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The
no land, no house no vote campaign still on
M’du Hlongwa
Extracted
from Pambazuka News 286
January 18, 2007
http://www.pambazuka.org/en/category/comment/39242
M’du
Hlongwa explores the role of NGOs in the struggle for social justice.
"Even some NGOs call us criminal when we speak for ourselves.
We are supposed to suffer silently so that some rich people can
get rich from our work, and others can get rich having conferences
about having more conferences about our suffering. But the police
never come to these conferences. These conferences are just empty
talking."
South
Africa does not think of the poor. The poorest of the country are
the majority but we are kept voiceless. The poorest I am talking
about are the shack dwellers, the street traders, the street kids,
the flat dwellers who can’t afford the rent and the ‘unemployeds’
from Cape Town to Musina in the Limpopo Province and from Richard’s
Bay on the Indian Ocean to Alexander Bay on the Atlantic Ocean.
We
always say that the fact that we are poor in life does not make
us short-minded. We know that our country is rich. There are all
the minerals like gold and aluminium, the water and the forestry,
the trade and the industry, the agriculture, the art and the culture
and the science and the technology.
The
Freedom Charter said that the wealth of South Africa should benefit
the people of South Africa but it is not like that. The land of
our ancestors was taken for the farms and the forests. Our grandparents
and parents worked on those farms and in the mines and factories
and houses. Now we are either trying to make a living selling to
other poor people or we are the servants who come quietly into the
nice places with our heads always down, to keep them nice, and to
keep them working for the rich. Most of our time goes into just
trying to survive. To get some little money, to get water, to see
a doctor, to rebuild our homes after they have burnt down, to get
our children into school or to try and stop evictions. We shouldn’t
be suffering like this.
Our
shacks are flooded during heavy rains. Sometimes they are even washed
away because the City won’t let us build proper structures or build
proper houses for us in the city where we need to be to work and
study. And our shacks get burnt down in fires because the City thinks
that we don’t deserve to have electricity. We are always losing
our belongings in these fires and sometimes loved ones, especially
children and old people, are lost. The constitution says that everyone
must have adequate shelter. We don’t have adequate shelter and the
situation is not getting better. Now the city is trying to evict
us and is leaving people homeless on the side of the road. How many
lives will be destroyed before our voices are heard? How many children
will drown in rivers on the way to school because ‘there is no budget’
to build bridges while casinos, and airports and theme parks have
huge budgets? Who will do something about the fact that the police
who are supposed to protect the people are always abusing us? Is
it right that they come into our houses and ill-treat us, insulting
us, stealing from us and hitting us? Who will do something about
the fact that even when our youth finish grade 12, they just sit
at home because there is no work and because our parents can’t afford
to send us to university? Who will turn our economy from something
that lets the rich get richer off the suffering of the poor into
something that lets all the people make a better life?
The
politicians have shown that they are not the answer to our suffering.
The poor are just made the ladders of the politicians. The politician
is an animal that hibernates. They always come out in the election
season to make empty promises and then they disappear. But we know
that lies are for the time being but truth is for life. These guys
get into power by lying to us and then they make money. They don’t
work for the people who put them up there. In fact our suffering
ends up working for them. Their power comes because they say that
they will speak for us. That is why in Abahlali [Shack Dwellers
Movement] we started to say ‘Speak to us and not for us’ and why
we vote in our own elections for people who will live and work with
us in our communities and without any hopes for making our suffering
into a nice job.
We
know that our country is rich. We know that it is the suffering
of the poor that makes it rich. We know how we suffer and we know
why we suffer. But in Abahlali we have found that even though we
are a democratic organisation that gets its power from the trust
of our members and have never hurt one person, the government and
even some NGOs call us criminal when we speak for ourselves. We
are supposed to suffer silently so that some rich people can get
rich from our work, and others can get rich having conferences about
having more conferences about our suffering. But the police never
come to these conferences. These conferences are just empty talking.
When we have big meetings where we live, the police are even in
the sky in their helicopters. These conferences demand our support
but they never support our struggles. We are always on our own when
the fires come, or when the police come, or when the City comes
to evict us.
