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Thursday, January 10, 2013
New Year's Resolutions: How to stay on track
Have you set yourself some new goals for 2013? Not sure how to keep to those goals you set? Then take a listen to this interview I had with Dr Chamendran Naidoo earlier this week on how you can stay on track...
*This interview was first flighted on the Voice of the Cape Breakfast Show*
Friday, December 14, 2012
Medical Tips for the Holiday Season
Going on holiday this festive season? Earlier this week I chatted to Dr Chamendran Naidoo about some of the essential medications you should pack when going on holiday. This interview was aired on VOC's Breakfast show earlier today...
Tuesday, December 4, 2012
Sub Saharan Africa:1.8 Million new HIV infections recorded
On Saturday World Aids Day was celebrated across the globe. In South Africa alone last year 380 000 new HIV infections were recorded . Last year an estimated 1.8 Million new HIV infections were recorded in sub Saharan Africa, this translates into a 25 % decline since 2010. Earlier today VOC Current Affairs Producer and Breakfast show host, Dorianne Arendse chatted to Fahmida Miller who along with the support of Prof Farid Esack started the support group Positive Muslims in 2000 as well as Dr Michael Mol about the latest developments around the management of HIV and AIDS.
*This was first aired on Voice of the Cape's Drivetime Show- a local community radio station*
Wednesday, November 28, 2012
Conference held on HIV and AIDS at UCT
South Africa’s higher education sector begins a three-day conference on HIV and AIDS today at the University of Cape Town. For more on I chatted to Dr Ramneek Ahluwalia, the Programme Director of the Higher Education HIV and AIDS programme on VOC's Breakfast Show...
Tuesday, November 27, 2012
16 Days of Activism: Is it effective?
This is the ninth year that I have been involved in the 16 Days of Activism of No Violence Against Women and Children in some way. Either as a journalist or helping out local NGO’s in my community in raising awareness about the scourge of abuse.
I first become aware of the various forms of abuse when I was convinced by my mother to help Families South Africa’s Kensington outlet arrange a human chain in the area to raise awareness about abuse. Their target market was school children from Grade 7 to matric.
The response to this initiative was overwhelming, at the time I was not working as a practicing journalist, so instead of reporting on the event I made sure that every media house in Cape Town knew about the event.
"1 in 9 Women who are raped in South Africa go to the police to report the rape"
What was interesting about this 2008 event was not only were radio stations and newspapers interested but so too was television. Something I did not really expect, even though I do tend to push for as much coverage as possible when assuming the role of a Public Relations Officer.
This year, I find myself, talking about the 16 Days of Activism as a talk show host on a local community radio station. I thought the response would be overwhelming to opening the discussion on the campaign of no violence against women and children, considering that an abuser does not respect race, culture or creed, sadly this is not the case.
The question one has to ask is: Despite all of these efforts to raise awareness about gender based violence is it enough and is the community especially women and children prepared to speak out about the abuse or just simply become an unreported statistic?
Just before the start of this campaign, I read with interest a blog on how women often do not report crime against them or even report the sexual innuendo that they at times they have to endure especially in a male dominated environment. Surely now that were are living in 2012,s this stigma associated with reporting sexual crime would by now be something of the past, but this seems to not be the case.
"During 1992 Famsa recognised the threat domestic violence posed to relationships, families and the communities on a whole."
Some of the programmes on offer by Families South Africa (Famsa) includes the Men Stopping Violence Project. According to their website http://www.famsawc.org.za/cgi-bin/giga.cgi?cmd=cause_dir_project&project_id=7559&cause_id=1753
The Men Stopping Violence Group aims to improve the safety of survivors of domestic violence by the implementation of specialised interventionist programmes for perpetrators of domestic violence as well as counselling and support measures for survivors of domestic violence.
The group involves confrontation of the perpetrator with regard to the abuse, challenging cognitive distortions that support abusive behaviour and patterns, as well as challenging myths and stereotypes, while also providing empathy and support in terms of addressing early trauma.
During 1992 Famsa recognised the threat domestic violence posed to relationships, families and the communities on a whole. This prompted the organisation to become the first in a third world country to begin working with male perpetrators of violence. Since the inception of the domestic violence programme’s in 1992, Famsa continues to run weekly men’s groups for perpetrators of violence.
In 1992 FAMSA, recognised the threat domestic violence posed to relationships, families and communities. In response to this Famsa became the first organisation in the third world to begin working with male perpetrators of violence. From the domestic violence program’s inception in 1992 until the present day Famsa continues to run weekly men’s groups for perpetrators of violence.
Famsa's Domestic Violence Project consists of two components comprising intervention and prevention methods.
For the last two years I have made a point of covering Famsa’s mini men’s march to Parliament, which despite its name includes young boys and girls who have been through the NGO’s gender identity workshops run at various schools across the province.
In addition to the programmes run at Famsa’s office there also NGO’s like the one in nine campaign that also raises awareness about abuse against women. You can visit their website here: http://www.oneinnine.org.za/22.page . Sadly, only one in nine women report that they have been raped to the police. The organisation was first founded in 2006 at the start of the rape trial of now President Jacob Zuma who was subsequently found not guilty of raping an HIV positive young woman.
According to their website approximately 53 000 rapes are reported annually in South Africa and it is more likely that a South African woman will be raped the country than learn to read.
The question we need to ask ourselves are the demands of our young children, to live in a safe environment where they do not need worry about been raped, or abused falling on deaf ears? How many more times do I need to open the paper and read about a young defenceless toddler been raped before society and we as communities realise that we need to speak out about abuse not just against women but men as well.
Additional information from FAMSA and the 1in9 Campaign website
Saturday, November 24, 2012
380 000 New HIV infections recorded in 2011
Currently South Africa has more people living with HIV in the World. Last year an estimated 380 000 new HIV infections were recorded in South Africa. With World Aids Day just a few days away,Voice of the Cape Current Affairs Producer and Breakfast Show host chatted to Dr Michael Mol about the latest developments in the treatment of HIV and AIDS.
That was a short extract of an interview I conducted with Dr Mol on Friday morning, which forms part of a new feature I'm working on for World Aids Day.
Sunday, November 18, 2012
Human rights: the people vs the UN
By Eric Walberg
Even as the US government is re-elected to the UN Human Rights Council, the UN Committee Against Torture hears a complaint against Bush, notes Eric Walberg
The recent death of Iranian dissident blogger Sattar Beheshti in police custody was a sad event. All human life is precious. “If anyone kills a person unless in retribution for murder or spreading corruption in the land – it is as if he kills all humanity,” states the Quran. An investigation by the Tehran prosecutor, the head of Tehran police and the head of Tehran prisons was ordered by Iranian parliament and Beheshti’s interrogators were hauled on the carpet.
