Opening Address by COSATU President

 

Comrade Sidumo Dlamini

 

at the 12th National Congress, held from the 23rd - 26th November 2015,

Gallagher Estate, Gauteng, Midrand

 

 

Members of the Central Executive Committee, 

The delegation of the ANC led by President Jacob Zuma 

The delegation of the SACP led by the General Secretary comrade Blade
Nzimande, 

The delegation of SANCO led by its President comrade Richard Mdakane 

The delegation of the ANC Women`s League led by its President Bathabile
Dlamini 

The delegation of the ANCYL led by its President comrade Collen Maine

The National Secretary of the Young Communist League, comrade Mluleki
Dlelanga and your delegation 

The President of SASCO   comrade Ntuthuko Makhombothi and your delegation; 

The General Secretary of COSAS comrade Mondli Skosana and your delegation; 

The President of FEDUSA Koos Bezuidenhout and your delegation;

The President of NACTU Joseph Maqhekeni and your delegation; 

The General Secretary of ITUC comrade Sharon Burrow and your delegation 

The General Secretary of the WFTU comrade George Mavrikos and your
delegation; 

Our distinguished International guests;  

 

Please accept revolutionary greetings on behalf of the millions of COSATU
members.

 

We give special greetings to the delegates drawn from all COSATU unions
coming from all the economic sites of our country where they are organised
and waging relentless struggles against employers and our class enemies.
You come here representing the common aspirations of millions of workers
organised within and outside of COSATU. 

 

We want to thank all our members all over the country for remaining firm and
for keeping the flag of COSATU flying high. Even during the most difficult
times in our organisation you were never shaken, you stood firm occupying
the front ranks in defence of your federation.

 

When they were recruiting you to form new unions outside of COSATU, you said
no we know our home!

 

When they called for the formation of a new federation you told them that we
currently have 180 registered trade unions in South Africa, and that there
are currently 23 registered trade union federations in the country.  This
means enough divisions which weakens workers unity. Forming yet another
federation when we are supposed to unite the existing federations is absurd.

 

Those who are forming a new federation are nothing else but power mongers
who want to remain leaders perpetually. They think that trade unions are
milk cows which must be used to advance personal business interests.   

 

Just yesterday, these divisive characters stood in platforms presenting
themselves as being principled super revolutionaries and talked about unity
of workers condemning those who were forming new unions and new federations.


 

We are refusing to believe that FEDUSA and NACTU are part of the nefarious
plans to form a new federation aimed at destroying COSATU. 

 

If this is true, we want to communicate a single and simple message to all
of you, you will fail as those who came before you also failed
spectacularly. Don't stand on our way we will crush you!

 

Comrades, COSATU is emerging from a dark period of manufactured
organisational challenges into a period of bright sunshine characterised by
robustness, organisational unity and cohesion.

 

We come from a period where we had to choose between a union with big
numbers but which had taken a decision to undermine and destroy COSATU.  We
were patient, we tried to reason, we sent comrades to talk sense to the
leadership of this union, we had alliance partners talking to them and it
was all in vein. Finally we chose COSATU!

 

We come from a period where we had to choose between the cult of personality
which has been allowed to grow over many years and the organisation which
had been built trough the sweat of workers over many years.  Again we were
patient and tolerated open defiance and ill discipline over a long time. We
spent monies of the organisation, which could have been used for other
programmes and paid facilitators and it was all in vein.  Finally we chose
COSATU!

 

We had to use worker's money to defend the federation in the courts of law
because people wanted to impose their minority views over the majority using
the courts. As if this was not enough, the organisation had to live with the
burden of servicing costly contracts, which had nothing to do with the core
business of COSATU. 

 

Those who signed these contracts are going around shouting that COSATU is in
a crisis and are not explaining how it got there, because they were leading
it at the time.  

 

We said that one day the real truth about the essence of the challenges we
have been going through will come out. They called us conspiracy theorists,
when we said they were sponsored from outside to steal COSATU and use it for
their narrow political projects. 

