25 August 2013

 

 

SACP Central Committee Press Statement

 

 

The Central Committee of the SACP met in Johannesburg over the weekend of
23-25 August 2013. 

 

The CC was meeting in the week before an all-important Alliance Economic
Summit and in the midst of serious challenges within our alliance partner,
COSATU. The first day of the CC was, accordingly, devoted to a secretariat
political report that focused on this immediate context.

 

None of our domestic challenges can be adequately understood, still less
responded to effectively, without locating ourselves in the midst of the
persisting global capitalist crisis - the gravest crisis of its kind since
the 1930s. In its first phase, beginning in 2007/8, the epicentre of the
crisis was focused on the US financial sector, spreading rapidly into the
Eurozone. SA was relatively cushioned through this first phase, thanks to
continued strong, notably Chinese, demand for our industrial minerals.

 

The one mineral export exception was platinum - our major export market for
this mineral being Europe. It is no accident, therefore, that it was to be
the platinum sector in which the offensive against labour by the mining
houses, and the attempt to undercut NUM, the largest of COSATU's affiliates,
was first felt. The major platinum mining houses have flirted with vigilante
unionism, are looking to downsize, and use unprotected strikes to retrench
as a useful means to cushion profits in a depressed market.

 

In 2012 a second phase of the globalised capitalist crisis struck. While
stagnation and crisis continue to characterise the developed capitalist
economies, the impact of the crisis has now spread to leading developing
economies, including China, India and Brazil. The commodity super-cycle,
driven in particular by China's sustained growth, is now over. This has
impacted significantly on major industrial mineral exporting economies -
Brazil, Chile, Australia, and South Africa.

 

At the same time, the US administration's attempts to re-float their
economy, partly through quantitative easing (the "printing" of billions of
dollars of cheap money) has had hugely negative effects on developing
economies like SA, with excessively liberalised financial controls, and
relatively high interest rates. Cheap "hot" money has flooded into SA in
pursuit of quick profits based on the differential between interest rates in
the US and SA. This in turn resulted in an excessively over-valued rand,
impacting on the competitiveness of our exports, including our manufacturing
and agro-processing sectors which had begun to see some progress, as a
consequence of our state-led industrial policy actions, and other state-led
interventions.

 

When the US Federal Reserve hinted earlier this year that quantitative
easing might be tightened up, this "hot" money then poured out of SA (and
many other economies in a similar situation) for "safer havens". This, then,
plunged the Rand down to equally unrealistic levels - with a serious impact
upon the cost of imports (notably oil) and our balance of payments.

 

Meanwhile, the domestic investment strike by South African monopoly capital
largely continues - epitomised, in particular, by SASOL's recent
announcement that it will be investing (in practice, disinvesting) some
R200bn in Louisiana, USA. This is the largest FDI investment in the history
of the US! In 2007, in the face of calls from the SACP, and a recommendation
from a Treasury Task Team to impose a windfall tax on SASOL's super-profits,
Treasury and SASOL reached a compromise "gentlemen's" agreement. Instead of
a windfall tax, SASOL agreed to consider investing its massive profits
(R24bn in 2012) in a new coal-to-liquid plant in Limpopo (Mafutha). Nothing
has happened on this front. Instead South African-earned surplus is being
disinvested out of our economy, exporting job-creation, enhanced energy
security and re-industrialisation to the US!

 

In the Alliance Economic Summit next weekend, the SACP delegation will be
calling for the imposition of a windfall tax on SASOL - so that at least
some of its excessive profits are re-invested within our country. At the
same time, the SACP will be raising the broader macro-economic challenges
that have been dramatically exposed by the current situation. The 1996 GEAR
macro-economic programme has excessively liberalised our financial markets
and exchange controls, exposing us to massive disinvestment and making us
excessively reliant on speculative capital flows. This makes for a volatile
currency, and it undermines our industrial and agro-processing sectors. At
the Alliance Economic Summit a serious discussion on re-calibrating our
macro-economic policies has become ever more important.

