The Mercury

Machel was a steadfast ally in struggle

Mozambican­s should be treated with the respect they deserve, given their past support

- Imraan Buccus

They want to come here and commit murder. So we say: Let them come, let all the racists come … Let them come! Let us liquidate war once and for all. Then there will be true peace in the region. Not the false peace that we are now experienci­ng. Let the South Africans come, but let them be clear that the war will end in Pretoria. The war will end in Pretoria, for the majority will take power in Pretoria.

THESE words by Mozambique’s first president, Samora Machel, in the wake of South Africa’s cross-border raids in 1981, were remembered this week when South Africa hosted a commemorat­ion marking 30 years since the death of Machel, who was killed in a mysterious plane crash just inside the border of South Africa.

Bearing in mind our state of political affairs, this may be an important time to remember what Machel stood for; and how he led Mozambique’s commitment to our struggle and freedom.

In South Africa some of us tend to think of Mozambique as a holiday destinatio­n – with peri-peri chicken, a vibrant night life, the romance of the Arab dhow in the harbour and all those glorious beaches. At others times we tend to think of our neighbour as a place where desperatel­y poor people come from and hijacked cars go to.

We don’t think often enough of the history that binds us together. The ANC and Frelimo, both ruling parties in South Africa and Mozambique respective­ly, share a long and deep history as liberation movements in the struggle for freedom.

The apartheid state was always threatened by this relationsh­ip and carried out many raids against Frelimo and the ANC. After Mozambique’s independen­ce in 1975, the relationsh­ip between Frelimo and the ANC reached a critical stage for South Africa as Umkhonto we Sizwe (the ANC’s military wing) could now operate freely on South Africa’s doorstep. Feeling vulnerable, the apartheid Defence Force carried out a number of operations against the ANC and Frelimo. They included:

A 1981 attack against the ANC at one of its bases in Maputo, killing 16. The ANC fought back, killing two of the attackers

In 1982 the famous South African academic and activist Ruth First was killed by a parcel bomb at Mozambique’s Eduardo Mondlane University. First was the wife of Joe Slovo, then a senior member of the South African Communist Party and the ANC. He later served as minister of housing in Mandela’s cabinet. Pallo Jordon, arguably the leading intellectu­al in the ANC, was the first person on the scene.

In 1983 the South African Air Force attacked Maputo, destroying ANC bases and killing a number of people

In 1988, another ANC activist, Albie Sachs, survived a bomb explosion in Maputo. He lost his arm in that explosion. Sachs went on to become a judge in the Constituti­onal Court.

In 1989 ANC activists Reginald Mhlongo, Themba Ngesi and Samuel Phinda were killed by a South African Secret Service hit squad.

Today if you take a walk along the Marginale, the road that winds around the beautiful bay in Maputo, you can still see some of the damage left by the bomb that cost Albie Sachs his arm, and an eye. But today while both countries have serious problems they are both free. The sacrifices that were required for liberation were not for nothing.

Pogroms

Xenophobia runs through our country from top to bottom, from poor people attacking a Mozambican in the xenophobic pogroms in 2008, to the police murdering a Mozambican by dragging him behind their van; to the rich calling for stricter border control, we all carry the burden of a national shame.

But when one looks at the shared history of struggle that joins South Africa and Mozambique the discrimina­tion, and sometimes violence, to which Mozambican­s are often subject in our country, is even more despicable. Many debts were incurred in the struggle for our freedom. One of these debts, certainly, is to Frelimo and the people of Mozambique. That debt is not only because Mozambique hosted so many of our activists during the hardest days of the struggle, often at real risk to its own security and citizens. The victory of Frelimo over Portuguese colonialis­m in Mozambique was also a huge boost to the struggle here.

In 1974 Muntu Myeza, from the South African Students’ Organisati­on, organised rallies in support of Frelimo. The biggest of these events, and the most contested, was here in Durban, at Currie’s Fountain. The event was carried out in direct defiance of the apartheid regime and it put people like Saths Cooper, Patrick Lekota, Aubrey Mokoape and Strini Moodley in prison.

The 1974 rally in support of Frelimo has gone down in the history of the city, along with the Durban strikes of 1973 and mass struggle in the 1980s, as one of the great moments in the struggle for freedom in our city.

Forty years later the least we can do is treat our neighbours with the respect they deserve.

Buccus is a senior research associate at the Aliwal Socioecono­mic Research Institutio­n, research fellow in the School of Social Sciences at UKZN and academic director of a university study abroad programme on political transforma­tion.

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