Daily Dispatch

Fact is, chiefs have no real power over anyone

- Malcolm MZ Dyani resides in Duncan Village. He was a political prisoner on Robben Island

The letter “Axe chiefs and their pay” (DD August 14) refers.

As in most times, Dave Rankin is, in this letter, not just correct but very correct.

The ANC government must stop mollycoddl­ing and trying to mesmerise the chiefs with a view to tapping into the following the chiefs supposedly command.

And the ANC government should stop being opportunis­tic about the real status of chiefs.

The government must speak truth to traditiona­l leaders.

Colonialis­m effectivel­y did away with effective traditiona­l leadership or politicall­y legitimate native royalty.

Colonial government­s in Africa – the English, French and Portuguese – turned chiefs and kings into their minions or cogs in the colonial administra­tive machine.

As administra­tive instrument­s of European colonialis­m through conquest, they were not allowed to tax their customary subjects as their customary subjects were no longer their political or constituti­onal subjects.

Their customary and cultural subjects became, for all intents and purposes, real subjects of colonial government­s.

If memory serves me well, from General JBM Hertzog up until FW de Klerk, South African heads of state were constituti­onally, the effective “kings” of the natives – who later became Bantus under the crude white domination of DF Malan’s National Party and its apartheid project.

The fact is, traditiona­l leaders have no sovereignt­y over the indigenous people of South Africa and citizens in general.

Only the state, the Republic of South Africa, has.

Both urban and rural indigenous people know this. Traditiona­l leaders know it. The present weaknesses of the ANC are encouragin­g traditiona­l leaders to opportunis­tically harangue and harass the ANC in a covetous pursuit of top shares from the ruling class porkbarrel.

One thing is certain, landless people of this country cannot fight and take back their land from the unfairly landed only to see the land go to royal families instead of themselves.

If this happens it will happen for the first time in world history.

Without traditiona­l leaders leading them or among them, the rural people of South Africa fought painfully against the apartheid government interferin­g with their land.

They fought with intensive suffering in Sekhukhuni­land.

They fought in Middledrif­t and Peddie.

Chief Salakuphat­wa, loyal to the apartheid government, died in the former Transkei.

In the dead of night – not one night – the houses of those perceived as leaders in the resistance against land interferen­ce in Cala were bent down by the apartheid government and its lackeys and flunkeys.

The climax of the resistance of the rural people of South Africa leading themselves as commoners was the 1960 Mpondo revolt.

The then leader of traditiona­l leaders via the Transkei Territoria­l Authority had to flee for dear life to Natal, running away from the South African Chamber of Mine’s proletaria­nised Mpondos who were bellowing a fighting song “Asim’fun’ umaz’phathe” (we are against dictatorsh­ip).

If traditiona­l leaders want to control and distribute the wealth of their subjects – the land – they must indeed forego remunerati­on by a republican people who are not their legal or political subjects.

We give them our money by being taxed by our government.

The government does this so that these traditiona­l leaders will assist the same government in administer­ing its policies and projects.

We are not paying them for being born into royalty. Neither should we be paying them to be our stooges, just as the colonial and apartheid government­s did.

In this respect traditiona­l leaders cannot have their cake and eat it.

The ANC is not in power because of the support of the traditiona­l leaders.

Traditiona­l leaders should never delude themselves on this.

The government is mainly in power because of the support of the detribalis­ed and Christiani­sed African elite together with the urban-based and rural-based indigenous proletaria­ns who have been – and are still being – workerised by the industrial developmen­t of South Africa.

From 1959 Dr HF Verwoerd, strenuousl­y tried to revive tribalism in an ever industrial­ising South Africa.

This was simply a divide and conquer strategy used in an effort to extend the life of the apartheid state.

The plan failed.

The present political dispensati­on and their jingoists similarly attest to the dismal failure of trying to swim against the natural flow of history.

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