At the same time, the US was elected to a second three-year term on the 47-member United Nations Human Rights Council (HRC). President Bush boycotted the HRC for criticizing Israel too much, but Obama joined in 2010 to ‘improve’ it. US Ambassador to the United Nations Susan Rice welcomed Washington’s re-election this week, saying that the HRC “has delivered real results”, citing its criticism of Syria, though she criticized the rights council’s continued “excessive and unbalanced focus on Israel”.
US emphasis on the HRC is on freedom of expression, religion, and the rights of women and gays, and of course criticism of Iran. Beheshti’s case will surely be raised by the US rep in the near future.
The US government-funded Freedom House huffed that seven of the countries on the HRC – Ivory Coast, Ethiopia, Gabon, Kazakhstan, Pakistan, UAE, and Venezuela – are “unqualified for membership” on a body that requires members to “uphold the highest standards regarding human rights”, and that the qualifications of Brazil, Kenya, and Sierra Leone were “questionable”.
What about the US ‘qualifications’? During its first term, the US
*continued its illegal occupations of Afghanistan and Iraq (1.5 million Iraqis have been killed as a result of the US invasion in 2003)
*used its veto at the UN to conemn Israeli human rights violations (the 2009 invasion of Gaza killed 1400)
*accelerated its use of drone strikes in Pakistan, Yemen and Somalia (3,400 have been killed by drones in Pakistan alone since 2004)
*persecuted Wikileaks’ Julian Assange for his attempts to give substance to the concept of ‘freedom of expression’ in the interests of curbing US war fever.
The ongoing trial of US Army Staff Sergeant Robert Bales, accused of killing 16 Afghan villagers – “heinous and despicable crimes” according to the prosecutor – makes you stop and think: each day, US troops, carry out similar mass executions in Afghanistan, Yemen, Somalia, and, in connivance with Israel, in Palestine.
The alleged comment by Stalin to Churchill is chillingly apropos: The death of one man is a tragedy, the death of millions is a statistic.
Coincidentally, as Rice demanded less criticism of Israel in the HRC, the Israeli army launched another attack on Gaza, with 21 Palestinian deaths so far, including Hamas deputy military chief Ahmed Al-Jaabari.. Earlier attempts to assassinate him include an air raid in 2004 which killed his eldest son, his brother and several of his cousins. (Rest assured, the US HRC rep will do his/her best to keep this off the agenda.)
But though the slaughter and torture in Afghanistan and Gaza continues on a daily basis, with hardly a peep from the media, the force of world opinion has meant that US leaders commanding the likes of Bales, such as Bush, Cheney and Rumsfeld, and virtually all Israeli leaders, now have to be more careful about where they go. People around the world who refuse to consider the death of millions as an inconsequential statistic are waiting to enforce citizens’ arrests.
This week, four survivors of US torture filed a complaint against Canada with the United Nations Committee Against Torture for the country’s failure to investigate and prosecute Bush during his visit to British Columbia last year, the first such complaint filed with the UN Committee. As a signatory to the 1984 Convention Against Torture, Canada has an obligation to investigate and prosecute a torture suspect on its soil, argued the Canadian Centre for International Justice (CCIJ) and the US-based Center for Constitutional Rights.
Canada’s attorney general refused to consider the CCIJ’s call to conduct a criminal investigation during Bush’s visit last year, and the British Columbia provincial attorney general quickly shut down a private criminal prosecution. Bush cancelled a trip to Switzerland last year after he heard of plans for a similar prosecution and the apparent unwillingness of Swiss authorities to stop it.
Citizen diplomacy is coming alive. So far, there is no such campaign to try Obama for continuing the drone operations that kill civilians and non-civilians, men women and children, indiscriminately. However, popular support for Assange convinced Ecuador to give him asylum. As for Israel, its actions are increasing resistance rather than quelling it. Hamas militants in Gaza vowed to continue on the path of resistance, asserting that “the occupation opened the gates of hell.” Egyptian President Mohamed Morsi vowed that such violations of human rights would no longer be tolerated by Egypt, as they were in the past 30 years under US ally ex-President Hosni Mubarak.
The US and Israel have become infamous for their eagerness to torture and/or kill those they don’t like. US and Israel attacks have killed dozens, if not hundreds of Beheshtis daily for decades, and not at home, but as part of their aggressive wars abroad. Guantanamo, Abu Ghraib and Operation Cast Lead may have been crowded out of western media, but the crimes committed there will not go away.
A US Viet Nam War veteran at a Remembrance Day rally in Toronto this week spoke of “the heaps of corpses generated by modern industrial warfare. Every time I attended such ceremonies in the US, I speak up for the millions of Asians who died in that criminal folly. We slaughtered millions.”
But this is merely the US agenda, just as US distaste for criticism of Israel on the HRC is, in preference for Iran. Just as is the US penchant for torture and killing, borrowed from Israel and which blossomed under Bush.
***
Eric Walberg is author of Postmodern Imperialism: Geopolitics and the Great Games http://claritypress.com/Walberg.html. You can reach him at http://ericwalberg.com/
A version of this appeared at http://www.presstv.ir/detail/2012/11/17/272774/trying-war-criminals-people-versus-un/
Even as the US government is re-elected to the UN Human Rights Council, the UN Committee Against Torture hears a complaint against Bush, notes Eric Walberg
The recent death of Iranian dissident blogger Sattar Beheshti in police custody was a sad event. All human life is precious. “If anyone kills a person unless in retribution for murder or spreading corruption in the land – it is as if he kills all humanity,” states the Quran. An investigation by the Tehran prosecutor, the head of Tehran police and the head of Tehran prisons was ordered by Iranian parliament and Beheshti’s interrogators were hauled on the carpet.
At the same time, the US was elected to a second three-year term on the 47-member United Nations Human Rights Council (HRC). President Bush boycotted the HRC for criticizing Israel too much, but Obama joined in 2010 to ‘improve’ it. US Ambassador to the United Nations Susan Rice welcomed Washington’s re-election this week, saying that the HRC “has delivered real results”, citing its criticism of Syria, though she criticized the rights council’s continued “excessive and unbalanced focus on Israel”.
US emphasis on the HRC is on freedom of expression, religion, and the rights of women and gays, and of course criticism of Iran. Beheshti’s case will surely be raised by the US rep in the near future.
The US government-funded Freedom House huffed that seven of the countries on the HRC – Ivory Coast, Ethiopia, Gabon, Kazakhstan, Pakistan, UAE, and Venezuela – are “unqualified for membership” on a body that requires members to “uphold the highest standards regarding human rights”, and that the qualifications of Brazil, Kenya, and Sierra Leone were “questionable”.
