People's Democracy(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) |
Vol. XXXVI
No. 41 October 14, 2012 |
COSATU HOLDS 11TH
CONGRESS
Biggest
African TU Decides to Affiliate with WFTU
Swadesh
Dev Roye
HELD
at Gallagher Estate in Midrand,
situated between
A
notable feature was that members of the two
categories, including top leaders from the African National
Congress (ANC) and
the South African Communist Party (SACP), were present
throughout the congress
and also participated in the deliberations on all matters
along with regular delegates.
Interestingly, the two international trade union centres with
diametrically
opposed ideological positions --- the class oriented WFTU and
the class
collaborationist International Trade Union Confederation
(ITUC) --- had sent high
level large delegations to the congress. While general
secretary George
Mavrikos led the WFTU team, his counterpart Sharon Barow
headed the ITUC delegation.
Both of them were allotted half an hour time each to address
the congress. This
writer attended the congress as a member of the WFTU
delegation.
As
COSATU is a powerful and militant
working class constituent of the ruling tripartite alliance of
INAUGURAL
ADDRESS
In
his inaugural address to the congress, COSATU
president Sidumo Dlamini noted the growth in its membership
from 1.8 million in
2003 to 2.2 million in 2011, an increase of over 4,22,000,
which made COSATU “one
of the fastest growing trade union federations in the world.”
He told the
delegates, “These four days will be your opportunity to tell
us on our faces
where we have deviated. This is your congress to point out
where the organisation
has done right and where it needs to consolidate.”
Dealing
with the present systemic crisis of
capitalism from a sharp working class perspective, Dlamini
noted that the governments
all over the world, representing capitalist interests, “have
drawn clear class
battle lines. It is now an open class war!”
Then he said, “The question this congress must provide
practical answers to
is whether we have a requisite organisational and political
capacity to respond
pound for pound and emerge victorious from this class war.” Coming
down heavily upon the
pro-capital and anti-labour policies of the government of
South Africa (SA),
Dlamini noted that despite serious economic crisis in
The
president’s speech provided interesting
data. The world’s billionaires saw their wealth grow by 50 per
cent and their
ranks swelled to 1,011, from 793. Europe had 248 billionaires
and the
The
speech also captured the pathetic
picture of South African workers. A major phenomenon is of
huge job losses and aggravation
of unemployment problem. The workers’ share in national income
has fallen: more
than 50 per cent of workers live on less than eight per cent
of national
income. More than 54 per cent of them receive no regular wage
increases and yet
the bourgeois class is demanding abolition of collective
bargaining.
The
speech also referred to the shocking
Marikana mine tragedy. It said, “..…the central issue (in
Marikana) is that
workers in the mines are rising against their continued
exploitation by
employers….. Mine workers cannot be expected to keep quiet and
say “thank you
basi” when they know that the Financial Officer of Lonmin,
Alan Ferguson earns
R 10,254,972 a year or R 854,581 a month, which is 152 times
higher than the
salary of a rock drill operator.”
It
may be noted here that the COSATU congress
adopted a resolution titled “Declaration on the Lonmin
Marikana Platinum Mine Tragedy,
the Mining Industry and General Poverty Wages.”
FAST RISING
EXPLOITATION
The
COSATU declaration drew a picture of
severe exploitation of South African workers by capitalist
class in its pursuit
of more profits by shifting the burden of the capitalist
economic crisis on to the
working class. The declaration noted, “In all capitalist
countries, of which
our own is no exception, the state plays a central role in
bolstering capital’s
effort to resolve the crisis by increasing the levels of
exploitation and
accumulation. Calls for fiscal austerity are part of this. The
working class, through
its organised formations, has to counter this, and mobilise
for responses to
the crisis which shifts the burden of responsibility to those
generating the
crisis, and protects workers and poor communities from bearing
the cost.”
The
document further said, “The impact of
the global economic crisis is being felt by the working class
in ever growing
unemployment, a growing precariousness of employment,
declining household
incomes, reduced pensions and reduced social services. Social
cohesion, trust
and solidarity take strain under these conditions.” Regarding
the attack in
workplaces, it said, “attack is being effected through the
relocation of production,
casualisation, subcontracting and labour brokering, through
reducing the size
of the workforce, factory closures and through changes
production processes.
Attempts are being made to undermine trade union rights
including collective
bargaining and growing emphasis by the bosses on performance
pay, and the
reduction or elimination of employer contribution to the
social wage and to
social security payments.”
On
the August 16 police firing that killed
45 people, the declaration lambasted the moves for “violent
repression of
protesting workers” and said “the action of the police in
labour disputes in
While
welcoming the independent judicial
commission of inquiry appointed by the government, the COSATU
declaration demanded
“a second independent commission of inquiry that will work
parallel to the
judicial commission already appointed by the president. The
terms of reference
of this second commission must be to investigate the
employment and social
conditions of workers in the mining industry, historically and
at present. The commission
will have also to look at the global context of the industry.
