Daily Maverick New.png

 

 

Vavi plays Russian roulette as ANC salvage team takes on COSATU crisis

 

 

Ranjeni Munusamy, Daily Maverick, Johannesburg, 18 September 2013

 

Since being suspended as COSATU general secretary last month, Zwelinzima
Vavi has not really given anybody the opportunity to miss his presence. Vavi
is constantly in the news cycle through his press statements, his tweets,
his legal battles and his public speeches. His perceived defiance and ill
discipline is building anger and resentment in COSATU, which could result in
summary dismissal. Vavi has absolute confidence that a special COSATU
congress will rescue him and discard his enemies. It is a dangerous gamble,
especially now that the ANC heavies have moved in. 

 

When Zwelinzima Vavi decided to address the National Union of Metalworkers
(NUMSA) political school on Tuesday, it could be assumed he had something
earth shattering to say. After all, he knew that he had already earned the
ire of COSATU president S'dumo Dlamini and other federation leaders by
speaking at a NUMSA strike last week, which they said was a violation of his
suspension conditions. To speak on the union platform again, this time while
the COSATU central executive committee (CEC) was in progress, could only
have meant that either Vavi had something to say that would break the
impasse or he wanted to provoke the federation to expel him.

 

But other than to keep talking in defiance of COSATU, it is not clear now
what exactly Vavi's game plan is. Vavi was apparently addressing the NUMSA
event as "a friend and neighbour" of the union's late general secretary
Mbuyiselo Ngwenda, to whom the political school is dedicated. When he
addressed striking NUMSA workers last week, he used a similar excuse saying
he was doing so in a personal capacity.

 

The problem is that the contents of Vavi's address were not just about being
a neighbour to NUMSA's deceased leader. It had everything to do with the
current crisis in COSATU, the position of the federation in the alliance and
his own troubles stemming from his suspension.

 

Vavi's suspension, which resulted from a sexual encounter with a subordinate
at the COSATU offices, has already triggered a messy court battle pitting
affiliate unions against each other and the federation leadership. Vavi had
lodged his own urgent court application to set aside his suspension, arguing
that the decision of a special CEC last month was unconstitutional. But Vavi
would know that while he did not agree with the CEC decision, it remains
valid until overturned by the court. So by speaking on issues pertaining to
COSATU, on a union platform, he was once again handing ammunition to his
enemies and pointing at where to shoot him.

 

There is no possible way that Vavi's detractors in COSATU will not read his
comments at the NUMSA political school as provocation and an attempt to
escalate the crisis in the federation. Vavi said COSATU should remain an
"independent, fighting, campaigning organisation" and should not hand the
ANC a "blank cheque" in next year's elections.

 

Vavi also said that COSATU leaders should not serve on the ANC's national
executive committee (NEC). "It is about a principle guaranteeing the
independence of the trade movement. It is also about eliminating any
confusion," he was quoted by Sapa.

 

He had refused to stand for a position on the NEC at three consecutive ANC
conferences. "[This is] not because I am a counter revolutionary, or
oppositionist, as everyone is saying, but because I felt that you have to at
least spare the office of the general secretary or president."

 

"Those two should continue to speak only wearing the face and hat of the
mandate they have received from the union," Vavi said. This is a direct
swipe at Dlamini who was elected onto the ANC NEC at the Mangaung conference
in December.

 

Vavi said he would not allow his detractors to silence him and he would
continue to speak out as a "class-conscious cadre". Vavi came out in support
of a special COSATU congress to deal with the crisis in the federation.
NUMSA initially proposed that a special congress be held and is now being
supported by eight other unions. The COSATU constitution states that a
special congress can be convened if seven or more unions petition for it.

 

This issue is currently being discussed at the CEC meeting underway at
COSATU House. It is not known whether Vavi was deliberately trying to
aggravate his detractors in that meeting by lobbying outside and taking pot
shots at the COSATU leadership. It certainly could not have made it easier
for those trying to defend him and spare him from further sanction. It is
not as if the atmosphere in the CEC meeting needs to be any more tense and
fractious, with bouts between warring factions crippling previous meetings
and a court battle over Vavi's suspension already in the mix.

 

Vavi and his allies seem to have placed all their eggs in one basket: the
special congress. By their calculation, if they win that battle at the CEC,
they have won the war, as the delegates at the special congress would tilt
in their favour. Because Vavi is extremely popular among ordinary COSATU
members, the assumption is that he would get more votes than any candidate
the opposing faction put up to run against him for the position of general
secretary. The assumption also goes that Dlamini would be voted out as
COSATU president to punish him for the treatment meted out to Vavi.

 

It should be recalled that the reason the vote was avoided for these two
positions at last year's COSATU congress was that it would have definitely
caused a division in the federation. By opting to do this now, the
consequences would be the same: COSATU would be divided and the crisis would
be far from resolved. The unions opposed to Vavi, including the National
Union of Mineworkers (NUM), the National Education Health and Allied Workers
Union (NEHAWU) and teachers union SADTU, would stage an enormous fight back
and there is no guarantee that things would go according to the Vavi and
NUMSA script.

 

Last September's COSATU congress was not exactly marching to the NUMSA tune,
and although the union has now overtaken NUM as the biggest affiliate, how
things pan out on the congress floor cannot be taken for granted. A lot has
happened in the last year that has caused turbulence and uncertainty in
COSATU, and in labour relations generally. There is no way of knowing to how
all this is impacting on COSATU members on the shop floor.

 

It is also not known how much of the noise Vavi has been making in the media
and on Twitter has been reaching the ordinary COSATU members who could be
deciding his fate. NUMSA is clearly in his corner already, so it seems
rather strange for him to address two of their events two weeks in a row. If
Vavi's strategy is to lobby publicly, then he needs to get around more. If
he wants to reach the workers, he needs to go to them quietly and not feel
the need to tweet his every move and thought.

 

But if Vavi intends to get himself expelled or to force COSATU to its knees,
then he is right on track. The strategy of outing the sexual indiscretions
of other COSATU leaders in the media in order to justify his own would then
also makes sense. The Mail & Guardian reported last week that Vavi's
supporters are now accusing his opponents in COSATU's leadership of
selective morality by hiding "worse" sexual indiscretions of their own,
including fathering children out of wedlock with junior staff. This has
infuriated those named and made them determined to get rid of Vavi.

 

On Tuesday the ANC announced that a high-powered task team has been
appointed by the party's national working committee to help COSATU to
navigate through its problems. The team is headed by ANC deputy president
Cyril Ramaphosa and includes general secretary Gwede Mantashe (both of whom
are former NUM general secretaries), chairwoman Baleka Mbete, national
treasurer Zweli Mkhize and four members of Cabinet. 

 

However, there is nothing in the statement that suggests that the ANC
intends to broker a deal between the warring factions. 

 

The COSATU leadership will announce the CEC decisions on Thursday. 

 

 

From:
http://www.dailymaverick.co.za/article/2013-09-18-vavi-plays-russian-roulett
e-as-anc-salvage-team-takes-on-COSATU-crisis/#.Ujkjk8Zi27k

 

 

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