What about the US ‘qualifications’? During its first term, the US
*continued its illegal occupations of Afghanistan and Iraq (1.5 million Iraqis have been killed as a result of the US invasion in 2003)
*used its veto at the UN to conemn Israeli human rights violations (the 2009 invasion of Gaza killed 1400)
*accelerated its use of drone strikes in Pakistan, Yemen and Somalia (3,400 have been killed by drones in Pakistan alone since 2004)
*persecuted Wikileaks’ Julian Assange for his attempts to give substance to the concept of ‘freedom of expression’ in the interests of curbing US war fever.
The ongoing trial of US Army Staff Sergeant Robert Bales, accused of killing 16 Afghan villagers – “heinous and despicable crimes” according to the prosecutor – makes you stop and think: each day, US troops, carry out similar mass executions in Afghanistan, Yemen, Somalia, and, in connivance with Israel, in Palestine.
The alleged comment by Stalin to Churchill is chillingly apropos: The death of one man is a tragedy, the death of millions is a statistic.
Coincidentally, as Rice demanded less criticism of Israel in the HRC, the Israeli army launched another attack on Gaza, with 21 Palestinian deaths so far, including Hamas deputy military chief Ahmed Al-Jaabari.. Earlier attempts to assassinate him include an air raid in 2004 which killed his eldest son, his brother and several of his cousins. (Rest assured, the US HRC rep will do his/her best to keep this off the agenda.)
But though the slaughter and torture in Afghanistan and Gaza continues on a daily basis, with hardly a peep from the media, the force of world opinion has meant that US leaders commanding the likes of Bales, such as Bush, Cheney and Rumsfeld, and virtually all Israeli leaders, now have to be more careful about where they go. People around the world who refuse to consider the death of millions as an inconsequential statistic are waiting to enforce citizens’ arrests.
This week, four survivors of US torture filed a complaint against Canada with the United Nations Committee Against Torture for the country’s failure to investigate and prosecute Bush during his visit to British Columbia last year, the first such complaint filed with the UN Committee. As a signatory to the 1984 Convention Against Torture, Canada has an obligation to investigate and prosecute a torture suspect on its soil, argued the Canadian Centre for International Justice (CCIJ) and the US-based Center for Constitutional Rights.
Canada’s attorney general refused to consider the CCIJ’s call to conduct a criminal investigation during Bush’s visit last year, and the British Columbia provincial attorney general quickly shut down a private criminal prosecution. Bush cancelled a trip to Switzerland last year after he heard of plans for a similar prosecution and the apparent unwillingness of Swiss authorities to stop it.
Citizen diplomacy is coming alive. So far, there is no such campaign to try Obama for continuing the drone operations that kill civilians and non-civilians, men women and children, indiscriminately. However, popular support for Assange convinced Ecuador to give him asylum. As for Israel, its actions are increasing resistance rather than quelling it. Hamas militants in Gaza vowed to continue on the path of resistance, asserting that “the occupation opened the gates of hell.” Egyptian President Mohamed Morsi vowed that such violations of human rights would no longer be tolerated by Egypt, as they were in the past 30 years under US ally ex-President Hosni Mubarak.
The US and Israel have become infamous for their eagerness to torture and/or kill those they don’t like. US and Israel attacks have killed dozens, if not hundreds of Beheshtis daily for decades, and not at home, but as part of their aggressive wars abroad. Guantanamo, Abu Ghraib and Operation Cast Lead may have been crowded out of western media, but the crimes committed there will not go away.
A US Viet Nam War veteran at a Remembrance Day rally in Toronto this week spoke of “the heaps of corpses generated by modern industrial warfare. Every time I attended such ceremonies in the US, I speak up for the millions of Asians who died in that criminal folly. We slaughtered millions.”
But this is merely the US agenda, just as US distaste for criticism of Israel on the HRC is, in preference for Iran. Just as is the US penchant for torture and killing, borrowed from Israel and which blossomed under Bush.
***
Eric Walberg is author of Postmodern Imperialism: Geopolitics and the Great Games http://claritypress.com/Walberg.html. You can reach him at http://ericwalberg.com/
A version of this appeared at http://www.presstv.ir/detail/2012/11/17/272774/trying-war-criminals-people-versus-un/
Friday, November 16, 2012
Food Security Conference in CT
A conference on Food Security in Southern Africa will be held from 26th-27th November 2012 at the Protea Breakwater Lodge in Cape Town. This morning I chatted to Dr Jane Battersby from the African Centre of Cities at UCT about the conference and some of the issues that they will be touching on at the conference later this month…
This interview was first broadcast on Voice of the Cape's Breakfast Show
Wednesday, November 14, 2012
DA Seeks African Vote
Amid much speculation on social media on Monday, about who the ‘high ranking member’ of the ANC is that would be joining the ranks of the official opposition on Tuesday afternoon, the Democratic Alliance (DA) announced that former Premier of the Eastern Cape, Nosimo Balindlela, had resigned as COPE Member of Parliament and joined the DA.
At a media briefing held at Parliament yesterday, DA Leader Helen Zille introduced Balindlela as the newest member of the party. “Balindlela resigned her COPE membership and her seat in the National Assembly. In a moment she will sign a DA membership form and receive her membership card from DA Eastern Cape Provincial Leader, Athol Trollip,” said Zille.
Zille explained that with Balindlela joining the ranks of the DA, it was another step in the realignment of politics in South Africa. “Good people from across the spectrum are starting to converge around a vision and a plan for our country. We invite others like Balindlela who may be inspired by her courage and vision today to join us in building a new majority,” added Zille.
While the DA described Balindlela as been a former ANC NEC member, the spokesperson for the ANC, Jackson Mthembu said in a statement on Tuesday, that they were dismayed at the claim made by the Democratic Alliance and Balindlela that she was an NEC member of the ANC.
“Balindlela has never been an NEC member of the ANC. In terms of party leadership, the furthest that she rose in leadership terms was being a regional chairperson of the ANC and the PEC of ANCWL in the Eastern Cape, and sat in the PEC as an Ex-officio member by virtue of being the Premier of the Eastern Cape. Secondly, Nosimo has never been a member of the ANC since 2008 when she joined the Congress of the People (COPE)”, said Mthembu.
He added that it was misleading to associate Balindlela with the ANC as she was a COPE member before joining the DA. According to Mthembu, this was ‘typical of the DA to use cheap propaganda to create hype over nothing’.
Poor Track Record
“It is a known factor that Balindlela was the least effective Premier in the Eastern Cape hence she was recalled. If there is anything that the DA has netted is a political liability that will further alienate the party in the Eastern Cape,” added Mthembu.
According to political analyst Professor Amanda Gouws, even though Balindlela does not have a good track record as the Premier of the Eastern Cape, it is important to take into consideration the circumstances around her being forced out of office in 2008.
