[image: Inline image 1]Nzimande
Blade Nzimande |
03 July 2016
SACP GS says liberation movement cannot afford further quantitative
fragmentations going forward

*The youth and the revolution*

* SACP General Secretary, Cde Blade Nzimande‎, address at:*

*Young Communist League of South Africa’s Youth Rally, 3 July 2016,
Johannesburg*

Let me on behalf of the SACP start by congratulating you for this gathering
to remember and honour the 40thanniversary of the June 1976 student and
youth uprisings.‎

The SACP values the youth as a rising generation that constitutes a chief
representative of the future in the broadest sense. As our national
liberation movement concluded long ago in the course of our liberation
struggle, the future of our society, as of any society, depends on the
political, ideological, theoretical and practical moulding of the youth.
The importance of the intervention from our Party’s 11th National Congress
in 2002 to re-establish the Young Communist League cannot be
over-emphasised. The role played by the Young Communist League in the
twelve years since its re-establishment in 2003 speaks out clearly for
itself. There is no confusion!

The Ten Youth Demands formulated by the Young Communist League at its first
National Policy Conference in 2005, two years after re-establishment,
introduced a qualitative shift not only in the history of the youth
movement but overall political discourse in our country as a whole.

The Ten Youth Demands put to the front to need to alter the structures of
ownership and control in our economy to support democratic social
transformation. The Young Communist League stressed the importance, in the
demands, of developing democratic control in the mining sector in the
interest of the people as a whole, the majority of whom is the working
class and poor. It placed emphasis on progressively rolling out free
education rigorously when it was not fashionable. For this it was condemned
by right-wing elements and opportunists of different moulds as populist.

Today almost all of the Young Communist League’s Ten Youth Demands are at
the centre stage of our country’s political discourse. Some groupings have
even misappropriated these or other sections of the demands as if they were
in the first place their ideas. Worst of all are elements that, on the
basis among others of these demands, engaged in divisive behaviours,
disunity and adopted the road to separatism forming isolated organisations
apart from, and opposed to our tried and tested national liberation
movement. Again the Young Communist League played one of the pivotal roles
in tackling this opportunism. This task must be deepened to the end in
defence not only of our liberation alliance but essentially the national
democratic revolution, our road to socialism.

There can be no doubt that there are many things that could have gone
otherwise were it not of the Young Communist League and the role it played
since its historic re-establishment. The Young Communist League is an
important political pillar not only of the youth but the SACP and socialism.

Why should this be the case?

Taking our cue from the collective wisdom of our liberation struggle, it is
important for the youth to appreciate that, classes and strata act not only
for their own good but also for the good of their rising generation. Young
people are not a class on their own, but they are not classless. They have
a class background and their social lives are influenced by class
realities. According to the experience of our people as summarised by our
national liberation movement, the youth grows and is moulded within a
concrete social environment, be it in the comfort and sleek surroundings of
the capitalist home, in learning establishments such as schools, colleges
and universities or in boardrooms, in the squalid conditions of the working
class ghetto, the backward and wretched environment of the countryside, or
in the confines of a petty-bourgeois upbringing.

As our ANC-led national liberation movement put it succinctly in Kabwe,
Zambia, in the mid-1980s:

“The stage of youth is one of assimilating knowledge of all kinds. Avidly
searching for a rational understanding of the surrounding world, the youth
therefore displays curiosity, rebelliousness, impassioned and uncontrolled
enthusiasms (at times); it quickly forms judgements as it abandons others.
Such a stage is crucial in the moulding of stable social being; thus all
classes and strata wage relentless battles for the hearts and minds of the
youth.”

This is exactly why as the SACP we re-established our own organisation
among the youth, the Young Communist League. It is exactly why we need to
continuously build and strengthen the capacity of the Young Communist
League through thoroughgoing political education and ideological training,
based on a scientific outlook of society and development as elaborated by
Marxism-Leninism. It is exactly why as the SACP we must continue tempering
the Young Communist League, like hardening steel, in revolutionary theory
and practice. As Karl Marx, the world’s renowned revolutionary social
scientist said in his eleventh and last thesis in the “Theses on
Feuerbach”, “Philosophers have hitherto only *interpreted *the world in
various ways; the point is to *chang*e it”.

One of the immediate threats we are facing in the battle by different class
forces for the hearts and minds of the youth are the dangers of corporate
capture, patronage and corruption. This is coupled with, or often rides on
the back of, the persistently high levels of inequality, unemployment and
poverty mostly affecting the youth.

