The Marikana Massacre and the South African State's Low Intensity War Against the People By Vishwas Satgar

5 September 2012 — The   B u l l e t • Socialist Project • E-Bulletin No. 693

The <strong class=’StrictlyAutoTagBold’>massacre of the <strong class=’StrictlyAutoTagBold’>Marikana/<strong class=’StrictlyAutoTagBold’>Lonmin workers has inserted itself within <strong class=’StrictlyAutoTagBold’>South <strong class=’StrictlyAutoTagBold’>Africa‘s national consciousness, not so much through the analysis, commentary and reporting in its wake. Instead, it has been the power of the visual images of <strong class=’StrictlyAutoTagBold’>police armed with awesome fire power gunning down these workers, together with images of bodies lying defeated and lifeless, that has aroused a national outcry and wave of condemnation.

In a world steeped in possessive individualism and greed, the brutal Marikana/Lonmin massacre reminds us of a universal connection; our common humanity.

<a class=”relay” href=”http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Yy_uuxZJl1k”>These images have also engendered <a class=”relay” href=”http://johnb.smugmug.com/Journalism/Rally-to-condemn-killing-of/24984242_TZvMM9″>international protest actions outside <strong class=’StrictlyAutoTagBold’>South African embassies. In themselves these images communicate a politics about ‘official state power.’ It is bereft of moral concern, de-humanized, brutal and at odds with international human rights standards; in these ways it is no different from apartheid era state sponsored violence and technologies of oppressive rule. Moreover, the images of <strong class=’StrictlyAutoTagBold’>police officers walking through the <strong class=’StrictlyAutoTagBold’>Marikana/<strong class=’StrictlyAutoTagBold’>Lonmin killing field, with a sense of professional accomplishment in its aftermath, starkly portrays a scary reality: the triumph of <strong class=’StrictlyAutoTagBold’>South <strong class=’StrictlyAutoTagBold’>Africa‘s state in its brutal conquest of its enemies, its citizens.

At the same time, the pain and suffering of the gunned down workers has became the pain of a nation and the world; this has happened even without the <strong class=’StrictlyAutoTagBold’>ANC government declaring we must not apportion blame but mourn the dead. In a world steeped in possessive individualism and greed, the brutal <strong class=’StrictlyAutoTagBold’>Marikana/<strong class=’StrictlyAutoTagBold’>Lonmin <strong class=’StrictlyAutoTagBold’>massacre reminds us of a universal connection; our common humanity. However, while this modern human connection and sense of empathy is important, it is also superficial. This is brought home by a simple truth: the pain of the <strong class=’StrictlyAutoTagBold’>Marikana/<strong class=’StrictlyAutoTagBold’>Lonmin workers is only our pain in their martyrdom. They had to perish for all of us to realise how deep social injustice has become inscribed in the everyday lives of post-apartheid <strong class=’StrictlyAutoTagBold’>South <strong class=’StrictlyAutoTagBold’>Africa‘s workers and the poor. The low wage, super exploitation model of <strong class=’StrictlyAutoTagBold’>South African mining, socially engineered during apartheid, is alive and well, and thriving. It is condoned by the post-apartheid state. This is the tragic irony of what we have become as the much vaunted ‘Rainbow nation.’