“She was forced out of her position as the Premier in 2008 right around the same time Mbeki was forced out of the presidency and then she resigned after that from the ANC and joined COPE,” explained Gouws.
She adds that even though Balindlela does have a good track record when it comes to service delivery in the Eastern Cape, there has never been any issues around corruption. “I don’t think that she can be seen as one of the stalwarts of the ANC. There have never been issues around corruption with Balindlela the issues were more about her service delivery,” said Gouws.
African Vote
When asked if the acceptance of Balindlela as a member of the DA was merely window dressing, Gouws said it was too early to tell. But added that the official opposition is trying to get the African vote, which was part of the reason why DA Parliamentary leader, Lindiwe Mazibuko was appointed.
“The issue of getting the African vote in the Eastern Cape is a serious one and the DA has been trying to address that with the appointment of Lindiwe Mazibuko. However she is seen as only been attractive to the middle class,” explained Gouws.
In the last general election only four opposition parties managed to get just over 2% of the vote, while the rest got just under 1%. Gouws said that this is probably part of the decision by Badlindlela to join the DA.
“The only party that can make a difference is the DA, so in that sense it is a matter of individuals doing cost benefit analysis and looking at where they will be better off and where they can make a better contribution and if they are able to join the DA, then it is to the benefit of the DA,” said Gouws.
At a media briefing held at Parliament yesterday, DA Leader Helen Zille introduced Balindlela as the newest member of the party. “Balindlela resigned her COPE membership and her seat in the National Assembly. In a moment she will sign a DA membership form and receive her membership card from DA Eastern Cape Provincial Leader, Athol Trollip,” said Zille.
Zille explained that with Balindlela joining the ranks of the DA, it was another step in the realignment of politics in South Africa. “Good people from across the spectrum are starting to converge around a vision and a plan for our country. We invite others like Balindlela who may be inspired by her courage and vision today to join us in building a new majority,” added Zille.
While the DA described Balindlela as been a former ANC NEC member, the spokesperson for the ANC, Jackson Mthembu said in a statement on Tuesday, that they were dismayed at the claim made by the Democratic Alliance and Balindlela that she was an NEC member of the ANC.
“She was forced out of her position as the Premier in 2008 right around the same time Mbeki was forced out of the presidency and then she resigned after that from the ANC and joined COPE”
“Balindlela has never been an NEC member of the ANC. In terms of party leadership, the furthest that she rose in leadership terms was being a regional chairperson of the ANC and the PEC of ANCWL in the Eastern Cape, and sat in the PEC as an Ex-officio member by virtue of being the Premier of the Eastern Cape. Secondly, Nosimo has never been a member of the ANC since 2008 when she joined the Congress of the People (COPE)”, said Mthembu.
He added that it was misleading to associate Balindlela with the ANC as she was a COPE member before joining the DA. According to Mthembu, this was ‘typical of the DA to use cheap propaganda to create hype over nothing’.
Poor Track Record
“It is a known factor that Balindlela was the least effective Premier in the Eastern Cape hence she was recalled. If there is anything that the DA has netted is a political liability that will further alienate the party in the Eastern Cape,” added Mthembu.
According to political analyst Professor Amanda Gouws, even though Balindlela does not have a good track record as the Premier of the Eastern Cape, it is important to take into consideration the circumstances around her being forced out of office in 2008.
“She was forced out of her position as the Premier in 2008 right around the same time Mbeki was forced out of the presidency and then she resigned after that from the ANC and joined COPE,” explained Gouws.
She adds that even though Balindlela does have a good track record when it comes to service delivery in the Eastern Cape, there has never been any issues around corruption. “I don’t think that she can be seen as one of the stalwarts of the ANC. There have never been issues around corruption with Balindlela the issues were more about her service delivery,” said Gouws.
African Vote
When asked if the acceptance of Balindlela as a member of the DA was merely window dressing, Gouws said it was too early to tell. But added that the official opposition is trying to get the African vote, which was part of the reason why DA Parliamentary leader, Lindiwe Mazibuko was appointed.
“The issue of getting the African vote in the Eastern Cape is a serious one and the DA has been trying to address that with the appointment of Lindiwe Mazibuko. However she is seen as only been attractive to the middle class,” explained Gouws.
In the last general election only four opposition parties managed to get just over 2% of the vote, while the rest got just under 1%. Gouws said that this is probably part of the decision by Badlindlela to join the DA.
“The only party that can make a difference is the DA, so in that sense it is a matter of individuals doing cost benefit analysis and looking at where they will be better off and where they can make a better contribution and if they are able to join the DA, then it is to the benefit of the DA,” said Gouws.
Friday, November 2, 2012
Hope for Somalia
VOC Current Affairs Producer and Breakfast show host, Dorianne Arendse this week spoke to Somali Journalist, Mohamed Garane about the current situation in Somalia. Garane was in South Africa for the Power Reporting- The African Investigative Journalism Conference which was held at Wits University this week…
Tuesday, October 30, 2012
Nigeria a powerhouse in Africa
VOC Current Affairs Producer and Breakfast Beat host, Dorianne Arendse is currently at the Power Reporting - The African Investigative Journalism Conference at Wits University. The conference brings together nearly 300 delegates from across Africa. Arendse spoke to one of the delegates at the conference, Emeka Umejei who is from Nigeria and currently doing a Masters Degree at Rhodes University about the current socio-political situation in Nigeria...
Annual Carlos Cardoso Memorial Lecture delivered at Wits University
The first annual Carlos Cardoso Memorial lecture was held at Wits University today as part of the 2012 Power Reporting- The African Investigative Journalism Conference. Cardoso an alumni of Wits University was deported by the South African Government in 1974 because of his support for the Frelimo government in Mozambique.
There he became a leading journalistm however while investigating a massive fraud at the country's largest bank- implicating leading political figures and their families, Cardoso was assassinated in the streets of Maputo on 22 November 2000.
This year the memorial lecture was delivered by Advocate Pansy Tlakula who is an advocate of the high court of South Africa and a Wits alumnus. In July 2005 she was appointed as a member of the African Commission for Human and People's Rights- where she holds the position of Special Rapporteur on Freedom of Expression and Access to Information in Africa.
Monday, October 22, 2012
Blaming It All On Muslims
I spoke to Andre Vltchek about his article on Friday afternoon during Voice of the Cape's Drivetime show....
By ANDRE VLTCHEK
In many aspects, Turkey is much like Indonesia – on paper the country’s economic growth is truly impressive, but talk to the people, and they will tell you that the place is collapsing, becoming unlivable in, overpriced, and that daily life is now extremely brutal. In both countries, a big portion of the wealth disappears into the deep pockets of the super-rich ruling elites: to obnoxiously glitzy yacht docks and marinas dotted around Istanbul, and in the glitzy shopping malls of Jakarta.