The parasitic bourgeoisie, the most dangerous class compared to the lumpen
proletariat of 1848 when Karl Marx and Frederick Engels wrote the Communist
Manifesto, is not alone in destroying the future of the youth through these
dangerous machinations. Monopoly capital and criminals in the form of drug
lords and drug dealers are also destroying the future of the youth. The
success of these forces of destruction will result in the failure of the
future of the youth and our country as a whole.

The Young Communist League must intensify its mobilisation and political
programme among young people to defeat all these forces. The youth of today
must take their cue from the class of 1976 that waged a gallant struggle
not narrowly against the apartheid language policy in schools per se but
against apartheid as a whole. This is part of the history of class struggle
in our country and the role played by the youth in it.

Many young people left the country following the 1976 student uprisings to
swell the ranks of uMkhonto we Sizwe outside of the country. Others joined
the ranks of the underground pillar of our struggle inside the country.
Many others participated in ongoing mass actions against oppression and
exploitation throughout the 1970s and 1980s leading to the apartheid regime
declaring the state of emergency in the 1980s. Our transition to democracy
in the early 1990s could not have been possible without the role played the
youth as part of the working class and poor masses who confronted the
apartheid regime and all its violent machinations head on.

In this same way we can fight corporate capture, corruption, patronage,
crime and the drugs that the drug lords and drug dealers are using as a
weapon to ravage our communities and destroy the future of the youth. It is
through mass mobilisation, proper education and training that we can
successfully fight inequality, unemployment, poverty and the system of
exploitation that created and reproduces these and other destructive social
consequences – that is capitalism.

In this same way we can together defend the many social achievements
millions of our people have gained since our democratic breakthrough
dislodged the apartheid regime in 1994. South Africa is today a better
country to live in since, and because of, our 1994 democratic breakthrough:

The ANC-led government established the culture of human rights and ensured
that this was guaranteed in our constitution. On its own this achievement
changed the lives of millions of our people for the better as a basis for
the massive social delivery and infrastructure development that followed.

The ANC-led government has delivered approximately four million houses
benefiting over seventeen million people. It electrified over seven million
houses, two million more than the mere five million electrified on a racist
basis in a century to 1994 by successive colonial regimes since the first
household electricity connection in 1894. We are near universal access to
basic education. By the second decade of our democratic transition in April
2014, over nine million learners were benefiting from the school feeding
scheme. At universities and colleges the majority of students are Black and
females.

The National Student Financial Aid Scheme is undisputedly the single
largest driver of this progress in colleges and universities. Access to
clean water services increased from a negligible base in 1994 to 90 percent
in 2014. There are many other social advances, tarred roads and streets,
primary healthcare clinics, hospitals, clean drinking water, and so on, all
of these also covering rural areas where none of them existed before.

This is why, as the SACP, we are saying to the Young Communist League in
particular and the youth in general, let us go all out and deliver a
victory for our people on the ballot through the ANC. Let us campaign
zealously to deliver this victory and defend our achievements.

But let us not be in denial about the challenges that we are facing. We
have highlighted some of them, corporate capture, corruption, patronage,
inequality, unemployment, poverty, drugs and substance abuse. Let us deepen
political and mass work to defeat these challenges as we campaign for
electoral victory and beyond!

Another challenge that is facing our movement is factionalism.

Ten years ago this time our movement was facing the same challenge. The
following year, 2007, there were two major gatherings taking place, the
SACP’s 12th National Congress in July and the ANC’s 52nd National
Conference in December. The factionalism, while cutting across the rest of
our movement and affecting the whole of the ANC-led alliance, was
particularly concentrated in the ANC. This was linked with a leadership
transition in government, in terms of which the ANC President was not going
to be its Presidential candidate in the 2009 elections because of the limit
on the terms of office of the President of the Republic by our country’s
constitution.

Then we found ourselves faced with a problem involving the functioning of
state institutions in a manner that left much to be desired, reflecting
involvement in party political battles and settling of scores. We had to
close ranks and unite against the manner in which the Scorpions, a state
investigative organ set up to fight serious crimes and corruption was
functioning. We were also faced with invasive surveillance including
tapping of our phones.

It is a serious problem that we are faced with a similar situation and
problems again!

