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Xenophobia
and the South African working class
Thandokuhle Manzi and Patrick Bond, Pambazuka News
May 27, 2008
http://www.pambazuka.org/en/category/features/48365
To convey the reasons
and effects of xenophobia in South Africa and its effect on the
working class, Thandokuhle Manzi and Patrick Bond take a microscopic
look at Cato Manor Township, one of the sites where the attacks
took place.
The low-income black
township here in Durban which suffered more than any other during
apartheid, Cato Manor, was the scene of a fanciful test performed
on a Mozambican last Wednesday morning.
At 6:45am, in the warmth
of a rising subtropical winter sun, two unemployed men strolling
on Belair Road approached the middle-aged immigrant. They accosted
him and demanded, in the local indigenous language isiZulu, that
he says the word meaning, "elbow" (this they referred
to with their hand).
The man answered "idolo",
which unfortunately means "knee". The correct answer
is "indololwane". His punishment: being beat up severely,
and then told to "go home".
What was going through
those two young thugs' heads? Why did others like them kill more
than 50 immigrants in various South African slums last week, leaving
tens of thousands more to flee?
Cato Manor has several
features that incubate conflict of the type Thando Manzi witnessed
- and was powerless to prevent - on his way to high school
last Wednesday. The same scene played out dozens if not hundreds
of times here in Durban's sprawling townships, where more than 1.5
million people suffer daily indignities.
Indeed, thousands of
immigrants were asked such questions by assailants in recent weeks.
Many millions heard of the elbow test and saw press coverage of
immigrants being burned to death last week in Johannesburg's eastern
townships, which ironically house the reserve pools of labour closest
to Africa's busiest airport, O.R.Tambo International, the gateway
to and from the continent.
Thousands of Zimbabweans
and Mozambicans living in Johannesburg and Durban fled to the borders,
but most went nearby to police stations, community centres and churches.
The notoriously corrupt Cato Manor police station now has several
hundred people sheltering in the immediate vicinity, and a large
tent was erected for shelter.
A 15-minute drive south
of Cato Manor is Chatsworth, whose best known community activist
is Orlean Naidoo. She joined Patrick Bond at central Durban's main
place of safety, Emmanuel Cathedral, on Thursday night. The Catholic
church had taken in 150 terrified Zimbabweans, and that night Naidoo
helped rescue another 100 from Chatsworth's Bottlebrush shack settlement.
By Sunday that number of refugees at Emmanuel had doubled again.
Our colleague Ashwin
Desai documented Chatsworth's role in progressive struggle dating
back more than a decade (in his 2002 book We are the Poors). Sadly,
last week, a majority of residents voted in a municipal by-election
for the welfarist-nationalist Minority Front, with its single-minded
emphasis on Indian identity.
And in Bottlebrush, low-income
Africans were apparently incited - and immigrants terrorised
- by an anonymous pamphlet telling foreigners to leave.
Naidoo notes the rise
of racial and class tensions here: "Bottlebrush settlement
has never been properly organised," she says. "It is
not an easy thing to do, when people are subject to arrest at any
time due to lack of formal documents."
In every locale, surface
stresses that invite bitter residents to cheer on beatings and ethnic
cleansing have deep faultlines. Cato Manor violence appears endemic
for several reasons that Thando Manzi hears every day in ordinary
conversation, to the point of stereotyping.
To illustrate, a taxi
war is now underway, as one owners' association whose market has
stagnated attempts to invade Cato Manor turf. Taxi lords from nearby
Chesterville - a township two kilometers west - apparently
instructed their drivers to begin expanding services into the Cato
Manor Taxi Association's routes a few weeks ago.
The Manzi household hears
gunshots most evenings, and it is sometimes impossible to move around
the township due to flying bullets. One taxilord has been killed
and quite a few innocent passengers and bystanders - including
a schoolchild - were wounded.
Indeed, long-suffering
residents know Cato Manor ( http://www.mantramedia.us/sites/cmt/history.htm
) - named after the city's first white settler mayor - as
contested terrain following British settlement in 1843 . A century
later, Indians and Africans regained occupation rights, but the
apartheid regime soon practiced a sophisticated divide-and-conquer
that heightened both ethnic and class cleavages.
By 1949, Cato Manor's
unequal internal power relations, evident in petty retail trade
and landlordism, generated a backlash by Africans against Indians
that left 137 residents dead over two days, with thousands more
injured. Recovering from this catastrophe, however, the African
National Congress began serious organising, and set the stage for
women's uprisings against both the state and African men who patronised
the local beerhall (where profits financed local apartheid), instead
of consuming the women's homebrew.
Combinations of local
grievances plus anti-racist macropolitics meant Cato Manor gender
relations were as advanced as anywhere in the country. But by 1964,
the apartheid regime overwhelmed social resistance, embarking on
mass forced removals, leaving the land just below the University
of KwaZulu-Natal vacant for a quarter century.
But like so much of our
'planet of slums', as Mike Davis describes these sites, a new generation
of shack settlements then emerged in the interstices of working-class
Indian and African communities. The post-apartheid government's
construction of tiny housing units, half the size of apartheid "matchboxes",
did not help. Too many quickly went onto the market and became unaffordable
to Cato Manor's lowest-income residents, though immigrants have
bought them and are settling in.
The ethnicised political
economy of Cato Manor capitalism creates many such tensions. Speaking
at a labour-community-refugee forum on Sunday, Timothy Rukombo,
a leader of exiled Zimbabweans in Durban, described how microeconomic
friction is displaced into hate-filled nationalism: "If you
want to go home [to Zimbabwe], you compare prices and you see the
large bus is a little cheaper than the minibus kombitaxi. Then when
you go to the bus, the taxi driver shouts loudly that you are makwerekwere",
a derogatory term for immigrant just as insulting as "kaffir".