There is suppressed anger and frustration on the streets of Istanbul. My good friend, a writer, had recently been injured in a public bus, as two buses raced through the narrow streets, with a total disregard for the passengers onboard. Last night I witnessed how a veiled woman was almost crushed by the doors of the metrobus; she begged and screamed to be released, whilst the driver obviously seemed to be enjoying her agony, and all in full view of the passengers. There were several people near the doors, but no one came to her rescue.
People don’t shout here, but they elbow each other, walk through each other, and often show absolute spite for their fellow citizens. There is generally a ‘bad mood’ everywhere at street level; there is an apparent diminishment of kindness, as well as something that could only be defined as, chronic fatigue.
Come as a tourist, to see the great ancient mosques and palaces, museums and traditional baths, and you will fall in love with the city in one instant. Live here for a while, and the chances are, that you will soon be exhausted and defeated.
Istanbul is a ferociously divided city. There is a clear distinction, between those who think that the greatest human right, is to be able to booze up in the open, at the tables placed right on the sidewalk, and between those who choose faith over worldly pleasures.
To be precise: the city is divided between those secular (and historically, although not of recent, governing) upper and middle classes, and their hated adversaries: the practicing Muslims of Turkey, the majority of the nation.
“Woman who wear headscarves have no brains”, a renowned Turkish author shouts at me, a woman, and needless to say, ‘a secular’ one. We are on the shores of the Bosporus, in a public place, at a café. People are looking at us and I feel embarrassed. There was no chance of even beginning to argue with her. She was having one of those Istanbul fits – a familiar outburst of: “I have no sympathy, no use for the Muslim religion. Have you ever read their Book?”
I did. And just a few days ago, I had the great pleasure of discussing the Book with the great British Muslim scholar, Ziauddin Sardan in London. I am better off keeping the fact to myself, for fear of being quartered, and my body parts thrown into the darkness of the legendary waterway dividing Europe, and Asia.
She is not the only person I know in Istanbul who has those moments. In ‘the City of Dreams’, to show spite for Islam and for practicing Muslims, is clearly some commonly used secret ‘password’ to the universe of what is acceptable here as brainy and hip.
As she speaks, a Ferrari is racing along the narrow road connecting two posh neighborhoods on the shores of the Bosporus – Arnavutköy and Bebek. It only slows down when confronted by the massive body of a public bus. If it could torpedo the bus, it would. Stripped of its muffler, the car is making an obnoxious roaring noise, frightening the seagulls, children and old passersby. The man driving it is definitely not a religious type: sporting a crew-cut, and a cool, bored Italian-actor-from-the 1960s look, with a woman sitting next to him, her hair flowing in the wind, wearing a sleeveless blouse, with designer glasses lifted up her forehead, and a cigarette between two slender fingers.
Turkey is segregated. In a way, it is more divided than either Israel or South Africa, before the collapse of apartheid. But you would never hear anyone talking about it here.
I have three books translated into, and published in the Turkish language; several of their television stations often interview me. I know many men and women in Istanbul. Some are secular, others are Muslim; but I never see them ‘mixing together’. Most of the secularists I know here, despise Islam; they make sure to demonstrate how Western, how pro-Western, how ‘European’ they are. In their eyes, being religious equates to being a degenerate, an idiot, and even ‘unpatriotic’.
Try to define Turkey as a Middle Eastern country, and you will lose all your friends and acquaintances in an instant.
The Muslim-bashers don’t hide their ideas: they actually advertise them; firing up each other in what to an outsider, may easily appear as bigotry.
Not once did my publisher, my fellow writers, acquaintances, or those pro-Western intellectuals ever invite out to dinner or a night out, someone who would happen to be a religious man or a woman. Not once in Istanbul did I have a chance to talk to a woman wearing a headscarf. Practicing Muslims are ‘un-people’ in all those ‘literary’ and ‘intellectual’ circles; they are not included, not talked to, not consulted. “One can learn nothing from them”, a ‘secular’ poet once told me in posh café overlooking the Bosporus.
To me all this is particularly shocking, because, for a big part of my life I live in Southeast Asia and in East Africa, in two places where people mix readily. In Malaysia, there could hardly be any party, or night out with friends, without people of different races and religions sitting at the same table. To be Malaysian is to be Malay, Chinese or Indian, Muslim or Buddhist or Hindu or secular. Of course even there it is not easy; it is not smooth, there are outbursts of intolerance, and even institutionalized discrimination, especially towards the Indian minority. But there is definitely no ‘segregation’. And if one attacks or puts down entire nationalities or religious beliefs, he or she is considered ‘uncool’ and very badly brought up. It would not be tolerated, especially in the company of educated people.
I have to repeat once again: I have only observed segregation such as that in Istanbul, in South Africa before the collapse of apartheid (and in some parts of the country after the collapse), in several parts of Israel and for different reasons, in Central Australia.
Secularists point fingers at Muslims, accusing the present religious Government of taking away their ‘sacred’ liberties (including, so often quoted, the right to booze up in full view of pedestrians).
But much more serious issues could be detected.
For instance, the West had been a determined sponsor of the present Turkish regime of Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan and President Abdullah Gul. There have been massive arrests and disappearances of many top Kemalist generals and intellectuals, including those who have been demanding that Turkey breaks up with the US political and military diktat, instead forging alliances in the east.
So here is the paradox that is hardly understood in the West, even amongst some well meaning and left leaning intellectuals: while promoting Islamic ideals, the present government is taking direct orders from the West, destroying anti-imperialist intellectuals and the top military brass.
While banning exposed drinking establishments and encouraging women to cover up, the present government is helping to train the Israeli air force within Turkish territory, as well as arming and training the so called ‘Syrian opposition’, in specially designated camps.
It is not only Turkey’s present that is complex; it is also its past. Turkey harbors many grievances from the by-gone eras. Simultaneously, it is accused of inflicting pain on many in the region. There are hardly any simple answers to the historical questions.
One of the most burning and controversial ones is that of PKK and ‘the Kurdish issue’: are Kurds really the victims of Turkish discrimination, brutality and neglect? Or are they allies of the West, and themselves the perpetrators in the drive to fragment and destabilize the region, which includes the Turkish state (the case of pro-Western Iraqi Kurdistan is often quoted)? The common wisdom in the West is that the Kurds are victims, but talk to Left wing intellectuals and analysts in Istanbul or in the Middle East, and you will learn that the potential Great Kurdistan (with its seeds in Iraq) is nothing less than a sinister Western plot.
It is also true that the most dedicated fighters against Western imperialism are the secular generals, the high-ranking officers and intellectuals, many of them now imprisoned, most without any charges or trials.