In July 2017 our SACP 14th National Congress will take place as with the
ANC 54th National Conference in December the same year. The current serving
President, Cde Jacob Zuma, will not be the movement's Presidential
candidate in the 2019 general election for the same reason as why former
President Thabo Mbeki would not be the movement's Presidential candida‎te
in 2009. There are individuals and factions, in this context, who have
already positioned themselves as the so-called kingmakers in the process of
the leadership transition in 2017 linked with the 2019 elections.

Our movement must find a better way of managing leadership transitions
linked with a change in leadership in government. Otherwise destruction
does not only take place in the form of an event. In fact most of it is
actually a process of quantitative changes culminating in a qualitative
change in the form of a downward spiral, disintegration and a collapse.
Already our movement has experienced quantitative fragmentations. We cannot
afford more of these fragmentations going forward to the future.

And those who think that we need less of the alliance going forward are
fooling themselves. The reality is that we will need more of the alliance,
united, cohesive, and functioning optimally at each moment more than ever
before. Without this, the second radical phase of the national democratic
revolution that we direly need will not be possible!!!!!

Another internal challenge we are facing is that of the depoliticisation of
the youth and our structures. Factionalists and parasites increasingly hate
the development of a cadreship that has high levels of political
consciousness and understanding. This is because politically conscious
cadres are often not easy to manipulate into cannon fodder for factionalist
voting. If not careful this depoliticisation often quickly degenerates into
various strands of anti-intellectualism and looking down upon educated
cadres in our movement.

Corporate capture, factionalism and depoliticisation are usually mutually
reinforcing. Parasites need factionalists in order to accumulate through
captured leaders and organisations. Factionalists in turn need both the
resources in the hands of the parasites in order to fund their factionalist
activities, as well as a depoliticised membership used as voting cannon
fodder. If we fail to break and defeat this vicious cycle, our revolution
will die and so will your future as young South Africans.

The most immediate task of the Young Communist League is to campaign even
harder for a decisive victory of the ANC in the forthcoming local
government elections, through heightened outreach to young voters. Priority
must be given to hotly contested areas, especially the metros.

However, it is important both now and after the campaign to build strong
structures of people’s power on the ground in order to ensure that the
people themselves become the primary vehicle for transformation at the
local level. This means strong revolutionary alliance and Progressive Youth
Alliance structures on the ground. The SACP is now even more strongly of
the view that we must build strong civic or residents associations on the
ground, as part of rectifying the weakness of branches that tend to be
inwardly focused instead of providing bold leadership to communities. We
urge the Young Communist League to reflect and join us in this task.

The Young Communist League needs to continue to strengthen itself in the
higher education sector, in both universities and colleges. Important
transformation struggles opened up and waged by students in this sector
must not be allowed to be hijacked by populist and other opportunistic
elements. They must firmly be led by the Progressive Youth Alliance with a
strong YCL presence.

The SACP is also pushing for the building of a strong worker-student
alliance at institutional level as the bedrock and principal motive force
for post-school education and training transformation. At the head of this
must be trade unions Nehawu/SADTU and the Progressive Youth Alliance. A
strong YCL has an important role to play here; especially also ensuring
that democratically elected structures in and their legitimacy in our
institutions are defended. Together we must ensure that no one gambles with
the education and therefore the future of our youth. We must protect
schools, colleges and universities from destruction.

Our clarion call must be that our institutions of learning across the board
must be transformed and not destroyed!

Given the tasks we have just outlined, as well as the threat of
depoliticisation of our members and cadres, the Young Communist League will
have to up its game in the provision of political education amongst young
workers, students and unemployed youth, with a particular focus on
leadership. The SACP can think of no more urgent a matter than the need to
intensify political education amongst the youth. No matter what
difficulties that maybe faced by young people today, our youth is not the
problem but an asset. If properly mobilised, the youth can serve as a
vehicle to solve many of the problems facing society.

Let us also emphasise this point: one of the most pressing problems for
which we must mobilise our youth to tackle is that of drugs and substance
abuse in our communities. If there is one urgent campaign we would urge the
YCL to take up in earnest is this one as drugs and substance abuse
constitutes one of the most serious threats to the future of hundreds of
thousands of young people and the negative impact these have on families.

Our clarion call is – go and vote, but do not sit back after that – go out
and mobilise; the future of local government and is that of our society as
a whole is in your hands!

*Issued by the SACP, 3 July 2016*

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