 

State of the organised labour sector

 

This wider reality is also the context for correctly analysing the
challenges within organised labour in SA, and particularly within our ally,
COSATU. Everywhere, in the face of the persisting capitalist global crisis,
the class offensive against organised labour has been intensified. Here in
SA, the grave challenges of unemployment, poverty, and inequality are blamed
on government and on the trade union movement and a supposedly "inflexible"
labour market.

 

While the capitalist offensive blames both our democratic government and the
labour movement, it also seeks to sharpen differences and conflicts between
the ANC-led government and COSATU. Unfortunately, elements within COSATU
have taken the bait.

 

The SACP has never argued that the ANC-led government is above criticism, or
denied that there are many challenges, including the dangers of corporate
capture, tenderpreneurship and corruption. Still less have we argued in
favour of a narrow support for individual government leaders. The democratic
government COLLECTIVE must be supported - but supported vigilantly and with
constructive but robust criticism where necessary. What the SACP rejects is
a narrow anti-government oppositionism that elevates an endless stream of
anti-ANC, anti-government invective above a serious and unifying class-based
struggle against monopoly capital and its hangers-on.

 

The CC expressed its full support for the struggle for a living wage
currently being waged by NUM, NUMSA, SATAWU and others. The SACP greatly
values its long-standing alliance with the progressive trade union movement
in SA, and we celebrate the role that Communists have played in building
militant unionism for more than eight decades in our country.

 

In the face of sustained provocation from some quarters, the SACP has
steadfastly refused to become involved in the internal problems and disputes
confronting our ally COSATU. We have consistently advanced a Hands Off
Cosatu call. COSATU must be given the time and space to address its own
internal difficulties, guided by its own constitution and experience.

 

None of this means that the SACP is a disinterested observer of the
challenges confronting our ally COSATU. We see our role as being one in
which we work together to analyse and deal with the underlying causes behind
much of the factional challenges - notably, corporate capture of leadership
elements by union investment arms, poaching of members in inter-affiliate
competition, the weaknesses of COSATU as a federation in supporting
difficult sectors, and weaknesses in terms of servicing members at the
shop-floor level.

 

We call for the unity of COSATU - there is no problem that is bigger than
COSATU itself. Only bosses will benefit from tensions, splits and walk-outs.
We call for organisational renewal across COSATU and its affiliates -
focused on the training of organisers and shop-stewards. We pledge to play
an active role in building combined Alliance campaigns that unite the
organised working class and the urban and rural poor.

 

The Farlam Commission and persisting violence in Marikana

 

Much has been made in the media about the Constitutional Court decision
upholding a lower court's judgment that there is no obligation on the state
to carry the ongoing costs of legal fees for private parties participating
in the Farlam Commission proceedings. It is, of course, unfortunate that
there is now, at the very least, the appearance of imbalance in legal
representation. But behind this situation is a wider question. We respect
Judge Farlam, but we are concerned that the Commission of Investigation has
been turned into a prolonged quasi-court proceeding, dominated by
excessively well-paid senior advocates, some of them clearly grand-standing
while clocking up billable hours. We would like to see the commissioners
taking more direct and unmediated responsibility for examining the
responsibilities of the various parties for the terrible tragedy, and for
uncovering the underlying systemic factors.

 

Meanwhile, as the Farlam Commission drags on, AMCU has refused to sign the
stability pact. Two AMCU members, charged with murder, were released last
week on bail back into the Marikana community on grounds that they "might be
called as witnesses to the Commission". Yesterday, we buried NUM
shop-steward and SACP member, Mrs Madolo who was murdered in cold-blood. The
reign of anarchy and fear prevails within the Marikana community. For the
Marikana community living in chronic insecurity and fear there is a sense
that they have been abandoned by the police. We call on the criminal justice
system to be much more decisive in dealing with criminality and violence and
to demonstrate at the highest level real commitment to assisting this
terrorised community.

