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Thursday 14 April 2016

Southern African News


Writing the Struggle – EPAs: The 

European game is over, 

comrades

The current episode between some African countries and European Union over the 
Economic Partnership Agreement (EPA) proves to a great extent what Franz Fanon 
talks about when he says: “The new day which is already at hand must find us firm, 
prudent and resolute.”
In this case, Namibia has stood firm and resolute in refusing to be dragged into an agreement that would benefit Europe only.
The EPAs are part of a new regime of trade agreements done regionally and in line 
with the World Trade Organisation (WTO). They are a renegotiation of a series of 
other trade agreements that existed when most African countries gained independence.
The deadline for the agreements was supposed to have been 2007 when most other countries signed on but others including Namibia and South Africa in the SADC region 
refused to sign before proposed changes to some clauses were done.
Namibia’s argument is that the EU is asking far too much than what the WTO rules 
prescribe.
As the situation stands today, the EPAs are crafted to benefit the EU rather than Africa.
Furthermore, the EPAs have no due regard for existing African regional trade bodies 
such as the Southern African Customs’ Union (SACU) to which Namibia has been a 
member for more than 100 years.
Caught in the harsh grip of poverty, poor business environment that has seen 
developing industries closing down because of financial predicament; joblessness; 
and poverty, many African countries cannot compete with the EU countries.
If Namibia signs and for those countries that signed the EPAs in their current form, 
Africa will be reduced to an importer of consumer goods from the EU without any development on the ground.
Critics have encouraged African leaders to
·    Challenge the EPAs false urgency
·    Insist that African countries’ access to EU markets continue during negotiation
·    Call for an extension of the signing timetable
·      Reject the negotiation of issues that have already been rejected at the WTO
·         Reject any provisions on intellectual property and services which go beyond 
existing commitments under the WTO agreements
·       Reject the EU’s demand that any future trade benefits that African countries 
might give to other major trading economies must also be given to the EU.
So where does Fanon fit into all this, you may ask? The last chapter of his book, “The Wretched of the Earth” aptly summarises the scenario unfolding before us today. 
Europe has always played games with Africa. If it’s not a political game, then it is an economical one. In every match Europe has engaged Africa, she sought to smuggle in
goals.
“Come, then, comrades, the European game has finally ended; we must find something different. We today can do everything, so long as we do not imitate Europe, so long as 
we are not obsessed by the desire to catch up with Europe,” Fanon exhorts.
Although Fanon said this in 1961, Namibia and South Africa as well as all those countries that are resisting the EPAs are showing that they are tired of playing Europe’s rearguard.

“Come, brothers, we have far too much work to do for us to play the game of rearguard. 
Europe has done what she set out to do and on the whole, she has done it well; let us stop blaming her, but let us say to her firmly that she should not make such a song and dance about it.
We have no more to fear; so let us stop envying her,” Fanon says.
Indeed, Europe today stands in the Third World’s path like a “colossal mass whose aim should be to try to resolve the problems to which Europe has not been able to find the answers”.
Have you imagined how and why Europe runs to try and solve African problems when 
Greece and such other countries in their midst have gone to the dogs?
Fanon urges Africa to move at her own pace and set her own target instead of playing the catching-up game.
“The pretext of catching up must not be used to push man around, to tear him away from himself or from his privacy, to break and kill him.
“No, we do not want to catch up with anyone. What we want to do is to go forward all the time, night and day, in the company of Man, in the company of all men,” he says.
Signing the EPAs as they are is a refusal to chart a new path, according to Fanon.
“It is a question of the Third World starting a new history of Man, a history which will 
have regard to the sometimes prodigious theses which Europe has put forward, but 
which will also not forget Europe’s crimes, of which the most horrible was committed 
in the heart of man, and consisted of the pathological tearing apart of his functions and 
the crumbling away of his unity,” he further explains.
Yes comrades, the European game is over.