 

Today the country knows the real truth; the real plan which we refused to
have executed in the name of our federation is out in the open. 

 

We now know that USA was approached to provide VIP security to this very
same former leader. We now know that a trip was taken to the USA to raise
funds of forming a new federation against COSATU and a new political
organisation to challenge the liberation movement. 

 

We now know that many of our union leaders have been taken to the USA to
undertake various trainings.  We have raised these concerns directly in our
meeting with the USA embassy. 

 

We now know that books have been funded and various articles written to
deliberately spread misinformation against COSATU and paint a picture of an
ongoing crisis in COSATU. 

 

This is done by people who during the day stand in various platforms and
proclaim to be revolutionaries that are  anti- USA when in reality during
the  night away from the TV cameras and away from addressing rented mass
meetings they are the agents of the Americans.  

 

If we were to answer as to what the real crisis in COSATU has been, we will
answer without any ambiguity that the real crisis in COSATU has been the
existence of an illegitimate political agenda which was planned and driven
from outside but was being imposed to coexist with the legitimate COSATU
policies planned and driven from inside COSATU's constitutional structures.


 

The two could not co-exit, the other one had to give way for the other and
in this struggle COSATU won! 

 

The glaring evidence of COSATU's victory was seen in the Special National
Congress, it was seen in the protests actions organised by the federation
post the Special National Congress as it will be seen in this 12th National
Congress.  

 

This is a sign showing that even though we may not have reached our peak but
we are definitely not weak!

 

No single individual must ever claim victory which has led us to the
relative stability we see in COSATU today but the members of COSATU!

 

I still have vivid images of the historic Special National Congress held
from the 13th - 14th July this year, where workers stood up and said "we
want to unequivocally declare that we want unity of COSATU. 

 

They said, this federation remains a home of all workers and workers will be
better organised under the leadership of COSATU.   

 

They demanded discipline within the federation and in affiliates.   They
said , they   want a COSATU that is based on its constitution and founding
principles of  one Country - One Federation, One Union - One Industry, Paid
Up Membership , Worker  Control ,   worker Solidarity, non -racialism and
Unity.

 

Comrades we can report that all the unions who had decided to boycott the
CEC have come back full force and were participating actively in
preparations towards this 12th National Congress.    

 

The two unions who have not yet attended the CEC tendered their apologies.
We are still waiting for them to come to a meeting to deal with whatever
concerns they have including the challenges in their structures. 

 

Comrades we come to this 12th National Congress having travelled an odious
path of our struggle. We carry scars, we had to endure insults, and we had
to take political punches for deciding to stand in defence of COSATU. We had
to accept new enemies in our lives rather than to make false friends whose
hidden mission was to destroy COSATU. 

 

This  National Congress must  continue on the directives of the Special
National Congress to re- affirm the character of COSATU as a militant and
radical federation of trade unions, which is class oriented and that COSATU
is not a political party.  

 

We have come here to continue with the work of building a federation that
must remain occupied with broad social and political issues, as well as the
immediate concerns of its members. A federation which continuously strive to
remain a social force for transformation.  

 

We have to continue on the tasks given by the Special National Congress to
continue building a COSATU whose influence on society remains based on its
organised power, its capacity to mobilise, its socio - economic programme
and policies and its participation in political and social alliances. 

 

This Congress must take forward the instructions given by the Special
National Congress to build a COSATU that  remain committed to worker control
and democracy, and to maintaining its independence being conscious of the
dangers of being co-opted by employers and politicians. 

 

This Congress must take forward the instructions of the Special National
Congress to build a COSATU that must remain conscious about striking a
balance between the immediate concerns of its members to the need for
'stability' and 'national development' without subordinating each to the
other. 

 

The Special National Congress said in keeping with the true traditions of
our federation, we will now initiate a process of introspection; we will
study how affiliates and COSATU structures operate in practice. This must be
with the view to subsequently elaborating and enriching the content of our
Back to Basics perspective, as discussed by the 11th Congress and the 2013
Organising and Bargaining conference. 

