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COSATU's
mission to Zimbabwe
Congress of South African Trade Unions (COSATU)
November
06, 2004
http://www.cosatu.org.za/press/2004/[Press]COSATU's_mission_to_Zimbabwe--13370.html
The Congress of South
African Trade Unions notes the continuing debate around its fact-finding
mission to Zimbabwe. COSATU reaffirms its support for all attempts to
reach a diplomatic solution to the problems of Zimbabwe and acknowledges
the sincerity and integrity of the SA government and the African National
Congress in their efforts to achieve this.
Diplomacy however
must be supplemented by mobilisation of the people to change their own
circumstances. Diplomacy has its role and place, but we cannot afford
to place all our eggs in the basket of diplomacy. Mass mobilisation and
solidarity have an equally important role. The challenge is to coordinate
these efforts to reinforce one another and not use one to the exclusion
of the other.
It is in this vein
that COSATU actively seeks to play a role in the unfolding process of
Africa's development and democratisation. COSATU has a right and duty
to make its own intervention in pursuit of that goal, and to act in solidarity
with our fellow trade unionists in the Zimbabwe Congress of Trade Unions
(ZCTU). The federation itself is a product of international solidarity
and understands the value of support from the international community.
Apartheid South Africa
would not have been brought down in 1994 purely through diplomatic pressure.
Apartheid was ended firstly by the struggle of the mass liberation movement,
assisted by an international solidarity campaign. While Zimbabwe is not
of course equal to apartheid South Africa, there is still a need to express
our solidarity with our fellow workers in their fight for trade union
rights and for political space.
COSATU has consistently
taken a similar view of attacks on trade unions rights in Swaziland, Nigeria
and other places and will continue to do so. In the case of Swaziland,
we organised a blockade of the border with South Africa, in support of
human rights and democracy on no less than four occasions, with the last
blockade lasting two full days. The COSATU General Secretary was also
unceremoniously booted out of Swaziland at one stage. He is practically
banned from Swaziland. This has been widely reported in the South African
media.
Recently we organised
demonstrations in protest against President Olusegun Obasanjo's attempts
to de-unionise Nigeria and muzzle the voice of labour through de-registration
of the Nigerian Labour Congress.
Throughout our history
we have consistently embarked on similar actions, including in support
of the people of Burma, Palestine, Cuba, Colombia, etc. We have on some
occasions paid a heavy price for this consistency. We are determined to
do so in the future. We will not be intimidated or blackmailed into becoming
something else that we have never been. COSATU cannot be held responsible
for either the ignorance of those who suggest we have suddenly woken up
to target Zimbabwe nor we can be made to account for selective amnesia
of others.
Nor can we be held
responsible for views expressed by the media, opposition parties and political
commentators, in response to the expulsion of the COSATU mission. Most
of the time our views are freely available in our public positions and
resolutions.
The aim of our mission
was not to undermine the Zimbabwean government, nor to embarrass the ANC
or President Mbeki. We reject any insinuation that COSATU seeks to unseat
the ZANU-PF government. All we have called for is free political activity,
repeal of repressive legislation and ending of routine harassment of trade
unionists.
It is also preposterous
to say that the expulsion of the mission somehow suggests a split in the
alliance or that COSATU both deserved and invited expulsion from the Zimbabwe
government.
In the most transparent
manner, we sent a fact-finding mission in order to appraise ourselves
of the developments in that country. We sought to meet with all stakeholders
and it is unfortunate that the Zimbabwean government chose not to meet
with COSATU.
If other groups such
as the DA opportunistically derive political capital out of the COSATU
mission, this should not serve as grounds to delegitimise our position.
The letter to COSATU
from the government of Zimbabwe stated that the mission was "not appropriate''
because it bypassed a process agreed upon between the governments, labour
and business leaders of South Africa and Zimbabwe which was to address
the political dimension of labour in Zimbabwe.
An article in ANC
Today refers to this as a "Joint Tripartite Commission" between South
Africa and Zimbabwe. But in fact no such structure exists. This untruth
is being peddled in order to create an impression that COSATU and the
ZCTU failed to use existing structures to address their concerns and therefore
had other intentions when it sent the mission to Zimbabwe.
The facts of the matter
can be corroborated by the ZCTU and the Zimbabwe and South African employers'
representatives. They are that at the 2003 ILO annual conference, after
an acrimonious debate in plenary where Zimbabwe was being accused of violating
workers rights, in a totally informal gathering, literally standing around,
the South African Minister of Labour suggested to the COSATU leadership
(Ebrahim Patel and Alina Rantsolase) who were with a business representative
(Mr Bokie Botha) that South Africa's tripartite parties should initiate
a more constructive engagement between the parties in Zimbabwe. Both the
ZCTU and the Minister of Labour of Zimbabwe agreed that a meeting involving
all the tripartite parties of both countries could be held.