Daily Sun News

4 HOURS AGO
'JUDGE IS NOT GOD' - HANI!
    Chris Hani's widow Limpho Hani. Photo by Herman Verwey  ~ 
    THE Hani family will take its fight against Janusz Walus's imminent release on parole to the Supreme Court of Appeal, after the High Court in Pretoria dismissed an application for leave to appeal the decision to release him.
    "She [the judge] is not God, we have other courts to go to," Chris Hani's widow Limpho Hani told reporters today.
    She was speaking shortly after Judge Nicolene Janse van Nieuwenhuizen dismissed government's bid to appeal her ruling that Walus could be released on parole.
    “As black people in this country... we will continue to fight until justice is done," she said.
    Justice Minister Michael Masutha applied for leave to appeal the ruling, just two days after the 23rd anniversary of the SACP leader's assassination.
    Walus, a Polish immigrant, shot Hani dead in the driveway of his Boksburg home on April 10, 1993.Hani expressed her bitter disappointment with Van Nieuwenhuizen’s judgment and accused her of not being fair. 
    She urged her to take a leaf out of Judge Thokozile Masipa's book in her handling of Oscar Pistorius’s case. Masipa granted the State leave to appeal her ruling that the former paralympian was guilty of culpable homicide.
    "She did not deny NPA leave to appeal, she said go for it," Hani said.
    "That's what I call somebody who gave a judgment with no agendas. She was confident that her judgment, as far as she was concerned, was fair.
    "But this one, it's so interesting, she denied the minister leave to appeal. It means she is not confident about her decision, that's what I am saying. I wish she could be mentored by Judge Masipa.". 

    Southern African News


    Writing the Struggle – Senghor’s 

    negritude rooted on self-

    actualisation

    One of negritude’s arguments was that even if one is as dark as three nights put 
    together, the first step towards self-actualisation is to love oneself.
    This came about because over the years, Africans especially women had developed 
    some self-negation traits that saw them seek to change their biological and physical 
    make-up using either skin enhancing lotions or even starving themselves to death 
    just to get the slim body the West so much adores.
    It was not only women but men too who would go all the way to try and sound or 
    behave like Westerners. There was an era when men too resorted to skin-lightening 
    creams just to hide their black mask.
    Indeed, most men would love to have slim women as compared to the robust 
    and heavily-built African woman.
    Negritude sought to instil some self-confidence in Africans on the continent as 
    well as elsewhere in the world.
    For Leopold Sédar Senghor, negritude means sharing “certain distinctive and innate characteristics, values and aesthetics” as shown in his poem titled ‘To New York’, 
    where he focuses on Harlem, the (in)famous black township.
    In the poem, Senghor urges New York to “Listen to the distant beating of your 
    nocturnal heart./ The tom-tom’s rhythm and blood, tom-tom blood and tom-tom.
    “New York! I say New York, let black blood flow into your blood./ Let it wash the 
    rust from your steel joints, like an oil of life/ Let it give your bridges the curve of 
    hips and supple vines./ Now the ancient age returns, unity is restored,/ The
    reconciliation of the Lion and Bull and Tree/ Idea links to action, the ear to the 
    heart, sign to meaning./ See your rivers stirring with musk alligators/ And sea 
    cows with mirage eyes. No need to invent the Sirens.”
    The imagery in the above stanza captures the greatness inherent in Africa and 
    its peoples. Let black blood … let it wash the rust … like an oil of life…
    He also alludes to night, which is a very strong symbolism because blackness 
    is as natural as the night. Nobody can escape the night. As such, nobody can 
    escape nature or biological make-up.
    For Senghor, Africans oiled development in today’s metropolis and that fact 
    alone should make them proud and stand tall even on the face of debilitating 
    circumstances.
    Self-actualisation in one’s physical outlook does not come alone but is 
    accompanied by one’s beliefs, which are simply culture and traditional norms.
    This combination gels into a very potent tool against any oppression and the 
    Chinese as well as Japanese are just but one good example of how a well-cultured 
    people can defy external odds and defeat such forces.
    Writing in “Negritude: A Humanism of the Twentieth Century”, Senghor says 
    that negritude is “diametrically opposed to the traditional philosophy of Europe”.
    He further argues that European beliefs are founded on “separation and opposition: 
    on analysis and conflict” while Africa’s is rooted on unity, balance negotiation and 
    an appreciation of “movement and rhythm”.
    Nigerian academic, Francis Abiola Irele in his study “The African Experience in 
    Literature and Ideology”, sums up Senghor’s negritude beliefs as one largely 
    based on “sensuality, rhythm, earthiness and a primeval past”.
    “The traditional stereotypes of African culture are not directly challenged by 
    Negritude – Africans are essentially spiritual according to Senghor – they 
    are modified.
    “Negritude is a process of negotiation which proposes a counter-myth or 
    counter-reading of those traditional stereotypes with the aim of valourising 
    and celebrating the African personality,” Irele writes.
    According to Irene, Senghor’s conception of Negritude holds that one’s inner 
    and outer essence is informed, defined by one’s race.
    Although there has been some conflicting theories about Senghor’s negritude 
    beliefs, the essence still remains that self-actualisation is central to being a 
    human race in a world battered by several forces seeking to destroy the weakest.
    There is also within negritude the belief that the colonised should acquire the 
    colonisers’ values and use them as a weapon against domination.