 

We can say without fear of contradiction that we come here today to mark the
30th anniversary of COSATU with our heads up. Despite all the challenges we
were going through but our unions remain having a deadly fighting capacity.
Many of our unions could still rely on strikes as a weapon against
employers.

 

The Department of Labour's Report on Industrial Action in 2014 shows that
over the period 2009 to 2014 there has been a constant increase in the
number of reported strikes. In 2012 alone, there were 99 strikes; in 2013
there were 114 strikes. In 2013 alone, almost two thirds of all working days
lost to industrial action were due to action taken by COSATU affiliates. 

 

This year we saw public sector unions mounting one of the biggest march,
which was followed by a resounding national day of action on the 7th October
2015 this year which left our enemies wondering if indeed it was true that
COSATU is weak! 

 

Comrades we must give a standing ovation to ourselves for the fact that we
stood  firm with COSATU members and defended  this federation of Vuyisile
Mini, of; Lesley  Masina, of  Elijah Barayi, of Violet Seboni, of Allinah
Rantsolase, Pretty Shuping;  of Ray Alexander, of Elizabeth Nanna Abrahams,
of Elizabeth Mafikeng, of Ruth first  and many others to whom we owe the
very existence of this federation!

 

We stand here today on the 30th Anniversary Congress of our giant federation
proud to tell  you  the members and owners  of COSATU,  that here is  your
organisation, here is your COSATU, we hand it over back to you still intact.
We must continue to build it into strong organisation that is ready to mount
a deadly offensive against our class enemies.   

 

For us as workers, organisation is everything, without organisation we are
dead. It is the only weapon we have at our disposal to confront our class
enemies. We therefore need to always proceed from an understanding that
building COSATU remains our first priority before everything else. There is
no battle we can win without a strong organisation whose presence is visible
and felt on the ground. 

 

Comrades since 1994 our country has made enormous strides. We have a
legislative framework which has allowed for more protection of workers'
rights.   In the recent past there had been the strengthening of the
legislation to protect the rights of workers in the vulnerable sectors such
as Domestic Workers; Hospitality sector; Contract cleaning; Civil
engineering sector; Private security sector; Taxi sector; Wholesale and
retail sector Farm Workers.

 

Since 1994, access to health care has been improved with more than 1500
health facility infrastructure completed and thus making it possible for
communities to access health care within a 5km radius of where they lived.

 

Government continues to support the automotive sector and the clothing and
textile sector.  

 

The number of social assistance beneficiaries has increased from 2.7 million
people in 1994 to 16 million people in 2013.  

 

Between 134 and 106 buses for Johannesburg and Cape Town Metros to be
manufactured locally (minimum local content is 80%); Clothing, leather and
footwear  have been designated for 100% local procurement by government;
70% of capsules and tablets tender sourced locally;  

 

But despite this progress our country continues to be engulfed by a variety
of challenges. One of the greatest challenges that we are facing include
violence against women and children. The year 2015 marks the 24th years of
the Global campaign on the 16th days of activism against gender based
violence. Whilst violence against women and children goes across racial and
class divide but it is clear that it is rifer against women and children
from the working class background.Poverty, inequality and unemployment are
conditions under which violence thrives. 

 

We have recently received painful reports that in Cape Town a young African
lady was subjected to abhorrent dehumanisation, indecent assault and rape by
two South African white men when she responded to the advert for employment.
This is a province where the DA once referred to our people as refugees and
given such racial statements, incidences like these were bound to happen.  

 

We must eradicate conditions which give rise to these inhuman acts against
our women and children. People who do this must not be allowed to live in
our communities. They must face the might of the law.  

 

We are also disturbed and angry at the growing rate regarding the killing of
our law enforcement officers. This also includes the killing and attacks
directed against health practitioners including educators. This congress
must commit to a relentless struggle against Gender based violence and the
killing of the law enforcement officers, the health practitioners and
educators. 

