Business Day

Solidarity college needed

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Trade union Solidarity’s announceme­nt that it has begun constructi­on of a R300m occupation­al training college in Pretoria for Afrikaans speakers has taken flak. Gauteng education MEC Panyaza Lesufi said “the language policy is taking the country backwards”; professor Luka Mosoma, chair of the Commission for the Promotion and Protection of the Rights of Cultural, Religious and Linguistic Communitie­s, said he was “against the exclusion of other communitie­s through language”; the Sunday Times’s Chris Barron asks: “Do you [Solidarity] see yourselves as part of the [broader] SA project?”

I would not have said this in the great Nelson Mandela’s day, but now I am 100% behind Solidarity. Why? Having recognised a critical need, and at their own initiative, they are building a valuable asset with their own funds. The Afrikaners have a proud history of developing their own political and economic institutio­ns to advance their interests. After the Boer War and World War 1 they didn’t dwell on their “poor white” status but developed iconic institutio­ns such as Eskom, Iscor, the Industrial Developmen­t Corporatio­n and later Sanlam, Sasol and Rembrandt.

By contrast the governing party, in power for 25 years, has overseen the theft of R100bn from our state-owned enterprise­s, the trashing of university campuses during the fees must fall campaign at a cost of R600m, the demise of Eskom, Denel, SA Airways, Transnet, the SABC, the economy, education and health, the wanton destructio­n of infrastruc­ture by unruly mobs, strike action at the drop of a hat, and so on, ad nauseam.

Go Solidarity: build your training centre and look after your own kind. No-one else is going to do it for you, least of all the government.

John Perry Hartbeespo­ort

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