    Wednesday 13 April 2016

    Southern African News

    Swapo warns of reactionary threat


    The three-member delegation led by Swapo secretary- general and Namibian Justice Minister Cde Pendukeni Ithana, met senior Zanu-PF officials at the party's headquarters in Harare yesterday.
    They exchanged notes and shared experiences the revolutionary political parties have gone through over the years.
    The Swapo delegation later paid a courtesy call on Acting President Joice Mujuru, who briefed the members on the formation of the inclusive Government and the progress it has achieved so far.
    Briefing journalists after the closed-door meeting, Cde Ithana said: “I came to pay a courtesy call on her to link up on many issues of interest both to the Government of Zimbabwe and government of Namibia, to Swapo and Zanu-PF. We are interested in following progress being made in the inclusive Government here.”
    She also updated Acting President Mujuru on Swapo's preparations for elections set for November 27 and 28 this year.
    During a meeting with senior Zanu-PF officials earlier, Cde Ithana bemoaned imperialist machinations in Southern Africa.
    “The onslaught is not only on Zimbabwe, but it merely started in Zimbabwe. Western imperialists are looking at a formula to eliminate former liberation movements from power. We need to learn through every experience we have gone through,” Cde Ithana said.
    She accused Western imperialists of moving around the continent creating reactionary political parties.
    The ruling Swapo secretary-general, said the West's attention was on Southern Africa because of the region's vast mineral resources.
    Cde Ithana said the imperialists were refusing to give up despite attainment of political independence by the region.
    “They are refusing to give up . . . They are still holding our countries at ransom because of our resources. We should organise ourselves to have economic independence so that we become stronger and resist their attempt to isolate us,” she said.
    Cde Ithana said Western countries united to impose illegal sanctions on Zimbabwe and coerced other countries to isolate Harare, warning the region to guard against such machinations.
    “They were going around forcing countries to abandon Zimbabwe. What may happen to Zimbabwe may happen to Namibia,” she said.
    Cde Ithana hailed relations between Swapo and Zanu-PF.
    “You will know that Swapo and Zanu-PF are sister parties that have shared so many things for a long time. During the liberation struggle, we shared the trenches and after independence, we continue to be allies and comrades. We occasionally visit each other and share experiences,” she said.
    Zanu-PF secretary for administration Cde Didymus Mutasa described Swapo's visit as the best thing ever to happen to Zanu-PF.
    “We are happy she is here during this time when we are affected by Western sanctions,” he said.
    Cde Mutasa condemned the West for imposing illegal sanctions on Zimbabwe saying these amounted to violation of human rights. He hailed relations between Zanu-PF and Swapo.
    The delegation later toured the National Heroes' Acre, where it laid a wreath on the tomb of the unknown soldier. ' The Herald.