 

Anyone found guilty of these horrendous crimes must be given a mandatory
sentence of a life sentence. Our society has to choose. It is either we
become a nation which accommodates criminals or a nation which embraces the
law. Police cannot and should not die with guns in their hands!

 

Our country's development continues to be constrained. For an example in the
past three years the South African economy had continued to grow at a slower
pace compared to other economies of a similar size.  Now the indications are
that the economy might be heading for a recession.  

 

These constraints in our economy are amongst others caused by the fact that
our country's economy continues to be based on the exporting of raw
materials and importing value added products. 

 

The global economic crisis has impacted negatively on the entire South
African economy; this has been vivid on our steel and the mining sector
amongst others where we saw thousands of workers losing their jobs. Worse
could have happened, lets commend the NUM for moving swiftly to secure an
agreement which saved thousands of jobs. Part of the problem has been that
for many years the steel industry has been using Import Parity Pricing (IPP)
which raised the price of this critical input. We have long made calls on
government to abandon Import Parity Pricing and this fell on deaf ears. 

 

We are still demanding that any support to the industry should be
accompanied by a clear commitment from the steel industry that it will
abandon import parity pricing and that it will not revert to it when the
economic conditions have improved. 

 

The real reason which constitutes the essence of the challenges confronting
our economy is that our economic policy trajectory continues to be based on
the Neo liberal paradigm. This paradigm is based on a belief that growth
must occur first, and then employment will follow.  

 

It argues that once employment increases, the distribution of income will
improve.  This is reflected in the persistent setting of growth targets as
the primary focus, rather than targets for employment and income
distribution. 

 

This fails to address the apartheid economic fault-lines that resulted in
the white monopoly capital taking charge and ownership of the economic
levers of powers while the black majority was labouring for slave wages. 

 

Unfortunately this neoliberal ideology by capital has captured some elements
within the state and the democratic movement, who though aware of the harsh
but failed medicine of neoliberals went ahead to impose it on society. 

 

Neo-liberalism survives and thrives under conditions of low-intensity
democracy and insulates political leaders from popular pressure so that they
can drive unpopular economic policies. 

 

It is against this background that the movement has over the years abandoned
the people driven and people centred approach to development. This explains
why  the structures of the movement remains in disarray and only  focuses
its energy on narrow electoral campaign and gets revived only during general
elections. 

 

It is within this context that the concerns raised by COSATU and the SACP
including some within the ANC regarding   certain sections of the National
Development Plan particularly  sections dealing with economic policy and
labour market could not be addressed . 

 

This neo-liberal policy paradigm continues to thrive in the context where
the contradiction between imperialism and the oppressed people of the world
is currently the dominant contradiction.   It festers in a fertile ground
created by the  deepening capitalist crisis which expresses itself through
the  centralization and concentration of capital and wealth; the
financialisation of the economy;  the systematic attack on the social
functions of the State achieved through struggle of the workers and peoples;
the commercialization of all spheres of social life in a logic of
privatizing all that can bring higher returns to capital; the attacks on
international law and sovereignty of the States; the centralization of
political power and its submission to economic power and to the strategies
of militarization of international relations, all these are features of
capitalist policies that dominate most countries all over the world today .

 

This neo-liberal policy paradigm has been legitimised by the
institutionalisation of policies by governments all over the world which
increases the rate of   exploitation of working men and women marked by a
denial of rights and the abuse of  workforce in return of increasingly lower
wages. 

 

The central axis of this offensive includes cuts in real wages;
Intensification of work periods; deregulation and increase in working hours;
deregulation of labour relations; widespread casual labour, particularly
among the women and young workers; overexploitation of migrant workers.
Appropriation of labour productivity gains by capital;  Increase in the
retirement age;  cuts in pensions and retirement benefits; Increase in
unemployment rates;  regression of social and labour rights;  the denial of
the right to bargain collectively and to strike.