I
want to say clearly that I am a Professor of my suffering. We are
all Professors of our suffering. But in this South Africa, the poor
must always be invisible. We must be invisible where we live and
where we work. We must even be invisible when people are getting
paid to talk about us in government or in NGOs! Everything is done
in our name. We are even told that the 2010 World Cup is for us
when we can’t afford tickets and will be lucky to watch it on television.
The money for stadiums should go for houses and water and electricity
and schools and clinics. Even now shacks are being destroyed and
street traders are being sorely abused by the METRO and SAPS police
to make us invisible when the visitors come. This World Cup is destroying
our lives. I call 2010 ‘The year of the curse’. South Africa is
sinking. It will only be rescued if the poor take their place in
the country.
But
before 2010 is 2009. This is the year of the National Elections
in our beloved country. When the elections come I want to see who
will be queuing in that hot or rainy day to vote. I see voting as
the same as throwing your last money in a flooded river. I believe
that many people who voted before want to go and ask to get their
X’s back. Abahlali sensed this early and in the 2006 local government
elections we said "No Land, No House, No Vote". We said
that whenever we have voted for people who say that they will speak
for us, they hibernate afterwards. We said that we would struggle
for land and housing against all councillors. We said that we would
make ourselves the strong poor by building our settlement committees
and our movement.
We
got beaten for that by the police. Some of the NGO people said that
we were too stupid to understand what elections were for and that
we needed ‘voter education’. They need an education in the politics
of the poor. They should come and live in a settlement for even
just one week before they say that we are too stupid to understand
our own politics. Our boycott brought the percentage of voters in
the areas where we are strong right down. In these areas the councillors
can’t claim to represent the poor and we have made our own organisations,
which do represent the poor because they are made for the poor by
the poor, much stronger than the councillors. Abahlali is much stronger
than Baig and Bachu and Dimba.
I
am sure the number of non-voters who choose to work very hard every
day struggling in their communities instead of giving trust to politicians
will be multiplied in 2009. I will personally be pushing for Abahlali
and our sister organisations to take the ‘No Land! No House! No
Vote!’ campaign into the 2009 National Elections. Oh! South Africa
the rich, sinking country! There is no more need to vote for politicians
in this country. I always say to people that they should vote if
they ever see even one politician doing something good for the poor.
But
from the local government to the provincial and national parliaments
I only see politicians on gravy trains and holidays and in conferences
with the rich. They are the new bosses, not the servants of the
poor. They deceive us and make fools of us. They ask us for our
vote and then disappear with our votes to their big houses and conferences
where they plan with the rich how to make the rich richer. Their
entrance fee for these houses and conferences is us. They sell us
to the rich. Can anyone show one politician who has stood up to
say build houses not stadiums? Can anyone show one politician who
has said that Moreland’s land should be for the poor who are still
waiting to be a real part of South Africa and not for more shops
and golf courses? Can anyone show one politician who has said that
it is wrong for the police to beat us and arrest us when we want
to march? Can anyone show one politician who has stood with us when
the police shoot at us?
Let
us keep our votes. Let us speak for ourselves where we live and
work. Let us keep our power for ourselves. The poor are many. We
have shown that together we can be very strong. Abahlali has now
won many victories. Other organisations are working hard too. Let
us continue to work to make ourselves the strong poor. Let us vote
for ourselves every day.
*M’du
Hlongwa lives in the Lacey Road settlement in Sydenham, Durban.
He is unemployed and his mother works as a cleaner in a state hospital.
He was the secretary in the first and second Abahlali baseMjondolo
secretariat but did not stand for election for a position in the
2007 secretariat in order to be able to complete his book on the
politics of the poor and to try and gain access to a university
to study to be a teacher. However he continues to be an enthusiastic
ordinary member of Abahlali baseMjondolo and to do volunteer work
each week day morning work for people living in HIV/AIDS. He is
26. For information on Abahlali base Mjondolo visit http://www.abahlali.org
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