    POLITICSWEB NEWS

    POLITICS

    No response from Mike Masutha to our memo - PAC

    Party says its main demand has always been immediate release of former APLA cadres
    Release of Political Prisoners
    On the 24th of April 2015, the PAC staged a national march to demand immediate release of the former APLA cadres who are still held in South African prisons as prisoners of wars against apartheid, a system which was declared unjust and crime against humanity by the international community.
    Our memorandum which is self-explanatory was handed to the ministry of justice and constitutional development [Michael Masutha] and we are confident that it reached the minister’s office.
    We are saddened that up to now, we have received no response, let alone communication from the minister concern.
    We doubt if the minister is honest about the issues raised in our memo, because it has been the first time since April that we read about his reactions in the City Press dated 22nd May 2015.
    What concerns us in is his statement, is that what the minister is raising has never been communicated to the PAC. We regard his actions as if he is just misleading the public and creating false impression that the government is doing something about the plight of these prisoners of war.
    Our main demand has always been immediate release of former APLA cadres, granting of parole and presidential pardon to those who qualify as well as the expungement of criminal records to those who have already finished their sentences.
    We did not expect the minister to be selective in dealing with these demands as it is reported in the City Press of 22nd May 2015, that he is actually fast-tracking parole processes only for those who are still incarcerated.
    We can safely say that the minister is playing hide and seek about this demands and we are saddened by his actions, he should come clean and take the PAC on board in dealing with this issue.
    Statement issued by Kenneth MokgatlhePAC Spokesperson, May 26 2015

    Tuesday 12 April 2016

    [COSATU Press] The unprincipled and unaccountable banks have no moral authority to moralise on the Gupta issue

    cid:image001.jpg@01D1545E.EEB01070

    The unprincipled and unaccountable banks have no moral authority to moralise on the Gupta issue

    The Congress of South African Trade Unions has noted with the concern and contempt the decision by some South African banks to hypocritically and recklessly ostracise the Gupta businesses, for narrow political ends. The decision by ABSA, FNB, NEDBANK, SASFIN and KPMG to stop doing business and associating with the Guptas is nothing but political posturing. This decision will not only negatively affect the gluttonous Guptas, but will badly affect the innocent workers, who have no dog in that hunt.

    COSATU demands answers from these banks; they need to explain why they decided to took these decisions, when workers are facing such a bleak future. Even the discredited and politically toxic people like the Guptas deserve to only be found guilty after a proper due process has been followed and they have never been convicted in a court of law. The federation has demanded a meeting with the Guptas to discuss the pending job losses in their companies after this decision by the banks.

    To prove that they lack any developmental consciousness, they did not think about the implications that their public relations stunt was going to have on the workers. The country is shedding jobs at an alarming rate and some of these banks are actually retrenching workers ,but they saw it necessary to ostracise the Gupta owned companies that employ thousands of innocent workers.

    COSATU feels that when worker’s jobs are at stake, it was inane and thoughtless of these organisations to play politics with their livelihoods. OAKBAY, Sahara Holdings and TNA might belong to the unsavoury family like the Guptas, but they employ thousands of innocent workers. Thousands of families and their livelihoods are being sacrificed by unprincipled financial institutions to pursue their own narrow agenda. Workers are a primary stakeholders in any company and to ignore their interests exposes these financial institutions for what they are, unprincipled opportunists.

    The federation holds no candle for the exploitative Guptas, who are terrible employers and have proven themselves to have no principles or self restraint. But the federation denounces the self serving and hypocritical stance of these banks and financial institutions. They acted without thinking about the fate of thousands of workers employed by the Guptas, and only treated this as a public relations issue. We challenge them to be transparent and prove that they and their shareholders are not doing business with any politically exposed individuals, corporations of regimes.

    COSATU is angry that innocent workers find themselves as part of collateral damage in an unprincipled fight between two sections of corporate looters, who are fighting for a sit at the table. These banks do not represent anyone ,except their shareholders, some of whom are foreign financial institutions with a reputation of doing business with unsavoury characters and regimes around the world.

