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Cosatu
unmasked
The
Sunday Mail (Zimbabwe)
February 06, 2005
http://www.sundaymail.co.zw/index.php?id=10253&pubdate=2005-02-06
THE Congress
of South African Trade Unions’ foiled mission to Zimbabwe was masterminded
by the American-sponsored International Confederation of Free Trade
Unions (ICFTU), it has emerged.
Following the deportation of the 20-member Cosatu delegation on
Tuesday, more details continue to emerge about how the Cosatu machinations
are part of a broader agenda of the ICFTU to use trade unions to
destabilise countries in Southern Africa being governed by former
liberation movements.
Cosatu last year attempted a similar unauthorised visit to Zimbabwe,
but its delegation was quickly bundled into a kombi and sent back
to South Africa.
It has now emerged that the latest attempt to invade Zimbabwe was
less for the Zimbabwe audience but more for the South African constituency,
where attempts are being made to stir anti-Zimbabwe and anti-President
Mugabe sentiments.
The initial plan was to get the Cosatu delegation into Zimbabwe
to mobilise pro-MDC unions and civic bodies ahead of the March elections.
But when it became clear that that mission would not succeed, Cosatu
persisted with its visit to Zimbabwe in order to create an international
incident that would change the South African people’s attitude towards
Zimbabwe.
"The visit was less for Zimbabwe but it was meant to build a constituency
in South Africa.
"They wanted to create a grievance within the South African body
politic," said a senior government official who has been following
the Cosatu programme.
The South African government has remained resolute in its position
that it will allow the people of Zimbabwe to solve their internal
affairs. The general population in South Africa has also increasingly
shown a liking for President Mugabe who they cheer every time he
visits that country such as when he attended the funeral of anti-apartheid
icon Walter Sisulu and at the inauguration of President Mbeki.
Following the deportation of the Cosatu delegation, a South African
newspaper, the Mail & Guardian, reported that 12 civil society
organisations (all sponsored by Western donor money) met in Johannesburg
to formulate plans to mobilise protests against the Zimbabwe Government.
But they seemed to admit that theirs was a futile exercise. The
Mail & Guardian quotes an official of one of the anti-Zimbabwe
civic bodies, Zimbabwe Liaison Office, Venitia Govender, as saying
she was realistic about the difficulties of mobilising mass support
against Zimbabwe in South Africa.
"There is not enough anger and passion among people in South Africa
about what is happening to their neighbour," she said. "It’s going
to be an uphill battle to get people to express their solidarity."
She also concedes that the formation of the coalition of anti-Zimbabwe
Government NGOs is "too little, too late" for the March 31 elections.
"We will build up momentum over time," she threatened.
But what is shattering for Cosatu is the role of the ICFTU in the
transformation of Cosatu from a pro-workers’ trade union movement
to one that serves the interests of white capital.
Sunday Mail investigations have shown that Cosatu’s attempt to defy
the borders of Zimbabwe and Swaziland and stir up trouble in those
countries has nothing to do with the workers of South Africa. Neither
does it have the support of the Pretoria government.
Instead it is part of an on going ICFTU programme that has been
applied before to the former anti-Western governments of Poland,
Czechoslovakia and Yugoslavia.
"The ICFTU have for long coveted the Cosatu role in the anti-apartheid
struggle. Cosatu had demonstrated its capacity to have street power.
The ICFTU has been keen to commandeer that street power against
the liberation movements in the Sadc region. So now they are looking
for incidents that will outrage the South African public so that
they can mobilise workers to demonstrate. They wanted the Zimbabwe
Government to arrest the Cosatu delegation or to manhandle them.
"They wanted this to trigger the protests. But they failed to get
the sort of incident they wanted but are now using the deportation
as a pretext to form a coalition of anti-Zimbabwe Government and
pro-MDC NGOs to put pressure on President Mugabe’s Government. They
realise that this is the last time the MDC can engage the Zimbabwe
Government as a serious force," said the official.
After the deportation of the Cosatu delegation, the ICFTU general
secretary, Guy Ryder, wrote to President Mugabe condemning the deportation.
In a letter dated February 2 2005, the ICFTU general secretary claimed
that the deportation added up to the Government repression and harassment
of trade unions.
Earlier on the ICFTU general secretary had written to Cosatu general
secretary Zwelinzima Vavi, encouraging him to press ahead with the
unsanctioned visit to Zimbabwe. He wrote: "We fully understand the
spirit of solidarity with Zimbabwean workers that is driving Cosatu
to stick to its declared intention to hold exploratory talks with
the ZCTU on matters of interest to workers of Zimbabwe and indeed
of the region. The solidarity work of Cosatu is known worldwide,
which trade unions across the world appreciate very much.
"In the context of globalisation and the ever greater interdependence
of workers across frontiers, the solidarity of Cosatu is an essential
building block in the continuing task of promoting an effective
defence of workers’ interests. In the circumstances, the ICFTU expresses
its full support to Cosatu on maintaining its plan to visit the
ZCTU, Zimbabwe."
The South African government has distanced itself from the Cosatu
action, describing it as a "sideshow" aimed at removing focus from
the process being taken by Zimbabwe and other Sadc countries to
come up with more democratic ways of holding elections.
According to diplomatic sources in South Africa, President Mbeki
and his government have for a long time now been sceptical of the
Cosatu political manoeuvres and are aware of the penetration of
the trade union movement by Western interests.
"The redeeming thing in all what has been happening is that the
ANC sees the forces behind Cosatu. They can see the emerging coalition
between Cosatu and the NGOs as well as the South African Communist
Party. They know that this is a dry run for a political role for
Cosatu in South African politics," said a diplomatic source. This
anxiety is likely to increase, as the Cosatu/ICFTU links become
more apparent. The ICFTU was created by the American government
during to the Cold War era to counter the Soviet Union’s global
programme of communism, which was predicated on workers’ support.
The ICFTU’s mandate was to penetrate trade unions and turn them
into rightwing organisations to compete with Eastern bloc unions,
which were greatly influenced by organisations such as Socialist
International.
It was the ICFTU that gave birth to rightwing leaders such as Leck
Walesa in Poland who went on to change the political landscape in
that country and the rest of the Eastern bloc.
In its Africa programme headed by its Nairobi office but reporting
to the Brussels headquarters, the ICFTU has sought to work with
civic bodies funded by NGOs that draw resources from the same source
as the ICFTU, which is largely American money.
After failing to enter Zimbabwe, Cosatu invited a ZCTU delegation
to South Africa where they reportedly discussed strategies to confront
the Zimbabwe Government.
SABC News quoted a member of the ZCTU delegation, Lucia Matibenga,
as saying their meeting with Cosatu had been fruitful.
She said the delegation would go back to Zimbabwe to "implement
strategies that were discussed at the meeting".
Read
the response by COSATU to this article
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