Turkish reality is often paradoxical.
***
“The society should aim at the wellbeing of all its people. It is absurd to discriminate against citizens for being Kurdish, for being believers or non-believers, atheists or Islamists. These things should not matter and they take attention away from the real problems this country is facing: the issues, like the unbridled privatization of the national wealth of the country, the skyrocketing prices and the deteriorating conditions of the common people, as well as the Western imperialist interests in the region”, declares Sezer (even he prefers not to use his full name), a Turkish intellectual who believes in Turkish unity and who embraces the ideals of Kemal Ataturk, whose nationalist ideas as he says, never relied on the ethnic origin of the people, but instead on their citizenship; on belonging to the country.
No matter how noble his ideas, they appear to resonate in the mind of only a tiny minority of this fragmented nation. Sezer is expressing progressive, secular, urban views. But there is very little communication and understanding between the Turkish cities and the countryside, between the posh neighborhoods on the Bosporus and the humble dwellings of the have-nots, between those who wear headscarves and pray five times a day and those who are sipping wine in ridiculously overpriced and smart cafes, sitting cross-legged and wearing imported designer outfits.
The founding father of the Turkish state – Mustafa Kemal Ataturk – would probably find it difficult to fit into the nation he was trying so painstakingly to unite. No matter how secular his beliefs, it is unlikely that he would join that upper class, the Bosporus/Ferrari anti-Islamic choir.
But Ataturk would also certainly clash bitterly with the present government, which is combining religious practices with servitude to the West. In fact both camps would be reluctant to accept Ataturk for what he truly believed. In today’s world, his nationalism would be seen as inconvenient. Both sides – the Islamic government and the secular elites – are in two different ways collaborating with the West.
It is actually probable that, would he be living now, Ataturk would end up like many other brave Turkish opponents of Western imperialism, in jail.
Andre Vltchek is a novelist, filmmaker and investigative journalist. He covered wars and conflicts in dozens of countries. His book on Western imperialism in the South Pacific – Oceania – is published by Lulu . His provocative book about post-Suharto Indonesia and market-fundamentalist model is called “Indonesia – The Archipelago of Fear” and will be released by Pluto Publishing House in August 2012. After living for many years in Latin America and Oceania, Vltchek presently resides and works in East Asia and Africa. He can be reached through his website.
This article was first published at www.counterpunch.org
By ANDRE VLTCHEK
In many aspects, Turkey is much like Indonesia – on paper the country’s economic growth is truly impressive, but talk to the people, and they will tell you that the place is collapsing, becoming unlivable in, overpriced, and that daily life is now extremely brutal. In both countries, a big portion of the wealth disappears into the deep pockets of the super-rich ruling elites: to obnoxiously glitzy yacht docks and marinas dotted around Istanbul, and in the glitzy shopping malls of Jakarta.
There is suppressed anger and frustration on the streets of Istanbul. My good friend, a writer, had recently been injured in a public bus, as two buses raced through the narrow streets, with a total disregard for the passengers onboard. Last night I witnessed how a veiled woman was almost crushed by the doors of the metrobus; she begged and screamed to be released, whilst the driver obviously seemed to be enjoying her agony, and all in full view of the passengers. There were several people near the doors, but no one came to her rescue.
People don’t shout here, but they elbow each other, walk through each other, and often show absolute spite for their fellow citizens. There is generally a ‘bad mood’ everywhere at street level; there is an apparent diminishment of kindness, as well as something that could only be defined as, chronic fatigue.
Come as a tourist, to see the great ancient mosques and palaces, museums and traditional baths, and you will fall in love with the city in one instant. Live here for a while, and the chances are, that you will soon be exhausted and defeated.
Istanbul is a ferociously divided city. There is a clear distinction, between those who think that the greatest human right, is to be able to booze up in the open, at the tables placed right on the sidewalk, and between those who choose faith over worldly pleasures.
To be precise: the city is divided between those secular (and historically, although not of recent, governing) upper and middle classes, and their hated adversaries: the practicing Muslims of Turkey, the majority of the nation.
“Woman who wear headscarves have no brains”, a renowned Turkish author shouts at me, a woman, and needless to say, ‘a secular’ one. We are on the shores of the Bosporus, in a public place, at a café. People are looking at us and I feel embarrassed. There was no chance of even beginning to argue with her. She was having one of those Istanbul fits – a familiar outburst of: “I have no sympathy, no use for the Muslim religion. Have you ever read their Book?”
I did. And just a few days ago, I had the great pleasure of discussing the Book with the great British Muslim scholar, Ziauddin Sardan in London. I am better off keeping the fact to myself, for fear of being quartered, and my body parts thrown into the darkness of the legendary waterway dividing Europe, and Asia.
She is not the only person I know in Istanbul who has those moments. In ‘the City of Dreams’, to show spite for Islam and for practicing Muslims, is clearly some commonly used secret ‘password’ to the universe of what is acceptable here as brainy and hip.
As she speaks, a Ferrari is racing along the narrow road connecting two posh neighborhoods on the shores of the Bosporus – Arnavutköy and Bebek. It only slows down when confronted by the massive body of a public bus. If it could torpedo the bus, it would. Stripped of its muffler, the car is making an obnoxious roaring noise, frightening the seagulls, children and old passersby. The man driving it is definitely not a religious type: sporting a crew-cut, and a cool, bored Italian-actor-from-the 1960s look, with a woman sitting next to him, her hair flowing in the wind, wearing a sleeveless blouse, with designer glasses lifted up her forehead, and a cigarette between two slender fingers.
Turkey is segregated. In a way, it is more divided than either Israel or South Africa, before the collapse of apartheid. But you would never hear anyone talking about it here.
I have three books translated into, and published in the Turkish language; several of their television stations often interview me. I know many men and women in Istanbul. Some are secular, others are Muslim; but I never see them ‘mixing together’. Most of the secularists I know here, despise Islam; they make sure to demonstrate how Western, how pro-Western, how ‘European’ they are. In their eyes, being religious equates to being a degenerate, an idiot, and even ‘unpatriotic’.
Try to define Turkey as a Middle Eastern country, and you will lose all your friends and acquaintances in an instant.
The Muslim-bashers don’t hide their ideas: they actually advertise them; firing up each other in what to an outsider, may easily appear as bigotry.
Not once did my publisher, my fellow writers, acquaintances, or those pro-Western intellectuals ever invite out to dinner or a night out, someone who would happen to be a religious man or a woman. Not once in Istanbul did I have a chance to talk to a woman wearing a headscarf. Practicing Muslims are ‘un-people’ in all those ‘literary’ and ‘intellectual’ circles; they are not included, not talked to, not consulted. “One can learn nothing from them”, a ‘secular’ poet once told me in posh café overlooking the Bosporus.
