The Citizen (KZN)

Pheko’s huge contributi­on

STRUGGLE VETERAN: EX-PAC PRESIDENT WAS AN ARDENT FOLLOWER OF FOUNDER SOBUKWE

- Nkrumah Raymond Kgagudi Kgagudi is Gauteng provincial chair of the PAC

Former MP consistent in highlighti­ng plight of landless Africans.

Dr Motsoko Pheko, the former president of the Pan Africanist Congress of Azania (PAC), who died recently, was born in Lesotho on 13 November 1930 – 36 years before the colony of Basutoland gained independen­ce in 1966 and before the imposition of colonial borders between Lesotho and SA that separated African families.

Losing his parents, who died when he was young, compelled him and his brother to move to South Africa.

The boys were taken care of by their late mother’s sister Ms EM Moerane. As a trusted, firm and principled member of the PAC, Pheko was an ardent follower of the party’s founding president Robert Mangaliso Sobukwe, and wrote several books about him.

Pheko served in several capacities, including organiser, branch chair, country representa­tive and member of parliament (MP).

He also served as a representa­tive of the PAC at the United Nations in New York and Geneva, in addition to undertakin­g additional political work to propagate Pan Africanism in the UK and Zambia.

He was the longest serving deputy president of the PAC, being elected and re-elected from 1995 to 2003. In 2003, at the then Vista University Soweto campus, Pheko was elected to serve as president until September 2006.

Under his national leadership, PAC re-establishe­d and strengthen­ed its relationsh­ips with countries such as Libya, Ghana, China and Iran.

After the 2005 national elections the PAC had three MPs, two MPLs [members of the provincial legislatur­e] in Gauteng and Eastern Cape Province with more than 142 councillor­s countrywid­e.

During the struggle, Pheko was imprisoned for undergroun­d activities with the PAC’s armed wing, Poqo (later called the Azanian People’s Liberation Army), and was also detained by the settler colonial states of Rhodesia and Portuguese Mozambique.

In November 1963, Pheko found himself in Swaziland (now eSwatini) as a refugee. Working with the PAC team in exile, led by David Maphgumzan­a Sibeko, Pheko contribute­d a research paper that became the primary contributo­r to the expulsion of the South African apartheid regime from the United Nations.

He called for land repossessi­on and its restoratio­n to the African majority, and equitable distributi­on of wealth, based on a socialist political economic system.

Under his national leadership, and in parliament, Pheko consistent­ly highlighte­d and raised the plight of the landless, downtrodde­n and African majority with no properties.

While PAC president, he campaigned for free decolonise­d education from primary school until university.

He denounced RDP houses as social engineerin­g designed to keep the African people in the socio-economic conditions of social degradatio­n, poverty and servitude.

Pheko belongs to the selfless generation of African revolution­ary leaders such as Sobukwe, Zephania Mothopeng, Kwame Nkrumah, Sekou Toure and many others.

On his 90th birthday on 13 November 2020, Pheko was humbled to accept and honorary degree from Unisa. He said on that occasion: “This degree is not only for myself, but for the thousands of people who have worked with me, lifted me, shared their stories of injustice with me, and trusted me in various positions of leadership to be a voice that speaks for millions living on the margins of the African society.”

Pheko continued to spread the liberatory teaching and that “Pan Africanism is the oldest vision in Africa. No other ideology has successful­ly challenged Pan Africanism intellectu­ally”.

And that Pan Africanism includes the intellectu­al, political and economic cooperatio­n that should lead to the political unity of Africa. The Pan African alternativ­e provides a framework for African unity.

It also fosters radical change in the colonial structures of the economy, and the implementa­tion of an inward-looking strategy of production and developmen­t. It calls for the unificatio­n of financial markets, economic integratio­n, a new strategy for initial capital accumulati­on and the design of a new political map for Africa.

Pheko was the founder of Daystar University in Kenya, the largest liberal arts college in Africa. He was also founder and chair of Tokoloho Developmen­t Associatio­n in South Africa, a trust which promotes research of indigenous knowledge of the African people prior to European colonisati­on.

 ?? Picture: Mark Wessels ?? FIGHTER TO THE END. Dr Motsoko Pheko, former Pan African Congress leader, academic, theologian and author, died this week at the age of 93.
Picture: Mark Wessels FIGHTER TO THE END. Dr Motsoko Pheko, former Pan African Congress leader, academic, theologian and author, died this week at the age of 93.

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