Rukombo continues, "And
when we are beaten, and we call the police, they never come."
In fact, when police do come - as to Johannesburg's Central
Methodist Church on January 30, where 1500 Zimbabweans had taken
refuge - then their agenda is often pure brutality. Host bishop
Paul Verryn was beaten that evening, and all the Zimbabweans were
arrested. But no charges stuck.
These sorts of grievances
Thando Manzi hears continually, but on the other side of the conflict
from Rukombo. At a time of roaring food price inflation -
as high as 80% for basics this year - he prioritises a few structural
reasons for his neighbours' xenophobia:
* lack of jobs, as formal
sector employment dropped by a million after 1994, and declining
wage levels as a result of immigrant willingness to work for low
pay on a casualised basis;
* immigrant tenacity in finding informal economic opportunities
even when these are illegal, such as streetside trading of fruits,
vegetables, cigarettes, toys and other small commodities;
* housing pressure which leads many immigrants to overcrowd inner-city
flats especially in Durban and Johannesburg, hence driving up rentals
of a dwelling unit beyond the ability of locals to afford; * surname
identity theft, which can cost an immigrant R3000 by way of a bribe
for an ID document and driver's license (including fake marriages
to South Africans who only learn much later); and
* increases in local crime blamed on immigrants.
Behind some of this tension
is the recent expansion of the hated migrant labour system. We thought
in 1994 that the ANC government would slowly but surely rid the
economy of migrancy, and turn single-sex migrant hostels into decent
family homes. But hostels remain, and in Johannesburg, the ghastly
buildings full of unemployed men were the source of many attacks.
And even if racially-defined
geographical areas have disappeared from apartheid-era Swiss-cheese
maps, the economic logic of drawing inexpensive labour from distant
sites is even more extreme (China has also mastered the trick),
now that it no longer is stigmatised by apartheid connotations.
Instead of hailing from
KwaZulu or Venda or Bophuthatswana or Transkei, the most desperate
migrant workers in SA's major cities are from Zimbabwe, Malawi,
Mozambique and Zambia - countries partially deindustrialised
by Johannesburg capital's expansion up-continent.
In a brutally frank admission
of self-interest regarding these workers, First National Bank chief
economist Cees Bruggemann intoned to Business Report last week:
"They keep the cost of labour down... Their income gets spent
here because they do not send the money back to their countries."
If many immigrants don't
send back remittances (because their wages are wickedly low and
the cost of living here has soared), that in turn reminds us of
how apartheid drew cheap labour from Bantustans: for many years
women were coerced into supplying unpaid services - child-rearing,
healthcare and eldercare for retirees - so as to reproduce fit male
workers for the mines, factories and plantations.
Apartheid-era superprofits
for capital were the result. Now, with more porous borders and the
desperate crisis Zimbabweans face (in part because Thabo Mbeki still
nurtures the Mugabe dictatorship), SA corporate earnings are roaring.
After falling due to overproduction and class struggle during the
1970s-80s, profit rates here rose from 1994-2001 to 9th highest
in the world, according to a Bank of England study, while the wage
share fell from 5% over the same period.
So notwithstanding SA's
national unemployment rate of 40%, a xenophobia-generated bottleneck
in the supply of migrant labour could become a crisis for capital,
such as occured at Primrose Gold Mine near Johannesburg. The mine's
workforce consists nearly entirely of Mozambicans, who much of last
week stayed away due to fear, thus shutting the shafts.
On the big plantations,
northeast of Johannesburg, men like Paul van der Walt of the Transvaal
(sic) Agricultural Union remark upon the danger: "It is not
far-fetched that even farmers employing workers lawfully from neighbouring
states could experience at first hand that xenophobia is not restricted
to metropolitan areas."
What next? If you work
for the state to impose neoliberalism on capital's behalf, as does
central banker Tito Mboweni, you stick with sadomonetarist policies
"come hell or high water", as he vowed last week, and
you maintain fiscal austerity, as finance minister Trevor Manuel
also promised.
If you are a ruling party
politician, either ignore the problem - like Thabo Mbeki,
who didn't even bother visiting the conflict sites - or send
in the army (a dangerous new development), or distract attention
as much as possible through "Third Force" allegations.
To explain xenophobia, minister of national intelligence Ronnie
Kasrils harks back to an earlier threat: "We see, on the surface,
that there is a duplication of what happened in the early -90s.
We know that there were political elements behind that. Are those
same trigger elements in place now? We-d be naive to just
write that off."
And if you are an internationalist
activist, like Soweto resident Lindiwe Mazibuko, you address the
root of the problem by fighting for access to decent public services
for all residents regardless of national origin.
With four other residents,
Mazibuko won an historic court case against the Johannesburg Water
company on April 30, doubling her free water supply and banning
prepayment meters (though the city will appeal). Tragically, she
died of cancer last week, but many more activists are inspired by
her example.
And if you are a brave
immigrant, we must be grateful that you reinvigorate our fights
for socio-economic justice and against the new racist xenophobia.
In solidarity, several thousand marched in Johannesburg on Saturday.
In contrast, on 25 May
1963, the Organisation of African Unity (now African Union) was
founded by nationalist elites to support liberation from colonialism.
It is hard to celebrate
Africa Day given that in the meantime, neoliberalism and paranoid
nationalism imposed from above have made mockery of Africa's ubuntu
philosophy (we are whom we are through others). From below, the
thugs who beat up that Mozambican have merely joined a rapidly-growing
movement: to barbarism.
*Thandokuhle
Manzi lives in Cato Manor. Patrick Bond is an academic at the Centre
for Civil Society ( http://www.ukzn.ac.za/ccs
)
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