To me all this is particularly shocking, because, for a big part of my life I live in Southeast Asia and in East Africa, in two places where people mix readily. In Malaysia, there could hardly be any party, or night out with friends, without people of different races and religions sitting at the same table. To be Malaysian is to be Malay, Chinese or Indian, Muslim or Buddhist or Hindu or secular. Of course even there it is not easy; it is not smooth, there are outbursts of intolerance, and even institutionalized discrimination, especially towards the Indian minority. But there is definitely no ‘segregation’. And if one attacks or puts down entire nationalities or religious beliefs, he or she is considered ‘uncool’ and very badly brought up. It would not be tolerated, especially in the company of educated people.
I have to repeat once again: I have only observed segregation such as that in Istanbul, in South Africa before the collapse of apartheid (and in some parts of the country after the collapse), in several parts of Israel and for different reasons, in Central Australia.
Secularists point fingers at Muslims, accusing the present religious Government of taking away their ‘sacred’ liberties (including, so often quoted, the right to booze up in full view of pedestrians).
But much more serious issues could be detected.
For instance, the West had been a determined sponsor of the present Turkish regime of Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan and President Abdullah Gul. There have been massive arrests and disappearances of many top Kemalist generals and intellectuals, including those who have been demanding that Turkey breaks up with the US political and military diktat, instead forging alliances in the east.
So here is the paradox that is hardly understood in the West, even amongst some well meaning and left leaning intellectuals: while promoting Islamic ideals, the present government is taking direct orders from the West, destroying anti-imperialist intellectuals and the top military brass.
While banning exposed drinking establishments and encouraging women to cover up, the present government is helping to train the Israeli air force within Turkish territory, as well as arming and training the so called ‘Syrian opposition’, in specially designated camps.
It is not only Turkey’s present that is complex; it is also its past. Turkey harbors many grievances from the by-gone eras. Simultaneously, it is accused of inflicting pain on many in the region. There are hardly any simple answers to the historical questions.
One of the most burning and controversial ones is that of PKK and ‘the Kurdish issue’: are Kurds really the victims of Turkish discrimination, brutality and neglect? Or are they allies of the West, and themselves the perpetrators in the drive to fragment and destabilize the region, which includes the Turkish state (the case of pro-Western Iraqi Kurdistan is often quoted)? The common wisdom in the West is that the Kurds are victims, but talk to Left wing intellectuals and analysts in Istanbul or in the Middle East, and you will learn that the potential Great Kurdistan (with its seeds in Iraq) is nothing less than a sinister Western plot.
It is also true that the most dedicated fighters against Western imperialism are the secular generals, the high-ranking officers and intellectuals, many of them now imprisoned, most without any charges or trials.
Turkish reality is often paradoxical.
***
“The society should aim at the wellbeing of all its people. It is absurd to discriminate against citizens for being Kurdish, for being believers or non-believers, atheists or Islamists. These things should not matter and they take attention away from the real problems this country is facing: the issues, like the unbridled privatization of the national wealth of the country, the skyrocketing prices and the deteriorating conditions of the common people, as well as the Western imperialist interests in the region”, declares Sezer (even he prefers not to use his full name), a Turkish intellectual who believes in Turkish unity and who embraces the ideals of Kemal Ataturk, whose nationalist ideas as he says, never relied on the ethnic origin of the people, but instead on their citizenship; on belonging to the country.
No matter how noble his ideas, they appear to resonate in the mind of only a tiny minority of this fragmented nation. Sezer is expressing progressive, secular, urban views. But there is very little communication and understanding between the Turkish cities and the countryside, between the posh neighborhoods on the Bosporus and the humble dwellings of the have-nots, between those who wear headscarves and pray five times a day and those who are sipping wine in ridiculously overpriced and smart cafes, sitting cross-legged and wearing imported designer outfits.
The founding father of the Turkish state – Mustafa Kemal Ataturk – would probably find it difficult to fit into the nation he was trying so painstakingly to unite. No matter how secular his beliefs, it is unlikely that he would join that upper class, the Bosporus/Ferrari anti-Islamic choir.
But Ataturk would also certainly clash bitterly with the present government, which is combining religious practices with servitude to the West. In fact both camps would be reluctant to accept Ataturk for what he truly believed. In today’s world, his nationalism would be seen as inconvenient. Both sides – the Islamic government and the secular elites – are in two different ways collaborating with the West.
It is actually probable that, would he be living now, Ataturk would end up like many other brave Turkish opponents of Western imperialism, in jail.
Andre Vltchek is a novelist, filmmaker and investigative journalist. He covered wars and conflicts in dozens of countries. His book on Western imperialism in the South Pacific – Oceania – is published by Lulu . His provocative book about post-Suharto Indonesia and market-fundamentalist model is called “Indonesia – The Archipelago of Fear” and will be released by Pluto Publishing House in August 2012. After living for many years in Latin America and Oceania, Vltchek presently resides and works in East Asia and Africa. He can be reached through his website.
This article was first published at www.counterpunch.org
LGE Features 2011
Just before the local government elections last year myself and a colleague look at some of the issues affecting various communities on the Cape Flats. Each feature looked at a different social issue...
Saturday, October 20, 2012
Minister in the Presidency Pays Tribute to Struggle Stalwart
Struggle veteran and ANC Stalwart, Johnny Issel was laid to rest yesteday after he passed away at Groote Schuur Hospital on Sunday. Johnny Issel (17 August 1946 – 23 January 2011) was one of the greatest organisers in our struggle against apartheid.
He was a student activist, a trade union and community organiser, one of the founders of Grassroots and the UDF in the Western Cape. VOC Current Affairs Producer and Breakfast Show host, Dorianne Arendse spoke to the Minister in the Presidency, Trevor Manuel about the legacy Issel left behind...
Tuesday, October 16, 2012
Gangs Evolving Says Expert
Gang violence on the Cape Flats is being driven by internal battles for control. This is according to policing specialist Eldred De Klerk, who put it down to leadership change, amalgamation and splintering in gangs as some of the main reasons for the ongoing volatility. Whilst on the surface, the recent lull in gang violence may seem positive, behind the scenes, it is most likely there could be a re-grouping inside the gang, which in most cases, was a catalyst for turf war. The phenomenon of gangsterism is an all-inclusive concept, but the scourge can be broken up into various sectors, such as gang-related crime and violence. Last week I had the opportunity to speak to De Klerk about the gang violence on the Cape Flats....
