South African miners cheer as murder charges dropped
By Abayomi Azikiwe
September 5, 2012
Some 50 workers celebrated outside the jail as South African authorities
announced on Sept. 2 that they were provisionally dropping murder charges
against 270 miners. All the jailed workers were scheduled to be released by
Sept. 6.
The group had been charged with murder after police on Aug. 16 shot and
killed 34 miners during a wildcat strike at the Marikana platinum mine, 80
miles northwest of Johannesburg.
Miners from the Lonmin Platinum facilities at Marikana are continuing to
pressure their bosses, demanding higher pay and better working conditions. The
rock drill operators have been blocking production at the platinum facility for
weeks.
Early last month, 10 workers had been killed in clashes between miners
represented by two rival unions. The police then massacred the 34 workers in a
confrontation after failed efforts to break up their occupation of a hill near
the mines. A video of the shooting was seen widely.
In the aftermath of the unrest and shootings, the prosecuting authorities in
the North West Province brought murder charges against 270 mineworkers based on
an old apartheid-era law related to “common purpose.” Under this
law, any form of unrest resulting in deaths allows the state to prosecute any
people involved in the struggle, even if they were fighting against
injustice.
Broad sections of the South African public expressed outrage at this use of
“common purpose” legal provisions against the mineworkers. The
Congress of South African Trade Unions, the main federation of trade unions,
which does not represent the jailed miners, called the murder charge
“absurd.”
That’s why the National Prosecuting Authority announced Sept. 2 that
it would suspend the murder charges pending the completion of an investigation.
South African President Jacob Zuma had launched a commission of inquiry in the
immediate aftermath of the Aug. 16 massacre.
Minister of Justice Jeff Radebe on Aug. 31 demanded that the NPA provide
sound legal reasons for charging the mineworkers with murder. Radebe noted that
the charges had sparked “shock, panic and confusion” inside the
country. (Wall Street Journal, Aug. 31)
The continued detention and murder charges were egregious, since it was the
police who fired on the miners. While some workers were armed with traditional
weapons, the police used automatic rifles, teargas and water cannons. Autopsies
showed many of the miners had been shot in the back.
Mathew Phosa, secretary treasurer of the governing African National
Congress, spoke out: “Charging some of the role players in the face of a
Commission of Inquiry is reckless, incongruous and almost absurd — the
consequences too ghastly to contemplate.” (Wall Street Journal, Sept.
1)
Mathole Motshekga, the ANC’s chief whip in Parliament, indicated on
Sept. 2 that he was glad to see the charges dismissed for now. Nonetheless, the
NPA suggested that the prosecution of the miners may resume if the Commission
of Inquiry unearths evidence of wrongdoing on the workers’ part.
Acting NPA director, Nongcobo Jita, said that those jailed miners who could
prove their places of residence would be released pending the outcome of the
government inquiry. She blamed the initial murder charges on the North West
Province prosecutor, Johan Smit.
The Marikana mines are located in the North West Province. Smit continued to
defend the murder charges, saying the decision had legal merit.
Unrest continues in other mines
Since the Marikana massacre, miners have opened struggles at other mining
facilities throughout South Africa. In late August and early September, the
Royal Bafokeng mines experienced three days of work stoppages. There were
strikes and other disruptions in the gold sector.
Four workers were injured when police opened fire Sept. 3 with rubber
bullets at the Gold One mine located in Modder East. Just four days earlier,
Julius Malema, the expelled president of the ANC Youth League, had spoken at
the Aurora Mines, where workers from Gold One had been present. However, there
had been unrest at Gold One since June. Malema blamed the government for what
he called collaboration between ANC officials and mining bosses.
At Gold One, bosses dismissed 1,000 workers in June for participation in
what the bosses say was an “illegal strike.” Of the fired workers,
some 300 have been rehired and mine executives claim that others may be taken
back if they apply and go through an interview process.
Gold One bosses also claimed that two of their employees were killed in the
unrest and another injured due to intimidation by wildcat strikers against
other workers. The company has offered a reward for the identification of those
responsible.
Most people blame the outbreaks of wildcat strikes throughout the mining
sector on the low pay rates and unfavorable conditions of employment. At the
profitable Marikana mine, rock drill operators are making less than $500 per
month, which cannot sustain the workers and their families.
Fundamental change needed
The ongoing problems in the mining sector of the South African economy stem
from the lack of fundamental transformation in the relations of production. The
ANC government, which has been in office since 1994, is coming under tremendous
pressure to institute changes that would transfer ownership of the mines and
other sectors of the economy to the workers and the communities in which they
live.
The Congress of South African Trade Unions — COSATU — has 2
million members and is the largest workers’ federation in the country.
Founded in 1985 during the struggle against white-minority rule, the federation
was instrumental in building support for the ANC in the struggle against
apartheid and in winning the first one-person, one-vote elections in 1994. That
vote resulted in an overwhelming victory for the ANC and Nelson Mandela, who
became the first president in the new South Africa.
However, the world capitalist crisis has had a tremendous impact on
Africa’s largest economy. Unemployment remains high. The high rates of
poverty are totally unacceptable to the majority of people.
That the ANC has not instituted sweeping industrial and agricultural reforms
has resulted in internal struggles within the union movement itself. The
breakaway Association of Mineworkers and Construction Union, which called the
Lonmin strike, is a reflection of this crisis within labor.
The problem of the declining wages of the working class is not confined to
South Africa. In U.S.-backed Kenya, for example, the national teachers’
union has been on strike demanding better salaries. Kenya’s educators say
they are not making enough money to send their own children to schools and
universities. (BBC News, Sept. 3)
The economic crisis is, in fact, worldwide. Even within the imperialist
states, workers are facing similar challenges with declining wages, high
unemployment and an all-out onslaught on unions within both the private and
public sectors.
These developments in Africa and in the West illustrate the need for a total
break with the capitalist system. Socialism, where the workers control the
means of production, is the only real solution to overproduction and the
decline in real wages.
Socialism can only be won through the building of a revolutionary party of
the working class and the oppressed. World socialism can be brought closer when
these revolutionary organizations are allied through a process of struggle that
places the most oppressed at the center of the fight for equality and
self-determination.