 

This open and heightening offensive against the working class also seen in
our country is a painful reminder of the words in the Communist Manifesto
that "the history of all hitherto existing society
<http://www.anu.edu.au/polsci/marx/classics/manifesto.html#c1r2>   is the
history of class struggles. Freeman and slave, patrician and plebeian , lord
and serf, guild-master
<http://www.anu.edu.au/polsci/marx/classics/manifesto.html#c1r3>   and
journeyman, in a word, oppressor and oppressed, stood in constant opposition
to one another, carried on an uninterrupted, now hidden, now open fight, a
fight that each time ended, either in a revolutionary reconstitution of
society at large, or in the common ruin of the contending classes".

 

This international offensive which intersect with the neo-liberal,
anti-majoritarian offensive in our country is rough comrades. It has set us
against each other whilst allowing the right wing offensive to gain
confidence. It has made our comrades to stop being guided by the policy of
the movement and decisions of our organisations.  We cannot predict how this
battle will end but one thing is certain and that is, we will not take it
lying down. 

 

In our country the offensive has taken the form of the failed DA attempts to
take away our right to strike. It expresses itself in the form of the Free
Market Foundation's attempts to take our right to collective bargaining. It
comes in the form of Employment Incentive Act which was forced to us even
without having gone through NEDLAC processes.  When we call for the review
of the employment incentive act / the youth wage subsidy no one wants to
listen! 

 

When we make a call for a ban on labour brokers, no one listens instead
labour brokers are given a life line of three months to exploit workers.  

 

We go to the Alliance Summit and raise a concern about the specific sections
of the national Development Plan but no one cares to listen to our concerns
instead we get subjected to a process which from the onset is intended to
yield no results. 

 

When we ask to be given a Comprehensive Social Security and Retirement
reform discussion paper, which government has failed to deliver for more
than ten years we get given Taxation Laws Amendment Act. When we take this
process to NEDLAC government represented by the National Treasury abandon
these engagements to pursue its planned retirement reforms unilaterally.

 

We want to reiterate that this arrogant act of provocation by the Treasury
and the entire government will get an appropriate and equal response from
the workers. Workers will fight any attempts to impose compulsory
preservation of our hard earned deferred wages.

 

We want to say here and now that there will be no compulsory preservation or
any other imposed reforms for us and about us but without us, on our watch.
We will spare no effort to stop this tyranny and ill placed overconfidence
by the neo liberal hard liners in government concentrated in the National
Treasury.

 

No government has a right to unilaterally decide for workers, as to how and
when they should spend their retirement savings. These savings are part of
worker's hard-earned salaries and should be accessible to the workers, as
and when they need them in particular in the absence of Comprehensive Social
Security.

 

We demand that government should postpone the implementation of this law
until Comprehensive Social Security and Retirement Reform Discussion Paper
is tabled at NEDLAC for discussions and an agreement on it is reached by
social partners. We want to remind government and anyone who cares to listen
that the 1973 Durban Strikes were on amongst others caused by a threat to
workers pension funds. 

 

The neo-liberal policy paradigm has made it difficult for government to
address challenges of food security. For example, the Marketing Agricultural
Product Act of 1996 diminished the role of the state in setting prices in
the sector. It also led to government dismantling the marketing boards, and
their assets were privatized[1].  This has resulted in exorbitant food
prices charged by the food industry. 

 

The neo liberal policy paradigm has resulted to unjust concentrated patterns
of ownership in the entire agricultural value-chain. For an example
manufacturing and agro-processing is dominated by few large entities (Tiger
Brands, Premier Foods, Foodcorp etc), which were found guilty of price
fixing by the Competition Commission in 2010. The retail sector is also
controlled by five major retailers; with a joint market share of 90%.

 

We have recently witnessed student's struggles throughout the country on a
demand for free education in universities. At the centre of the struggle for
Free Education in South Africa was not the Minister of Higher Education who
is wrongly accused of having failed to implement a resolution on Free
Education. As COSATU we have been in every ANC - Lekgotla and we know the
truth about what caused the non implementation of such resolutions as Free
Education.   

