campaign, and they were arrested.  After their release from
prison in Botswana, they authored a memorandum, which became known as the
Hani Memorandum.

 

The memorandum was robustly frank. It openly and directly addressed the
leadership about the weaknesses and challenges that our movement and
struggle faced. This was initially received with anger from within the ranks
of the leadership. Thanks to the collective wisdom of our movement, led by
President Tambo; the anger was redirected into a constructive way forward
convening the watershed ANC Consultative Conference held this month in 1969
in Morogoro, Tanzania. That conference conducted constructive
self-criticism. It adopted decisive self-correction and one of the most
profound ways forward in the form of the first Strategy and Tactics document
to be developed by the ANC and embraced by all alliance components ever.

 

As Comrade Chris was later to comment, President Tambo understood that he
had the ANC and the rest of our movement to hold together in unity and
cohesion; and did not form cliques or factions with anyone. In his own words
during the opening address to the 48th National Conference of the ANC here
in Durban on 2 July 1991, President Tambo said:

 

"...we did not tear ourselves apart because of lack of progress at times. We
were always ready to accept our mistakes and to correct them. Above all we
succeeded to foster and defend the unity of the ANC and the unity of our
people in general. Even in bleak moments, we were never in doubt regarding
the winning of freedom. We have never been in doubt that the people's cause
shall triumph."

 

Three most important lessons from these wise words are readiness to accept
mistakes and correct them; placing the unity of the organisation above all
else; and firm commitment to the cause of the people!

 

As we march forward in the context of the many challenges and difficulties
that our movement and society are faced with today, let us take our cue from
the revolutionary examples of our outstanding leaders like Hani and Tambo.
These revolutionary leaders served our struggle to complete liberation and
universal emancipation whole heartedly. They served our people, not their
own private interests.

 

Let us serve our people: Let us advance and deepen the second, more radical
phase of our struggle to realise complete liberation and social
emancipation!  

 

Let us unite and fight against imperialism - the highest stage of capitalism
and domination by foreign forces, mainly transnational monopolies,
oligopolies and the imperialist states that serve their interests.  

 

Let us mobilise working class power to fight and defeat corporate capture!

 

But let us be categorically clear:

 

To allow regressive, reactionary and harmful tendencies such as corruption
and corporate capture of the state and our movement to take root in our
organisations and domestic policy is not to fight against imperialism. It is
to open an entry door for imperialist machinations.

 

To allow factionalism, patronage, manipulation of internal democratic
processes and gate-keeping to prevail in our movement is not to fight
against imperialism. It is to weaken our movement. It is to divide it and
prepare grounds for unbridled imperialist penetration.

 

The reality is that our country cannot drive a sustainable transformational
agenda against established monopoly capital, both imperialist and domestic,
if our capacity within the state and our unity within the ANC and the
alliance have been contaminated by corporate capture - including the widely
reported problems caused by the Guptas.

 

We must decisively tackle the problems of corporate capture, corruption,
patronage, manipulation of internal processes and associated problems of
division and disunity in the ranks of our movement and in government at all
levels.  

 

Equally important, we must decisively solve the problems faced by our
people, the majority of whom is the working class and poor. When we declared
in the Freedom Charter that the people shall govern, we did not mean elected
public representatives and various bureaucratic arms of the state alone. We
meant that the people, to emphasise, the majority of whom is the working
class and poor, shall be the most important arm of the state, and shall, in
that capacity, govern!  

 

The importance of mass action, such as we have embarked on today cannot be
overemphasised.

 

Let us deepen the struggle to achieve transformation of the financial
sector!

 

Like all other important segments of the financial sector, banking for
instance is dominated by a few oligopolies - Standard Bank, Absa (Barclays),
FirstRand (FNB) and Nedbank - that together with a few other private banks
form a private monopoly. There is also a multiplicity of micro lenders and
loan sharks that, no different from the oligopolies, are also ruining the
financial and social lives of our people. Sky-rocketing bank charges and
interest rates are a norm that has worsened the levels of household
indebtedness and financial exclusion in our country.

 

Later in the year the National Economic Development and Labour Council
(NEDLAC) will be convening a financial sector summit. This is the second
since the first was held just more than a decade ago. Let us together deepen
our work to prepare for this forthcoming summit towards the achievement of
transformation in the financial sector.

 

What are our some of our demands and expectations from the financial sector?

 

We want significant amounts in the hands of the banks and insurance
companies to be invested in the productive sectors of our economy

 

We want banks to invest in our townships and villages, in support of SMMEs,
not just building of malls that kill small enterprises in our townships and
villages. After all, banks and insurance companies receive billions of Rand
from our stokvels and burial societies but there is hardly investment in
these areas.

