/ 11 August 2017

Letters to the editor: August 11 to 17 2017

Red flag: The SACP is to consider turning its back on the ANC and going it alone at the polls. Photo: Madelene Cronjé
Red flag: The SACP is to consider turning its back on the ANC and going it alone at the polls. Photo: Madelene Cronjé

SACP leaders hold out on contesting elections

There is no doubt that the South African Communist Party’s (SACP) 14th congress resolution on state power and the option of contesting elections was an improved version from that of the 12th congress in 2007.

But does it go far enough? The answer is no.

More than 95% of the 1 800 delegates wanted the SACP to resolve on contesting elections in the next elections, in 2019, either alone on a ballot or as a leader of the patriotic front that must be established. 

The first optional modality was open to the coalition with the ANC after elections, should they wish it. But the party must impose conditions that will ensure there is no Big Brother relationship in that arrangement. 

The issue of a reconfigured alliance received very little support – and it actually came from the leadership. But this aspect got a prime spot in the crafted resolution. This resolution was an act of compromise by crafters, balanced between what delegates wanted and what leadership wanted. 

The new feature is the aspect of the popular front, which was not there in the resolution of the 12th congress, and the need for a road map that will determine the recommended modalities, which the new central committee must produce in the December augmented central committee meeting. 

Such an augmented central committee becomes crucial for the party. Attendees must be strong and not allow any temptation or persuasion to shift the goal post at a special congress to be convened next year. Such a congress must endorse what the augmented central committee would have determined. 

This is important because some leaders are so hell-bent on ANC conference outcomes and are hedging their bets on one faction to emerge so that they soften or harden the SACP’s attitude in its electoral path. 

We must stand in guard as party cadres against this opportunistic reduction of the SACP to certain leaders’ fortunes in the ANC. The decision to contest must be concluded before the ANC conference and be endorsed next year at the special congress. 

The SACP cannot afford to lose public face even more than it has; it cannot afford to conduct itself further as some communist desk of the ANC. Nor can it continue to present a picture in public as a party of its leadership rather than its membership, masses and the working class. 

We must debunk these perceptions that we are always insulted about. The new leadership must appreciate why they have been brought back to the central committee. This is not a blank cheque. The party needs a new direction that elevates SACP objectives first, before the rest of other considerations, including the ANC. 

If the new central committee did not read the congress correctly, meaning the impatience from delegates as expressions of grass-roots narratives, then the leadership will be a rearguard leadership rather than a vanguard. – Sikhumbuzo Mdladla, Pietermaritzburg


Capetonians must clean up the city

I don’t think any Capetonian is proud of the refuse lying around, particularly in the poorer areas of the city and on the Cape Flats, and I don’t think anyone who lives in or visits these areas thinks the City of Cape Town is doing enough to reverse one of the consequences of apartheid. 

So I address this letter as an open one to our mayor, the head of solid waste, the premier and each councillor, particularly those for Gugulethu, Langa, Nyanga and Khayelitsha. Could you each indicate, in an open reply, what plan you each have to get rid of this waste, and whether you think the present planning is adequate to address the problem? 

I can understand (even though I don’t agree with the slow prioritising) the complexity of providing houses to poor people, but surely the second-best option is to make the existing areas clean and to have refuse regularly removed? 

Are the number of rubbish bins per person the same on the Cape Flats as in Constantia? Or are we just perpetuating apartheid inequality? Please pay us Capetonians the respect of answering these questions. 

Children need clean and hygienic environments to grow up in and to flourish, and our privileged citizens could be asked whether they would be happy to shoulder more responsibility if the city, for instance, proposed refocusing resources in townships for two years to make refuse a thing of the past. 

It would take teamwork and buy-in from all parts of society, including the poor communities, through themselves and their councillors. A rubbish indaba perhaps? Let’s hear from all stakeholders about how we can together overcome this problem. 

I believe this is a challenge we can all focus on and succeed at, and perhaps we can do so in a manner that addresses similar historically divisive issues one at a time, starting with smaller steps? – Michael Pickstone-Taylor, Franschhoek