Divided COSATU spells danger for SA, says SACP

 

 

Khuthala Nandipha, Mail and Guardian, Johannesburg, 25 August 2013

 

The South African Communist Party (SACP) has lashed out at "vigilante
unions" and warned that a divided and weakened COSATU could be dangerous for
SA.

 

Speaking at a South African Communist Party media conference on Sunday,
general secretary Blade Nzimande and his deputy Jeremy Cronin, defended SACP
against allegations that they are also part of a campaign to divide COSATU
and turn it into a "labour desk".

 

"The unity of COSATU is priceless and affiliates such as NUMSA [National
Union of Metalworkers of South Africa] are out of order. We [SACP] will
engage NUMSA about their reckless language. They know it is dangerous to
blame us for COSATU's problems. They just want to draw us in and we refuse."

 

COSATU and its leaders and affiliates have been at loggerheads since the
federation's suspended general secretary Zwelinzima Vavi was accused of rape
by a junior staffer in July.

 

At the conference, which was called following the SACP's central executive
committee meeting, Nzimande lashed out at unions calling them vigilantes who
are killing their own workers.

 

Speaking about Marikana's first anniversary on August 16, he said, "Unions
were queuing like vultures wanting to feed on the carcass of the NUM
[National Union of Mineworkers]."

 

Chasing their own tails

 

Cronin repeated his position on the challenges facing COSATU, saying the
SACP was interested in developing a sustainable strategic response to the
troubled union. "The danger in any political situation, and particularly one
that is fraught with difficult challenges, is that we easily become absorbed
and overwhelmed by the front-page headlines in sensation seeking commercial
media," he said addressing the Southern African Clothing and Textile
Workers' Union's 12th national congress on Friday.

 

Cronin warned that members of the alliance will be caught chasing their own
tails, and fail to carry the struggle of the real opponents of the working
class. "We can easily become absorbed by disputes between personalities and
factions, by leaks and palace politics. It is no secret that COSATU is going
through perhaps its most difficult period ever."

 

He emphasised that as a consistent ally of COSATU, the SACP treasures the
left wing, working class, socialist axis between the party and COSATU. He
added that the SACP is working actively to build an ANC that is a
disciplined force of the left.

 

Cronin went on to agree with Nzimande, saying if COSATU continues to
undermine worker solidarity through competition between affiliates it will
weaken the entire liberation movement. "This will diminish any prospects of
rolling back monopoly capital and building an economy based on the principle
of from each according to their ability, to each according to their needs."

 

Both Nzimande and Cronin denied NUMSA and Food and Allied Workers Union's
allegations that COSATU's alliance partners want to turn the federation into
a "labour desk", instead the two claimed that the SACP needs a robust,
independent and militant COSATU. "Of course government is not above
criticism. Of course the working class must vigilantly defend its interests
and carefully monitor that there is not corporate capture of government and
of the bureaucracy. But the trade union movement needs to bear in mind that
it is itself not immune to corporate capture," he reminded. 

 

Progressive trade unions

 

Cronin credited the tension and factionalism within COSATU to competition
over access to investment arms and retirement funds, calling for a thorough
review. "Trade unions always need to navigate between two extremes. On the
one hand, the bread and butter of any trade union movement must be the
defence and advancement of the immediate interests of workers on the shop
floor: wages, conditions of work, health and safety concerns."

 

But he argued that a progressive trade union cannot simply be workerist and
economistic as well as the voice of "civil society" over the state.
Progressive trade unions, he said, have to engage on the wider political
terrain; not only as an opposition but actively influencing and
consolidating democratic state power and capacity.

 

"We must say self-critically as alliance partners that over the recent
decade we have hardly succeeded in organising and mobilising the urban and
rural poor - apart from during election campaigns," Cronin said.

 

Nzimande ended the conference with the re-assurance that the SACP as
alliance partners are 100% behind the ANC for next year's elections.

 

 

From:
http://mg.co.za/article/2013-08-25-divided-cosatu-spells-danger-for-sa-says-
sacp

 

 

 

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