Since then a meeting
to facilitate the meeting referred to above was held in South Africa at
the end of September 2003 between the Minister of Labour of South Africa,
Ebrahim Patel representing labour and Bokie Botha representing South African
employers. An attempt was then made to convene the meeting for 3 November
2003.
This did not materialise
not because the ZCTU "refused" to travel to South Africa but because
the ZCTU genuinely was unable to make the date. It proposed alternative
dates to the Ministry of Labour in Zimbabwe. In the 2004 ILO Conference
the Minister of Labour of South Africa convened another meeting, now with
the President of NACTU, Joseph Maqhekeni, and General Secretary of the
ZCTU, Wellington Chibebe, in attendance. This was another attempt to resuscitate
the initiative that honestly never took off the ground.
Giving the initiative
a name "Joint Tripartite Commission" is an attempt to give a non-existent
structure political weight. This forms part and parcel of a strategy to
launch a political attack on COSATU and ZCTU by the Zimbabwe government.
The question that must be asked is when was this so-called Joint Tripartite
Commission inaugurated? Who are the commissioners? When was its first
or last meeting? Who attended such a meeting? Certainly COSATU and ZCTU
were not part of the meeting. Neither were the employers.
While this was an
excellent initiative, agreed very informally at an International Labour
Organisation meeting in 2003, meetings to launch it failed to take place
and it has unfortunately not become a reality. The initiative could not
bear fruit largely because of the timing of meetings not because any party
was not committed to the informal mediation.
This process was however
never seen as an alternative strategy to the decision by the COSATU National
Congress in September 2003 to send a fact-finding mission to Zimbabwe
and certainly not a reason to call off the mission.
There has been much
quibbling about the content of the letter COSATU wrote to President Mugabe,
setting out the aims of the mission. It is very unfortunate that discussion
of such a serious matter should have been trivialised around issues of
protocol. Giving such prominence to protocol or quoting selectively from
the letter in order to show the supposed arrogance of COSATU side-steps
the real issues.
No one, except the
author of the Zimbabwe government letter, would believe that the reason
why our delegation was treated in the manner that it was treated was because
the letter requesting audience with President Mugabe did not observe protocol.
The letter was merely an expression of a wish to meet with the government.
It answers those who have argued wrongly that the mission intended to
be 'selective' in its discussions.
The real reason for
booting out the COSATU mission is in fact in the letter from the Zimbabwe
Government to COSATU. Mr Simon Moyo, the Zimbabwe High Commissioner to
South Africa, who admitted that COSATU was kicked out because its visit
was seen as being "predated on political domain", has corroborated
this. Whether protocol was observed or not, this is the mentality of the
authors of the letter - that the mission was in the political domain.
This is the cold reality - that the Zimbabwe government has so much to
hide that it would risk such a negative publicity by kicking out a team
from a genuine trade union movement from a neighbouring country.
Equally, hiding behind
spurious notions that the Zimbabwe government is within its right to enforce
its immigration laws and other such conditions in order to justify ill
treatment of COSATU leaders is not useful.
Of course all countries,
including Zimbabwe, have a right to admit or not to admit person seeking
entry in the country. We reiterate however that our members did not transgress
any immigration rules - a fact which the Harare High Court confirmed when
it ordered the government not to deport the COSATU delegation. In fact
the Zimbabwean government was acting politically in defiance of the ruling
by the High Court. All democrats should have condemned this political
act in defiance of the judiciary instead of blaming the victims.
Moreover COSATU remains
opposed to the argument that the government of Zimbabwe had an inalienable
right to deport the mission. As a signatory to international conventions,
it is bound to respect the right to free movement between countries. The
mission members broke no immigration laws and were entitled to enter the
country.
With the advantage
of hindsight indeed we do accept that the letter to President Mugabe could
have in some few parts written differently.
The issue is however
that the government of Zimbabwe would not allow COSATU, the biggest civil
society formation in the country to meet with other civil society formations
in Zimbabwe, just as the apartheid and the Ian Smith regimes used to do.
In fact many trade unionists from all over the world, in particular those
who have been acting in solidarity with the ZCTU, get turned back frequently
at the Zimbabwe airport.
For a fuller statement
of COSATU's views, we urge readers to look at the article in the Mail
& Guardian of 5 November 2004.
Patrick Craven Acting
COSATU Spokesperson
patrick@cosatu.org.za
082-821-7456 339-4911
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