 

The fact of the matter is that our country's policy trajectory is still
encored on the neo-liberal policy paradigm which has rendered our democratic
government to remain cheer leaders to monopoly capital as it keeps the
economic power of the colonial rule intact. 

 

The neo liberal policies had a direct impact on derailing the attainment not
only of Free Education in South Africa but also the implementation of many
other progressive policies such as the National Health insurance, the
comprehensive social security including with regard to addressing food
security and hunger etc.

 

The struggles for Free Education have brought to the fore and exposed the
impact of neo liberal policies particularly with regard to the impact of the
limited role of the state and Fiscal Austerity  measures  and this is what
is at  the centre of the struggles for Free Education.   

 

It is the same thing as the fact that we go to conferences of the movement
and decisions gets taken about the implementation of NHI but until today we
have not even seen a white paper on the implementation of NHI.

 

Mangaung agreed on the establishment of a state bank but none of that is
happening. 

Both the Polokwane Conference and Mangaung agreed on a need for qualitative
shift in our macroeconomic policy. Polokwane said "the skewed patterns of
ownership and production, the spatial legacies of our apartheid past and the
tendencies of the economy towards inequality, dualism and marginalisation
will not recede automatically as economic growth accelerates. 

 

Therefore, decisive action is required to thoroughly and urgently transform
the economic patterns of the present in order to realise our vision for the
future. This includes addressing the monopoly domination". 

 

But our economy remains highly monopolised and foreign owned. The financial
sector (banking and insurance) is a monopoly industry: Dominated by 4 large
privately owned banks (ABSA, Nedbank, FNB and Standard Bank), two of which
have significant foreign ownership. 

 

The wholesale and retail trade sector is a monopoly industry, dominated by
two firms: Shoprite and Pick 'n Pay, which constitute 66% of the market
share. The state does not play any role in this sector. 

 

Manufacturing sector is dominated by two sectors, within which there are
monopolies: petro-chemicals and basic iron and steel, which are dominated by
Sasol and Arcelor-Mittal. Sasol is about 30% foreign-owned and
Arcelor-Mittal is 65% foreign owned. The cement sector is also dominated by
4 players (PPC, Alpha, Lafarge and Natal Portland), in which each player has
significant pricing power. Actually Mangaung said SASOL and Arcellor Mittal
must be nationalised but no one is even talking about it let alone having it
appear in any report. 

 

The construction sector is also monopolised, dominated by four players:
Murray & Roberts, WBHO, Aveng and Group 5. 

 

The machinery and equipment sector is dominated by foreign companies
primarily through the major import fronting company in South Africa,
Barloworld. The major equipment players are Caterpillar, John Deere/Bell,
Komatsu, Manitou SA and Thyssen-Krupp. All these are foreign owned companies
that play a strategic role in the country`s capital equipment supply. 

 

The pharmaceuticals sector is   a jungle that is ruled by foreign companies:
Aspen, Adcock-Ingram, Sanofi, Pfizer, and Norvatis, etc.They all have a
significant foreign-ownership.

 

Polokwane also said "a South African developmental state, whilst learning
from the experiences of others, must be built on the solid foundation of
South African realities. Whilst engaging private capital strategically, our
government must be rooted amongst the people and buttressed by a mass-based
democratic liberation movement. 

 

Whilst determining a clear and consistent path forward, it must also seek to
build consensus on a democratic basis that builds national unity. Whilst
acting effectively to promote growth, efficiency and productivity, it must
be equally effective in addressing the social conditions of the masses of
our people and realising economic progress for the poor". 

 

Instead of this happening organisational mass power is not used for purposes
of asserting a people driven and a people centred development but is used to
fight internal factional battles to get people elected to positions of power
which allows for access to resources.  Organisational mass power is not seen
as a strategic element to drive the NDR but it get reduced to be used for
patronage. 