New Faultline is Revealed

Moreover, the spectral presence of the <strong class=’StrictlyAutoTagBold’>Marikana/<strong class=’StrictlyAutoTagBold’>Lonmin <strong class=’StrictlyAutoTagBold’>massacre speaks to us about another shadow cast by the ‘Rainbow’ fairytale. It forces us to confront the hard edge of violence fluxing through our stressed social fabric. At one time, violent crime – car jackings, robberies, rapes, murders – defined our everyday understandings of violence. Our narration of these violent events constructed a sense of criminal violence as a major fault-line running through <strong class=’StrictlyAutoTagBold’>South African society. Such violence spreads fear, racial division and a sense of siege. It has been our undeclared civil war. However, the social geography of violence changes with the <strong class=’StrictlyAutoTagBold’>Marikana/<strong class=’StrictlyAutoTagBold’>Lonmin moment. A new faultline is revealed. Such a faultline has been in the making deep inside <strong class=’StrictlyAutoTagBold’>South African society through xenophobic attacks, violent <strong class=’StrictlyAutoTagBold’>police attacks on striking transport and municipal workers (over the past few years), violence against gays and lesbians especially in township communities, and <strong class=’StrictlyAutoTagBold’>police complicity in thwarting legitimate protest actions in poor communities and informal settlements. Through a failure to act decisively (in some instances like during xenophobic violence or by failing to provide policing in informal settlements) or through orchestrated violence the <strong class=’StrictlyAutoTagBold’>South African state is at war with the working-class within its borders; it is a ‘low intensity war.’ More specifically, such a war spans shootings, intimidation, failure to allow communities to lay charges, failure to investigate crimes perpetrated against poor communities, failure to be responsive to the safety needs of poor communities, fabrication and smear campaigns against local leaders, complicity with goons linked to local politicians (particularly the <strong class=’StrictlyAutoTagBold’>ANC) and a failure to act knowing that innocent lives are in danger.

A few examples of <strong class=’StrictlyAutoTagBold’>police orchestrated low intensity warfare working in cahoots with <strong class=’StrictlyAutoTagBold’>ANC goon squads or local politicians against communities illustrates this more clearly. This is based on testimony received from activists. First, after Abahlali Basemjondolo (Shack Dwellers movement) successfully challenged the Slums Act in the Constitutional Court, ensuring <strong class=’StrictlyAutoTagBold’>community participation to determine whether there can be relocation from an established <strong class=’StrictlyAutoTagBold’>community they became the target of <strong class=’StrictlyAutoTagBold’>police-<strong class=’StrictlyAutoTagBold’>ANC violence. In early 2010 an <strong class=’StrictlyAutoTagBold’>ANC goon squad violently removes Abahlali from Kennedy Road informal settlement. This is also captured in a documentary entitled <a class=”relay” href=”http://dearmandela.com/”&gt;Dear Mandela. The <strong class=’StrictlyAutoTagBold’>police carry out arrests of Abahlali leadership on trumped up charges and public violence which are eventually kicked out of court. Abahlali is not able to return to Kennedy Road informal settlement.

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Second, a more recent example in Umlazi township Durban also shows this <strong class=’StrictlyAutoTagBold’>police-political party nexus working in insidious ways to suppress <strong class=’StrictlyAutoTagBold’>community demands. The local Unemployed Peoples Movement (<strong class=’StrictlyAutoTagBold’>UPM) and Ward 88 residents demanded a recall of their <strong class=’StrictlyAutoTagBold’>ANC councillor and a democratization of the ward committee. In their perception the <strong class=’StrictlyAutoTagBold’>ANC ward councillor was corrupt, failing to deliver and engaging in clientelistic control of development resources. This unleashed a series of reprisals. On 23 July the leader of the <strong class=’StrictlyAutoTagBold’>UPM was arrested under false charges. The complainants turned out to be incited by the councillor working in cahoots with the station commander at Umlazi <strong class=’StrictlyAutoTagBold’>police station. These charges could not stick but they held the leader of <strong class=’StrictlyAutoTagBold’>UPM for a day. It would seem these trumped up charges were meant to prevent him from leading a <strong class=’StrictlyAutoTagBold’>community meeting being held on the same day. This story has many twists and turns with the <strong class=’StrictlyAutoTagBold’>police-<strong class=’StrictlyAutoTagBold’>ANC apparatus constantly trying to intimidate the <strong class=’StrictlyAutoTagBold’>UPM and residents of Ward 88 in the course of this struggle.

