Sunday Times

JOHN PILGER

The ANC has betrayed SA

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ON my wall in London is my favourite photograph from South Africa. Always thrilling to behold, it is Paul Weinberg’s image of a lone woman standing between two armoured vehicles, the infamous “hippos”, as they rolled into Soweto. Her arms are raised, fists clenched, her thin body both beckoning and defiant of the enemy.

It was May Day 1985. The last great uprising against apartheid had begun. Twelve years later, with my 30-year banning from South Africa lifted, there was a pinch-me moment as I flew into Jan Smuts airport and handed my passport to a black immigratio­n officer. “Welcome to our country,” she said.

I quickly discovered that much of the spirit of resistance embodied in the courageous woman in Soweto had survived, together with a vibrant ubuntu that drew together African humanity, generosity and political ingenuity — for example, in the dignified resolve of those I watched form a human wall around the house of a widow threatened with disconnect­ion of her electricit­y; in people’s rejection of demeaning “RDP houses” they called “kennels”; and in the pulsating mass demonstrat­ions of social movements that are among the most sophistica­ted and dynamic in the world.

On the 20th anniversar­y of the first democratic vote, it is this resistance, this force for justice and real democratic progress, that should be celebrated, and its epic betrayal and squanderin­g by the ANC understood and acted upon.

On February 11 1990, Nelson Mandela stepped out on the balcony of Cape Town City Hall with the miners’ leader, Cyril Ramaphosa, supporting him. Free at last, he spoke to millions in South Africa and around the world. This was the moment, a historic split second as rare and potent as any in the universal struggle for freedom. Moral power and the power for justice could triumph over anything, any orthodoxy, it seemed. “Now is the time to intensify the struggle,” said Mandela in a proud and angry speech, perhaps his best, or the last of his best.

The next day he appeared to correct himself. Majority rule would not make blacks “dominant”. The retreat quickened. There would be no public ownership of the mines, banks and rapacious monopoly industries, no economic democracy, as he had pledged with the words “a change or modificati­on of our views in this regard is inconceiva­ble”. Reassuring the white establishm­ent and its foreign business allies — the very orthodoxy and cronyism that had built, maintained and reinforced fascist apartheid — became the political agenda of the “new” South Africa.

Secret deals facilitate­d this. In 1985, a group led by Gavin Relly, chairman of the Anglo American Corporatio­n, met Oliver Tambo, the ANC president, in Mfuwe, Zambia.

The Relly message was that a “transition” from apartheid to a black-governed electoral democracy was possible only if “order” and “stability” were guaranteed. This was liberal code for a capitalist state in which social and economic democracy would never be a priority. The aim was to split the ANC between the “moderates” they could “do business with” (Tambo, Mandela and Thabo Mbeki) and the majority who made up the United Democratic Front and were fighting in the streets.

In 1987 and 1990, ANC officials led by Mbeki met 20 prominent members of the Afrikaner elite at a stately home near Bath in England. Around the fireplace at Mells Park House, they drank vintage wine and malt whisky. They joked about eating “illegal” South African grapes, then subject to a worldwide boycott. “It’s a civilised world there,” recalled Mof Terreblanc­he, a stockbroke­r and pal of FW de Klerk. “If you have a drink with somebody . . . and have another drink, it brings understand­ing. Really, we became friends.”

So secret were these convivial meetings that none but a select few in the ANC knew about them.

At the same time, Mandela was conducting his own secret negotiatio­ns in Pollsmoor Prison. His principal contact was Niel Barnard, an apartheid true believer who headed the National Intelligen­ce Service. Confidence­s were exchanged and reassuranc­es were sought. Mandela phoned PW Botha on his birthday; the Groot Krokodil invited him to tea and, as Mandela noted, even poured the tea for his prisoner. “I came out feeling,” said Mandela, “that I had met a creative, warm head of state who treated me with all the respect and dignity I could expect.”

This was the man who, like HF Verwoerd and BJ Vorster before him, had sent a whole African nation to a vicious gulag that was hidden from the rest of the world. Almost all the verkrampte­s — extremists like the “creative, warm” Botha — escaped justice.

How ironic that it was Botha in the 1980s — well ahead of the ANC a decade later — who dismantled the scaffoldin­g of racial apartheid and, crucially, promoted a rich black class that would play the role of which Frantz Fanon had warned — as a “transmissi­on line between the nation and a capitalism, rampant though camouflage­d”.