 

National Health Insurance

 

The CC received a report on progress being made in moving towards
operationalizing the NHI and the first pilots for the NHI. The SACP has long
supported the proposal for a comprehensive NHI, based on the principles of
universal access and social solidarity. We salute the important resolutions
taken by the ANC on the NHI at its 2012 Mangaung National Conference, and
the fact that government is now moving ahead.

 

However, as we move to implement an NHI there is a well-funded push-back
from the multi-billion rand private health-care industry which services a
tiny minority of our population. Having lost the battle to scrap the idea of
an NHI, the private health industry is now seeking to infiltrate itself into
an NHI, hijacking and distorting its key principles.

 

In this regard, and in line with ANC resolutions, the SACP insists that:

 

.        The NHI must be a single payer and must be publicly administered.
There must be no profit-seeking outsourcing of administration. Further
flirtation with the idea of a multi-payer system must be stopped - such an
approach will irreparably undermine the principle of universal access;

 

.        There must be no co-payments approach, in which costs are partly
met by out of pocket payments.

 

.        Tax subsidies, essentially for those of us with access to medical
aids, must be abolished

 

.        The NHI must be funded via general tax revenue on high-earning
individuals, payroll-linked progressive contributions, and contributions by
employers. No additional levies must be made through VAT, for instance, to
fund the NHI.

 

Erosion of these principles will end up reproducing the very yawning
inequalities in health-care provision in our society that we are seeking to
eradicate.

 

August - Women's Month

 

The CC devoted some time to discussing gender-based oppression and violence
in our society. In particular we focused on the plight of working class
women. The struggle for a non-sexist society, an integral part of any
struggle for sustainable democracy and development, is in part about
changing attitudes, a critical self-examination of personal behaviour and of
family life. But the struggle is also about the objective social realities
which exacerbate gendered oppression. Women from poor and working class
communities are challenged by the weaknesses in our social security system,
the absence of effective child-care facilities, poor public transport in
townships, and a breakdown in many places of law and order and community
cohesiveness. At the work-place, working women frequently encounter
harassment and discrimination.

 

The CC commended the Department of Justice for the re-introduction of the
Sexual Offences Courts.

 

A consistent struggle against behavioural, ideological and social factors
reproducing gendered oppression must be waged. Amongst other things the SACP
commits to struggling for a re-orientation of government's expanded public
works and community works programmes to more effectively align with the
inspiring, but often unrecognised and unpaid volunteer work that hundreds of
thousands of women (and men) in poor communities are daily undertaking
through stokvels, faith-based NGOs, and other local associations, in
providing community child-care services, in doing volunteer home-based care,
and generally in helping to re-build communities living in distress.

 

The crises in Egypt and Syria

 

The CC commended the South African government for condemning the military
coup in Egypt. Whatever the many mistakes and weaknesses of the Muslim
Brotherhood-led Morsi government - it was democratically elected. The
military coup and the subsequent horrific massacres have set back
democratisation and development in Egypt, and plunged the country into a
very dangerous situation. We condemn the role of the US and the reactionary
Saudi regime for their support to the Egyptian military forces. By failing
to roundly condemn the coup, the US and its European allies encouraged the
Egyptian army in its belief that it had a green light for proceeding with
its violent repression of its own citizenry.

 

In Syria a civil war, initially fomented by external forces including the US
and its European allies, has spun wildly out of control, with a death toll
now over 60,000. It is also impacting upon stability in neighbouring
countries, in particular Lebanon. Ultra-conservative forces with the
original backing of the US, steadfastly blocked attempts at a negotiated
settlement, free of external manipulation. This past week the conflict has
reached a new exceedingly dangerous point - with allegations of the use of
chemical weapons. If such has happened it must be condemned without any
ambivalence - however, using this as a reason for the further escalation of
external imperialist involvement will not bring peace to the people of Syria
and the region.

 

 

Issued by:

SACP

 

Contact:

Malesela Maleka

SACP Spokesperson - 082 226 1802

 

 

 

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