Please note that this interview was first broadcast on Voice of the Cape's Drivetime Show
Thursday, October 11, 2012
Metro Police VS SAPS
General Jeremy Veary has withdrawn his SAPS members from Operation Sisonke which was set to run for six months in Nyanga, Gugulethu, Athlone, Manenberg and Phillipi. In media reports this week General Veary was quoted as saying that the metro police should stick to law enforcement and leave the South African Police Service to handle serious crime. VOC Current Affairs Producer and Breakfast show host, Dorianne Arendse spoke to Alderman JP Smith, the Mayco membe for Safety and Security for more on this. Please note that we have contacted General Veary for comment on the story, however he indicated that he would only be able to speak to us in 3 days time as he has been booked off sick...
**This interview was first broadcast on Voice of the Cape's Breakfast show**
**This interview was first broadcast on Voice of the Cape's Breakfast show**
Wednesday, October 3, 2012
Charity in Motion aims to raise R300 000 for students in need
Teddy Govender, the Managing Director of Auric Auto Claremont is once again running 300km over the next 6 weeks to raise money for the Voice of the Cape Bursary Fund. Every weekday Govender will be running 10km's collecting as many pledges as donations as possible in a bid to raise R300 000.The corporate social investment initiative is a partnership between Auric Auto BMW Claremont and the radio station, aimed at raising funds for the VOC Bursary fund.
The annual community project aims to assist needy students with financial aid towards their tertiary education. Last year, Govender ran a daily distance of 10km, raking in R20 000 from the public’s pledges. In addition, Auric Auto donated R10 000 and R100 000 from the proceeds of the annual VOC Festival raised the total to R130 000. This meant twelve lucky students were given an opportunity to study this year.
The annual community project aims to assist needy students with financial aid towards their tertiary education. Last year, Govender ran a daily distance of 10km, raking in R20 000 from the public’s pledges. In addition, Auric Auto donated R10 000 and R100 000 from the proceeds of the annual VOC Festival raised the total to R130 000. This meant twelve lucky students were given an opportunity to study this year.
Saturday, September 22, 2012
Book Review: A Bantu in My Bathroom
Why are South Africans so uncomfortable with deep disagreement? Why do we lash out at people with opposing views without taking the time to engage logically with their arguments? These are some of the questions Eusebius McKaiser tackles in his book 'A Bantu in my Bathroom'.
McKaiser is on a mission to raise the level of debate in South Africa. He provokes us from our comfort zones and lures us into the debates that shape our opinions and our society. With surprising candour and intensely personal examples, McKaiser examines our deepest-felt prejudices and ingrained assumptions. Don’t expect to read this book and escape with your defences intact.
Immensely readable and completely engaging, McKaiser tackles deeply South African questions of race, sexuality and culture, including:
Can blacks be racist?
Why is our society so violent?
Is it morally okay to be prejudiced against skinny lovers?
Why is the presidential penis so problematic?
Is unconditional love ever a good thing?
Is it necessary to search for a national identity?
This week award winning journalist and host of Voice of the Cape's Drivetime show, Shafiq Morton chatted to Eusebius McKaiser about his book A Bantu in My Bathroom....
*This interview was first broadcast on VOC's Drivetime show*
McKaiser is on a mission to raise the level of debate in South Africa. He provokes us from our comfort zones and lures us into the debates that shape our opinions and our society. With surprising candour and intensely personal examples, McKaiser examines our deepest-felt prejudices and ingrained assumptions. Don’t expect to read this book and escape with your defences intact.
Immensely readable and completely engaging, McKaiser tackles deeply South African questions of race, sexuality and culture, including:
Can blacks be racist?
Why is our society so violent?
Is it morally okay to be prejudiced against skinny lovers?
Why is the presidential penis so problematic?
Is unconditional love ever a good thing?
Is it necessary to search for a national identity?
This week award winning journalist and host of Voice of the Cape's Drivetime show, Shafiq Morton chatted to Eusebius McKaiser about his book A Bantu in My Bathroom....
*This interview was first broadcast on VOC's Drivetime show*
Thursday, September 20, 2012
Samwu to embark on strike action
The South African Municipal Workers Union (SAMWU) announced this week that they will embark on industrial action in a few weeks time, after it emerged that the South African Local Government Associations (SALGA) dubious actions.
The spokesperson for SAMWU, Tahir Sema says they have learnt that SALGA has filed leave to appeal the wage curve victory the trade union secured. “We have learnt with dismay that SALGA has filed leave to appeal the wage curve victory to increase workers salary scales.
The judgement which SALGA wants to appeal was handed down by the Labour Court in Johannesburg. It brought to the fore the blatant dishonesty displayed by SALGA officials when dealing with municipal workers,” explained Sema.
The union said this kind of behavior by the employer body, SALGA is a waste of rate payer’s money, as the legal process could cost millions of Rands. “This is also tantamount to Union bashing and a complete disregard for the many men and women who serve in the Local Government sphere.
It is clear that the employer body knows very well that it would not win this issue in court but seeks instead to delay the process unnecessarily, which could easily lead to instability in the sector. It is also not unlikely that the current instability could quickly turn into a second Marikana tragedy,” adds Sema
In addition Samwu is calling on the ruling ANC to intervene in the dispute and ensure that SALGA, which is controlled by the ANC is ‘reigned in’ and abides by the labour court judgement awarded in the workers favour. “The wage curve judgment referred to above will pave the way for a proper wage structure to exist in the municipal sector, where jobs and associated salaries are properly graded.
This will ensure that many workers who for years have been underpaid will now receive the correct payment. The effect of the agreement is that payment will be backdated to September 2009,” said Sema.
The spokesperson for SAMWU, Tahir Sema says they have learnt that SALGA has filed leave to appeal the wage curve victory the trade union secured. “We have learnt with dismay that SALGA has filed leave to appeal the wage curve victory to increase workers salary scales.
The judgement which SALGA wants to appeal was handed down by the Labour Court in Johannesburg. It brought to the fore the blatant dishonesty displayed by SALGA officials when dealing with municipal workers,” explained Sema.
The union said this kind of behavior by the employer body, SALGA is a waste of rate payer’s money, as the legal process could cost millions of Rands. “This is also tantamount to Union bashing and a complete disregard for the many men and women who serve in the Local Government sphere.
It is clear that the employer body knows very well that it would not win this issue in court but seeks instead to delay the process unnecessarily, which could easily lead to instability in the sector. It is also not unlikely that the current instability could quickly turn into a second Marikana tragedy,” adds Sema
In addition Samwu is calling on the ruling ANC to intervene in the dispute and ensure that SALGA, which is controlled by the ANC is ‘reigned in’ and abides by the labour court judgement awarded in the workers favour. “The wage curve judgment referred to above will pave the way for a proper wage structure to exist in the municipal sector, where jobs and associated salaries are properly graded.
This will ensure that many workers who for years have been underpaid will now receive the correct payment. The effect of the agreement is that payment will be backdated to September 2009,” said Sema.
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