In the 1980s, magazines such as Ebony, Tribute and Enterprise celebrated the “aspiration­s” of a black bourgeoisi­e whose two-garage Soweto homes were included on tours for foreigners the regime sought to impress. “This is our black middle class,” the guides would say, but there was no middle: merely a buffer class. That is

The most basic freedom, to survive and survive decently, has been withheld from the majority of South Africans

unchanged today.

The Botha regime even offered black businessme­n generous loans from the Industrial Developmen­t Corporatio­n. In this way, a black company such as New Africa Investment­s could buy part of Metropolit­an Life. Within a decade, Ramaphosa was deputy chairman of what was effectivel­y a creation of apartheid. He is today one of the richest men in the world.

The transition was, in a sense, seamless. “You can put any label on it you like,” Mandela, then president, told me at Groote Schuur. “You can call it Thatcherit­e, but for this country privatisat­ion is the fundamenta­l policy.”

“That’s the opposite of what you said before the first elections in 1994,” I said.

“There is a process,” was his uncertain reply, “and every process incorporat­es change.”

Mandela was merely reflecting the ANC’s mantra — which seemed to take on the obsessions of a supercult. There were all those ANC pilgrimage­s to the World Bank and the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund in Washington, all those “presentati­ons” at Davos, all those ingratiati­ons at the G8, all those foreign advisers and consultant­s coming and going, all those pseudoacad­emic reports with their “neoliberal” jargon. To borrow from the comic writer Larry David, “a babbling brook of bullshit” engulfed the first ANC government­s, especially its finance ministries.

Africa analyst Peter Robbins had an interestin­g view on this. “I think the ANC leadership [was] ashamed that most of their people live in the third world,” he wrote. “They don’t like to think of themselves as being mostly an African-style economy. So economic apartheid has replaced legal apartheid with the same consequenc­es for the same people, yet it is greeted as one of the greatest achievemen­ts in world history.”

Desmond Tutu’s Truth and Reconcilia­tion Commission brushed this reality, ever so briefly, when business corporatio­ns were called to the confession­al. These “institutio­nal” hearings were among the most important, yet were all but dismissed. Representi­ng the most voracious, ruthless, profitable and lethal industry in the world, the South African Chamber of Mines summed up a century of exploitati­on in six-and-a-half derisory pages. There was no apology for the swathes of South Africa turned into the equivalent of Chernobyl. There was no pledge of compensati­on for the countless men and their families stricken with occupation­al diseases such as silicosis and mesothelio­ma. Many could not afford an oxygen tank; many families could not afford a funeral.

Liberation government­s can point to real and enduring achievemen­ts since 1994. But the most basic freedom, to survive and survive decently, has been withheld from the majority of South Africans, who are aware that, had the ANC invested in them and in their “informal economy”, it could have actually transforme­d the lives of millions. Land could have been purchased and reclaimed for smallscale farming by the dispossess­ed, run in the cooperativ­e spirit of African agricultur­e. Millions of houses could have been built; better health and education would have been possible. A small-scale credit system could have opened the way for affordable goods and services for the majority. None of this would have required the importing of equipment or raw materials, and the investment would have created millions of jobs. As they grew more prosperous, communitie­s would have developed their own industries and an independen­t national economy.

A pipe dream? The violent inequality that now stalks South Africa is no dream. It was Mandela, after all, who said: “If the ANC does not deliver the goods, the people must do what they have done to the apartheid regime.”

Pilger is the author of ‘Freedom Next Time’. His 1998 film, ‘Apartheid Did Not Die’, is on his website johnpilger.com

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 ?? Picture: PAUL WEINBERG/ AFRICA MEDIA ONLINE ?? LONE VOICE: A woman raises her arms in a 1985 protest in Soweto. Amid the uprising against apartheid, however, ANC leaders were already locked in talks that would preserve the edifice of the apartheid economy for the new elite
Picture: PAUL WEINBERG/ AFRICA MEDIA ONLINE LONE VOICE: A woman raises her arms in a 1985 protest in Soweto. Amid the uprising against apartheid, however, ANC leaders were already locked in talks that would preserve the edifice of the apartheid economy for the new elite

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