It should be of a
scale similar to the 1979 Wikelhaln commission into labour
legislation.”
CONGRESS
DOCUMENTS
AND
DELIBERATIONS
The
theme of the congress was “Strengthen
COSATU for Total Emancipation.” As usual with the South
African trade union
movement, documents presented to the congress were voluminous,
amazingly colourful
and innovative in form while their contents were politically
rich with a clear
class struggle orientation.
Each
of the 3,500 delegates and guests was provided
with a set of 11 A4-size books, containing various congress
materials. These
included a three volume report of the secretariat, not a
‘Report of the General
Secretary’ as is the practice in our country. These covered
the national and
international situation, state of the working class movement
in the country,
the challenges and opportunities present today, status of
COSATU organisation,
its structure, its alliances with others, and its
participation in Nediac and
other tripartite institutions.
Three
separate presentations in different
sessions of the congress were made on the basis of the three
separate reports:
(i) political, (ii) organisational and (iii) socio-economic.
The presentation
of each report was followed by deliberations and adoption. It
is noteworthy
that several major unions prepared separate composite review
reports on the
congress documents and conducted comprehensive discussions in
pre-congress
sessions of the respective delegations. The number of
delegates in these
sessions ranged from 100 to 400, depending upon the membership
strength of the
unions concerned. These exercises were in the format of
mini-conferences in
different venues, leading to sharp deliberations in the
congress on each of the
topics. These were also very rich in political and
organisational perspectives.
The
exercise of preparation, presentation
and adoption of resolutions was quite unique. Resolutions were
broadly divided
into Part A and Part B. Part A comprised 67 resolutions from
affiliates and
Part B comprised 26 resolutions from the gender, education and
skill
international conferences to the 11th COSATU congress.
Each
resolution was sponsored and seconded
by several unions and was circulated to the unions two months
in advance, along
with the main documents of the congress. As a result of this
pre-congress
exercise, most of the resolutions were adopted along with the
concerned section
of the Secretariat’s report without much delay in the
congress. However, the congress
had the right to move amendments and moving of amendments and
discussion
preceded the adoption in case of a few resolutions.
RESOLUTION
ON
WFTU
AFFILIATION
In
these columns we have discussed the role
of the WFTU in the trade union movement of
Encouraging
progress was achieved with the affiliation
of some major sectoral, COSATU affiliated unions of
During
the period preceding the congress, the
WFTU affiliates carried out a resolute ideological campaign
among the South
African workers, mobilising support for COSATU’s affiliation
with WFTU. Various
pre-congress meetings and conferences put forward strong
arguments for this
change of affiliation.
At
the 11th COSATU congress, WFTU general
secretary George Mavrikos appealed to the delegates, “In this
11th congress of
COSATU, WFTU, as an international class oriented organisation
with 82 million
members in 120 countries, invites you to take a historic and
important decision
to affiliate COSATU to WFTU.” Mavrikos further continued, “We
want COSATU to be
in the forefront in the international struggle of class
oriented trade union
movement against barbarous capitalism, because capitalism
produces poverty,
unemployment, hunger, slums, state violence, wars, disease and
environmental
disaster.”
Vested
interests within the country and
abroad did conduct a silent campaign before and during the
COSATU congress to get
a decision deferred. To counter this move, WFTU affiliates and
supporters were
preparing to demand ballot on the matter. In such an exciting
environment, the
central office bearers and general secretaries of all the
affiliated unions met
on the third day of the congress, during lunch break, and
arrived at a consensus.
It was that a resolution to affiliate COSATU with WFTU would
be moved in and adopted
by the congress; that affiliation with ITUC would continue;
that the new leadership
would meet the leaders of the WFTU and ITUC, come back to the
very first
meeting of COSATU CEC after the congress and review the
response from both the
organisations on the affiliation decision. (The WFTU has
already given a letter
to COSATU welcoming the decision, inviting its delegation to
visit the WFTU
headquarters and appealing it to play a leadership role in the
WFTU.)
As
COSATU has a prestigious in the working
class and trade union movement of the entire African
continent, its affiliation
with the WFTU has a high potential of impacting the working
class movement,
particularly in the continents of Africa and
CONGRESS
DECLARATION
The
congress adopted a concluding declaration summarising the
national and
international situation and drawing an Action Plan for the
post-congress period.
The declaration said, “….we the workers gathered here today,
pledge to embark
on a united and radical programme of action to realise
workers’ legitimate
demands, and to engage our communities and the broader
democratic movement, to
support us in these efforts.”
Noting
the challenges and opportunities before the working class, it
said, “We are meeting
at a time of a global economic crisis, and massive domestic
challenges. On the
one hand this crisis worsens our triple crisis of poverty,
unemployment and
inequality. On the other, space has now opened up for
countries to pursue
radical economic alternatives. The moment to act is now! After
18 years of
freedom the patience of our people is running out.”