 

We want legislation to compel the financial sector to invest in identified
priority developmental projects.

 

We want the financial sector to invest in student housing for college and
university students.

 

We want the financial sector to make resources available towards a
comprehensive social security net, so that workers can have, amongst other
things, decent but affordable housing.

 

We want an end to the corruption and collusion between some officials in the
magistrates' offices and the banks in the repossession of workers' houses
that are often auctioned for next to nothing.

 

We want the financial sector to end its investment strike and partner with
government to invest funds in order to grow and develop our economy.

 

Let us deepen the struggle to rollback deepening exploitation of workers by
capitalist bosses, to achieve comprehensive social security and universal
access to quality healthcare for all!

 

Comprehensive social security offering adequate levels of social protection
is long overdue in our country in the context of persisting poverty,
unemployment and retrenchments of workers by the capitalist bosses who
exploit them. The bosses have also been aggressively restructuring not just
the workplace but workers to maximise profit.

 

As a result, there are many workers employed under labour brokering, who are
casualised, or who are irregularly employed under permanent temporary
arrangements. All of these and other actions adopted by the capitalist
bosses to deepen exploitation and maximise profit have manufactured
increasing levels of social insecurity among workers. We must intensify our
struggles to rollback these and other exploitative actions. We must continue
the struggle to bring labour brokering to an end. We must continue the
struggle to deal a blow to casualisation and perpetual temporary
arrangements.

 

What are some of our demands?

 

We want accelerated implementation of the National Health Insurance, so that
we can strengthen primary healthcare and create an affordable health care
system. Our commitment to deliver on the National Health Insurance (NHI)
cannot be allowed to be frustrated by the private healthcare sector.

 

We must deal decisively with the expensive private health care system in our
country; and that is why we welcome the current investigation into the cost
of healthcare in the private health sector. 

 

We want accelerated infrastructure and associated investment to create an
affordable public transport system.

 

We are calling for the strengthening and not the looting of state owned
companies so that they play an important role in growing and developing our
economy.

 

We strongly endorse the commitments in the ANC Manifesto to minimise
outsourcing. But we must intensify and lead the struggle for insourcing at
local government level and in the public sector generally.

 

We call upon COSATU unions to take a lead and not allow all sorts of
opportunists to hijack this struggle as has happened in some of our
universities recently.

 

The implementation of a national minimum wage is crucial as part of these
efforts. This is one of the important objectives of the Freedom Charter. A
national minimum wage has an important role to play in contributing towards
addressing the problems of exploitation and income inequality.

 

Above all, one thing is certain.

 

We cannot win in the boardroom or in government that which we have not won
on the ground and in our communities. Let us therefore deepen both social
mobilisation and political awareness in our communities, at the workplace,
in the terrain of class struggle through the battle ideas, and everywhere
else it matters, in support of the objectives of our struggle as a whole!

 

The working class, we are on our own, for there is no other class to fight
for our interests, to advance our struggles other than ourselves!

 

Let us recall the words of revolutionary wisdom by our revered leader,
Comrade Joe Slovo in his popular pamphlet 'The South African working class
and the National Democratic Revolution', relating to our duty as the working
class to fight our struggles even in the context of the necessity to form
class alliances such as we have in the form of our liberation alliance.
Slovo correctly asserts that involvement in alliances and minimum programmes
with other classes does not imply a dilution of workers' independent
positions as a class:    

 

"...when a front is created the working class does not just melt into it. It
does not abandon its independent class objectives or independent class
organisation. On the contrary, the strengthening of workers' independent
mass and vanguard structures is even more imperative in periods demanding
organised relations with other class forces."

 

Let us build peoples' power through local government!

 

Since 1994 the ANC has led us as the alliance and as a people through the
government to implement the socio-economic rights that we streamlined in our
country's constitution. Let us deepen the progress we have achieved by
ensuring that the outcome of the forthcoming local government elections
continues to answer the pressing questions facing the working class and poor
communities.

 

First and foremost these elections must be fought on the basis of a
democratic mandate, based not only on the content of the manifesto we have
endorsed as part of the ANC-led alliance, but also on the basis of
democratically elected councillor candidates.

 

The ANC constitution, procedures and processes relating to the selection of
councillor candidates, including the role that must be played by
communities, must be fully respected and followed. Any councillor candidate
who may be imposed will create problems of legitimacy and plunge our moral
high ground and electoral campaign into a crisis. It will be difficult to
campaign for such candidates, who must be avoided at all before the process
is closed.

 

Most of all let the working class take the lead in fighting against all
forms of factionalism in all of our organisations! There is often a close
connection between corporate capture and factionalism! Let us fight both
these as the most immediate enemies in advancing the interests of the
workers and poor of our country.

 

Issued by the SACP 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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