South Africa 10 Years On


TEN YEARS ago saw the first election in post-Apartheid
South Africa where the entire adult population, black, white and coloured,
was entitled to vote. 
The African National Congress (ANC) won by a
landslide, with Nelson Mandela elected as the first President of the ‘new’
South Africa. 
A decade later, with the ANC re-elected with nearly 70% of the
vote (see last week’s the socialist) and former ‘communist’ Thabo Mbeki as
President, what has really changed for the people of South Africa?
 Steve
Bush gives his impressions.

AS A visitor to South Africa, I went to a branch meeting
of the DSM (Democratic Socialist Movement – the Socialist Party’s sister
party in South Africa) in the Cape Town suburb of Belleville.

The comrades were keen to hear about the situation in
the UK, particularly the attitude of workers here towards the war and
occupation of Iraq. They were also very interested to hear of our
experiences regarding privatisation and the Blair government’s attacks on
the working class.

The ANC is still seen popularly as a liberating movement
– but one with an increasingly capitalist leadership. The ANC’s position on
‘multi-racism’ has in reality been geared towards the acceptance of the
existence of wealthier classes by the poor.

It has been an almost seamless transition from racial
segregation to class segregation, with the emergence of both a black
capitalist class and a poor white working class, both still tiny in numbers.

At present there is no alternative perceived amongst
most workers to the ANC but the decline in their support has been evident
electorally in recent by-elections. The local elections next year will be a
better test of their support.

Privatisation

There has been some confusion amongst ‘coloured’ or
mixed race voters. Under the apartheid system the coloured population fared
slightly better than the black populace. The division was exploited by the
regime, nonetheless many supported the ANC, but now feel let down by the
government, with little improvement and a perception that they still face
prejudice from both the new ruling class and the old.

This has lead to an attempt to create a new party for
coloured workers, ironically calling itself the New Labour Party. This
confusion is also rife in the townships where the majority of poor black and
coloured people live, and unemployment is very high.

THE ANC government has pursued, since coming to power,
two economic ‘restructuring’ schemes – the first was the Reconstruction and
Development Programme, which was a limited reformist programme, offering
small improvements to the black working class.

This was abandoned in 1996 in favour of the GEAR (Growth
Employment and Redistribution strategy)

This has been a wholesale neo-liberal economic assault,
with privatisation programmes and attacks on the working class. Since then,
our comrades in South Africa have abandoned working inside the ANC in favour
of working outside it against these neo-liberal attacks.

One of the key areas has been in the Anti-Privatisation
Forum (APF), but other groups have also been set up in some areas –
particularly in the townships. I visited a meeting of COREMO – the COncerned
REsidents MOvement in the KTC area outside Cape Town.

New workers’ party

COREMO was established in 2001 as a voice for the
residents in this township, because the ‘official’ residents group is run by
the ANC. When the area was flooded a few years ago, the government promised
money for residents affected by the flood but when they went to collect it
they were told that local ANC luminaries had already collected their
compensation "on their behalf". Needless to say they have never
seen their money.

COREMO is not even allowed to use the local community
centre to meet, because it charges rates that no residents group made up of
more than 50% unemployed could ever afford. In spite of having been built
"for the community" it stands empty most of the time.

Many local people have to spend all their time just
trying to exist, and those that do work are super-exploited, often having to
travel hours to work on dangerous public transport or in the back of ancient
pick-up trucks.

Both COREMO and the APF called for spoiled ballot papers
in the elections. Spoiled ballots outstripped the vote for the former ruling
New National Party and turnout plummeted by more than 13% compared to the
last elections. Even though there were 35 parties standing, many of the
poorest voters simply felt they had no-one to vote for.

The DSM, APF and COREMO all see the task ahead as being
the building of a new mass workers’ party in South Africa, one that can
truly represent the poor and oppressed people of this wonderful country, a
people with so much to offer, and so little on which to exist.