 

In this regard, the most immediate task to undertake is to consolidate the
Unity of COSATU through a Back to Basics Campaign: There is no short cut to
asserting our hegemony.  We must build COSATU on the ground based on the
Back to Basics articulated  in our 11th National Congress, the 2013
Organising and Campaigns Conference and as articulated by the Special
National Congress. 

 

We must avoid being overwhelmed by the scale of the problem but cut our
cloth according to our size.  This means accepting first that we are
currently not at our maximum and yet our existence and relevance is based on
our numbers. This means that our response should prioritise winning the
confidence of workers to join our unions.  

 

This will include ensuring that every union has a clear work place programme
which will include getting COSATU at all levels to have workplace visits
aimed at listening to workers issues. 

 

We must put our weight in working with the SACP to occupy all centres of
power in society and to be found where people are as part of the immediate
task to deepen and radicalise the National Democratic Revolution in line
with the people's demands.

 

We must invest in building the unity of the alliance as a vehicle which
drives the revolution. 

 

Our anger and frustrations about the challenges in the Alliance must not
blind us to see and understand that the functionality and non functionality
of the Alliance is based on the struggle we wage on the ground.

 

Anger alone without a practical and revolutionary plan is not enough! Anger
Alone without preparedness to sweat and work to change the balance of forces
on the ground is not enough!

 

Let us heed comrade Mandela's call when he said "The struggle that will free
us is a long, hard job. Do not be deceived by men who talk big with no
thought for tomorrow. Freedom is not just a matter of strong words. Neither
is it simply brave men and heroic deeds. Impatience, which makes men lose
their heads, will not bring freedom".

 

We must stop demanding a reconfigured alliance in every meeting but fight
for a reconfigured alliance through asserting our mass presence on the
ground through driving programmes and campaigns which addresses the needs of
our members and our communities. Let us be present where people are found.
Let's continue to be present in the struggles of the working class.  

 

We must reconfigure the alliance through mass activities which must define
the balance of power inside the alliance.  There is no short cut to this
task. 

 

Whilst we must accept that we have an interest on who become leaders of the
ANC and in government but we must firstly avoid getting into the 2017
succession debates prematurely. More importantly we must stand by our policy
that the ANC must be allowed to independently decide on its leaders without
any interference from any of the alliance partners or anyone outside the
ANC. But COSATU members who are also members of the ANC have every right to
participate in the leadership debates inside the ANC guided by the policy
and discipline of the ANC. 

 

We must invest our energies and time more on building and strengthening the
SACP to ensure that it has the necessary confidence and capacity to drive
the struggle for Socialism.

 

We must stop asking the ANC about the content of radical economic
transformation but we must wage campaigns which should force it to emerge
organically from the ground as recently seen in the free education campaign.
Whilst it is important that we should derive lessons from international
experience but we must be careful of importing these experiences as if they
emerged under similar conditions as in our country. 

 

This Congress must agree that the struggle and vision we pursue cannot be
likened to Brazilian situation to a point of being referred to as creating
our Lula Moment. Our struggle is based on the concrete conditions obtaining
in our country and is based on our understanding of the fundamental
contradictions which our revolution seeks to resolve in our own country.  

 

We must revive our section 77 notice on our socio-economic demands and
mobilise workers and our people around these demands. It is these struggles
which will define the content of a second more radical phase of our
transition. 

 

We have got to keep pace with the masses and any honest observation will
come to a conclusion that the people are increasing the tempo and pace of
the struggle for economic transformation. If we are not careful we will
continuously react to their struggles and not provide any strategic
leadership. 

 

In our deliberations we must be guided by the words of a German Physicist
Albert Einstein who once said
<http://www.brainyquote.com/quotes/quotes/a/alberteins133991.html> "insanity
is doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different
results".  

 

This 12th National Congress in now officially opened!

 

Amandla!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


  _____  

[1] Department of Agriculture , Forestry and Fisheries :National Food and
Nutrition Security 2013

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