What is striking about these examples is their challenge to mainstream academic and media explanations of <strong class=’StrictlyAutoTagBold’>community based violence as being merely reducible to intra-<strong class=’StrictlyAutoTagBold’>ANC battles. In all these instances a conscious awakening and challenge by communities and movements to the <strong class=’StrictlyAutoTagBold’>ANC state unleashes a low intensity destabilization of these <strong class=’StrictlyAutoTagBold’>community forces through the <strong class=’StrictlyAutoTagBold’>police-<strong class=’StrictlyAutoTagBold’>ANC state nexus.

COSATU’s Challenge

Contrary to Zwelinzima Vavi, the General Secretary of <strong class=’StrictlyAutoTagBold’>COSATU, who believes <strong class=’StrictlyAutoTagBold’>South <strong class=’StrictlyAutoTagBold’>Africa is poised to experience the shock of a ‘ticking time bomb’ rooted in deep inequality and unemployment, this bomb is already exploding in various locales. However, the response of the <strong class=’StrictlyAutoTagBold’>ANC state has been about a recourse to low intensity violence. The <strong class=’StrictlyAutoTagBold’>Marikana/<strong class=’StrictlyAutoTagBold’>Lonmin <strong class=’StrictlyAutoTagBold’>massacre merely brings this trend into sharp relief. The challenge to <strong class=’StrictlyAutoTagBold’>COSATU is simple: does it want to remain a democratizing force, with a proud history, and take a stand with the wider working-class or does it want to be complicit in the low intensity war against the broader working-class and citizenry?

At a mass meeting on 22nd August at the University of Johannesburg the <strong class=’StrictlyAutoTagBold’>Marikana workers and <strong class=’StrictlyAutoTagBold’>community passionately appealed for <strong class=’StrictlyAutoTagBold’>solidarity. Such <strong class=’StrictlyAutoTagBold’>solidarity actions are congealing into but not limited to:

  • calls for a national and international day of <strong class=’StrictlyAutoTagBold’>solidarity action with <strong class=’StrictlyAutoTagBold’>Marikana workers (including 3 minutes of silence on August 29th at 1pm as a symbolic reference to the 3 minutes it took the callous <strong class=’StrictlyAutoTagBold’>South African Police Services to mow down the 34 workers on 16 August 2012);
  • support for <strong class=’StrictlyAutoTagBold’>solidarity strike action emerging within the platinum mining industry;
  • a call for an independent ‘peoples commission of enquiry’ to ensure full transparency, testimony and justice for the <strong class=’StrictlyAutoTagBold’>Marikana workers and communities afflicted with state-<strong class=’StrictlyAutoTagBold’>ANC violence;
  • calls demanding the withdrawal of all charges and the immediate release of miners held in <strong class=’StrictlyAutoTagBold’>police custody;
  • calls for the dismissal of the Head of the National Prosecuting Authority and the Minister of Police to be dismissed for trying to cover up the <strong class=’StrictlyAutoTagBold’>police killings of the miners by utilizing a common purpose provision in apartheid legislation to charge the workers for murder and calls for an end to the <strong class=’StrictlyAutoTagBold’>police siege and harassment of the <strong class=’StrictlyAutoTagBold’>Marikana communities.

<strong class=’StrictlyAutoTagBold’>Marikana as a defining moment in post-apartheid politics is essentially about galvanizing the battle to reclaim <strong class=’StrictlyAutoTagBold’>South <strong class=’StrictlyAutoTagBold’>Africa‘s democracy from below. It resonates with and expresses the desire of the majority to end the ugly reality of <strong class=’StrictlyAutoTagBold’>South <strong class=’StrictlyAutoTagBold’>Africa‘s deep seated and racialized class based inequality that has been widening under <strong class=’StrictlyAutoTagBold’>ANC rule. •

<p class=”auth”><strong class=’StrictlyAutoTagBold’>Vishwas Satgar is a founding member of the <a class=”relay” href=”http://democraticleft.za.net/”>Democratic Left Front and a member of the DLF national convening committee. This article first appeared on his blog <a class=”relay” href=”http://defendingpopulardemocracy.blogspot.ca”>defendingpopulardemocracy.blogspot.ca.



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