Morning Star.png

 

 

Marikana Massacre

 

 

Editorial, The Morning Star, London, 27 June 2015

 

Those who have already convinced themselves that the Marikana massacre was
authorised at the highest level of the South African government will not be
shaken by the Farlam report.

 

The same applies to others who have twisted the words of ANC deputy
president Cyril Ramaphosa - then a mining company Lonmin director - to imply
that he "ordered" police to open fire on strikers.

 

Retired judge Farlam has examined the allegations and the evidence and
rejects both charges.

 

His panel has looked into the actions of the company, police officials,
government departments and trade unions, making a number of judgements and
recommendations.

 

Farlam leads in on the findings against Lonmin, saying that the company had
failed to "use its best endeavours to resolve the disputes" between workers
engaged in a legally unprotected strike and those not taking part.

 

Lonmin insisted that miners not supporting the action should attend for work
even though it knew that this would place them in extreme danger.

 

Farlam actually soft-pedals criticism of Lonmin's deliberate divide-and-rule
tactics to weaken the position of the National Union of Mineworkers (NUM).

 

South Africa's platinum reserves, exploited by domestic and British
transnational corporations such as Lonmin, represent 86 per cent of the
world's stocks, yet the price is set in Western stock exchanges rather than
in Johannesburg, holding down workers' pay.

 

Marikana is situated in the former apartheid bantustan of Bophuthatswana and
still reflects the super-exploitative features of that history.

 

Mining companies have refused to provide homes for their workers, who have
been forced into squatter camps, living apart from their families and facing
pressure from slumlords, organised crime and vigilantism.

 

Lonmin and Impala Platinum encouraged the Association of Mineworkers and
Construction Union (AMCU), led by expelled NUM members, by breaking the
existing collective bargaining process.

 

In so doing, it offered an opportunity to the vigilantist AMCU to present
itself as a more militant alternative to the NUM.

 

Much has been made, justifiably, of the police massacre of 34 miners on
August 16 2012, but 10 people, including NUM members, security guards and
police officers were killed the previous week as AMCU stepped up its
campaign.

 

Farlam suggests that the scale of killing on August 16 arose from a "flawed"
police plan to encircle strikers and then disarm them.

 

However, the ferocity and one-sidedness of the gunplay raises at least the
possibility of an element of police vengeance against those responsible for
hacking their colleagues to death.

 

The commission's effort to equate responsibility of NUM and AMCU through
failure to "exercise effective control" over members is hard to accept,
especially in light of subsequent murders and woundings of NUM members in
the area.

 

President Jacob Zuma has accepted the Farlam recommendations, including an
inquiry into the suitability of national and north-west provincial police
commissioners to hold office.

 

He, in common with all South Africans, finds it unacceptable that such an
event can happen in a free and democratic country.

 

Families of those killed in and around Marikana before, on and after August
16 2012 should receive compensation without delay.

 

Apartheid-era living conditions, corporate malpractice and industrial
relations in the mining industry have to change quickly to prevent any
repetition.

 

But anger and sadness at the scale of this atrocity should not be misused to
direct undeserved accusations against the ANC government, its leaders or the
South African revolution.

 

 

From:
<http://www.morningstaronline.co.uk/a-a08b-Marikana-massacre#.VY4kEfmqqko>
http://www.morningstaronline.co.uk/a-a08b-Marikana-massacre#.VY4kEfmqqko

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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