    Banks like ABSA have a lot to answer for and they have no right to be preaching to anyone. These institutions are products of an evil apartheid system that was declared a crime against humanity by the United Nations. They have never explained or apologised for their role in propping up and doing business with that regime. They have no moral authority and no right to pontificate about political exposure, while recklessly putting at risk the livelihoods of so many innocent workers.

    These are organisations, which call for the de-regulation of labour markets, and advocate for the de-regulation of financial markets in order that they can maximise their profits. This new disdain for blackmoney and patriotic fervour that has suddenly engulfed them is selective and self serving. They have colluded to fix prices and impose high charges on their customers, making it very difficult for the majority to save. They have ostracised the mostly black working class by denying them access to finance and ultimately stopping their participation in the economy.

    When it suits them these banks and their rapacious shareholders never forget to tell the workers that money has no motherland; and that their loyalty is to their shareholders. They are daily taking decisions that do not serve the interest of the country and their sudden patriotic fervour can only fool the uninitiated.

    While the insatiable Guptas need to be called out for trying to capture the state in order to continue their corrupt accumulation, this does not give monopoly capital the right to moralise.  The people of South Africa will fix what is wrong with their government and with their country and do not need unaccountable and guiltless banks and financial institutions to interfere in the political affairs of this country.


    Issued by COSATU

    Sizwe Pamla (National Spokesperson)
    Congress of South African Trade Unions
    110 Jorissen Cnr Simmonds Street
    Braamfontein
    2017

    P.O.Box 1019
    Johannesburg
    2000
    South Africa

    Tel: +27 11 339-4911 Direct 010 219-1339
    Mobile: 060 975 6794

    SACP statement on banking and auditing oligopolies and private monopoly - the accomplices of the Guptas‎

    South African Communist Party
    Press Alert, 11 April 2016
    SACP statement on banking and auditing oligopolies and private monopoly - the accomplices of the Guptas

    The SACP has noted decisions taken by a number of financial oligopolies constituting private monopoly in the banking and auditing segments of the fincial sector, among others ABSA, FirstRand and the imperialist auditing monopoly GPMG to severe ties with businesses owned by, or linked to the Gupta family that is entangled in allegations of corporate state capture.

    The SACP has been in the forefront of the campaign to achieve transformation of the financial sector. The sector is dominated by handful oligopolies ABSA, FirstRand, Standard Bank, Nedbank and some insignificant new arrivals, all together forming private monopoly and pose a threat of collusive market conduct. 

    Acting together with an imperialist monopoly KPMG, the private banking monopoly has shown its dangers and collusive market conduct against one of their private mould, the Gupta oligarchy, with which they have established long standing business relations. What did they see all along in their relationship with the Guptas that they concealed until pressure from the struggle against corporate capture, thus acting as accomplices of the Guptas? They are as guilty, and cannot be left unchallenged. The majority of them benefited from apartheid - which was declared by the United Nations as a crime against humanity. They continue to benefit from financially exploiting our people.

    The SACP reiterates the importance of developing public ownership and democratic control, but which which is free from corporate capture and manipulation by private capital capital accumulation interests not only in the banking sector but the financial sector as a whole. The importance of state, co-operative and worker owned banks and other financial establishments trading in financial services cannot be over-emphasised. The dangers demonstrated by private oligopolies and monopoly are clearly pronounced for all to see. 

    The SACP stands on the side of the workers, and will fight for their rights and livelihoods - as opposed to the greedy behaviour of their exploiters the Guptas included.

    Issued by the SACP

    --
    __________________________________________
    FOR GENERAL ENQUIRIES ON SACP STATEMENTS

    CONTACT:

    ALEX MOHUBETSWANE MASHILO: NATIONAL SPOKESPERSON, HEAD OF COMMUNICATIONS
    SKYPE: MASHILOAM
    MOBILE: 082 9200 308
    OFFICE: 011 339 3621/2
    TWITTER: SACP1921
    WEBSITE: WWW.SACP.ORG.ZA
    FACEBOOK PAGE: SOUTH AFRICAN COMMUNIST PARTY
    SACP USTREAM TV CHANNEL: http://www.ustream.tv/channel/sacp-tv