Southern African Implications of Marikana Mine Shooting Tragedy
By Takura Zhangazha *
The tragic and fatal shooting of 34 mineworkers in South Africa has sadly brought
back memories of the violence of the apartheid years. And because
memories of apartheid are not only limited to South Africa, the killing
fields of Marikana must also be viewed as part of the Southern African
narrative of repression, violence and the historical de-humanisation of
the African. And this, even in the aftermath of the liberation of
the continent from colonial and settler minority rule. This point on its
own is a controversial but necessary one. The reason why it must be
raised is because parts of the Southern African media debate in the tragic aftermath of these shootings has mistakenly centered around the assumed failures of the leadership of the African
National Congress (ANC) as well as general derision of South African
'exceptionalism' on human rights observation in the region.
Some debates have gone so far as to argue that had such a tragedy
occurred on Zimbabwean soil, there perhaps may have been an immediate
invoking of the Responsibility to Protect liberal intervention doctrine that has
been used in parts of North and West Africa in 2012. That too is an
argument that misses the meaning and full implications of the dreadful
shooting of the miners. In other circles, others are arguing (including
some South African labour unions) that because the Marikana miners
actions are said to have led to the murder of at least two police
officers and that the strikers were also armed, the South African police were
acting in self defence. That is an even more controversial argument but
one that still skirts the serious meaning of the Marikana shooting
tragedy.
In fact, there must now be a distinction that is made between
the tragic event as it occurred and the broader and much more important
underlying causes to these most unfortunate of incidences. If not for just this one tragic event but also in order to prevent further such from occurring again. I am sure for
the nation of South Africa, this may be a task for the Commission that
has been established by President Jacob Zuma.
For Southern African
citizens this tragedy however must be viewed with the utmost seriousness
and examination of our collective regional history as it relates to mining operations, the
de-humanisation of migrant labour and finally the emergence of new
resource extraction oligarchies that are generally acting in collusion with many of our
governments in the region to extract/mine without attendant democratic socio-economic accountability. In effect, such an analysis, given the unaccountable state
of affairs in mining and resource extraction in most (if not all) of
Southern Africa, a 'Marikana' can unfortunately occur anywhere else in
the region, if it has not silently occurred in worse formats in
countries such as Angola and the Democratic Republic of the Congo. This
is before we even begin to discuss the processes that are unfolding in
Tanzania and Mozambique over gas, coal and potential oil discoveries by
international mining companies.
It is therefore of importance that we see the
borderline heinous shooting of striking miners in South Africa as a
tragic but now necessary wake-up call for all of us to reflect on how
issues of mining and mineral wealth discoveries are being handled by our own
governments and the regional body SADC. In doing so, we must however,
unlike most of our governments, place emphasis on the necessity of prioritizing the people's welfare and above all, tackling with finality, the repressive legacy of colonial mineral and labour extraction in our post-independence
societies. This would entail a reflection on how initially most of the
workers at big or small mines were mainly migrant as well as chibaro
(forced labour) recruits from across the entirety of the Southern
African region. We must also examine whether it is the same 'colonial' frameworks and
attitudes that inform the structure, function and profit of our contemporary mines.
Questions such as to what extent do most mines or extractive mineral
operations retain the structure of the oppressive colonial past and the extent to which our contemporary leaders are acting as 'replacements' for
colonial governments will be critical for such an appraisal.
Further still, we must begin to examine the entirety of the Marikana
tragedy, not only from the purview of the state (inclusive of the South African Police Service) but from its most 'human
rights' and 'humanity' related angle. This would be from the point of
view of the mine workers, their families and their socio-economic
circumstances. This not only for South Africa but for the entirety of
the region. In this there should be no exceptionalism. Whether one is
discussing the controversial diamond mines in Eastern Zimbabwe or the
revived copper mines in Zambia, a key question must resonate, 'where in
this do we find the people's socio-economic rights?' Even if the
investor appears to make the central or provincial governments in our
respective countries happy, we must measure whether there is no
deliberate elite cohesion in extractive wealth accumulation for the few
at the expense of the poor majority.
As it is, the lessons of Marikana may appear specific to socio-economic
and political developments in South Africa. Some may have even chosen to
view them in relation to the internal politics of the ANC as well in
order to falsely claim that all 'African' politics remain the same. The
truth of the matter is, Marikana is indicative of a continually emerging
and re-emerging Southern African problem around resource extraction,
elite collusion against workers and families and in the same process, an
active lack of democratic frameworks around resource extraction in the
region.
*Takura Zhangazha writes here in his personal capacity (takura-zhangazha.blogspot.com)
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ReplyDelete34 shot by the Police in a violent confrontation between the Police and a horde of advancing panga wielding, gun shooting protesters...this after the protesting miners burnt to death 2 security guards inside a vehicle, hacked to death a policeman in uniform and shot another before dispossessing of both of their weapons. During the nights of violent orgy by the protesters, 6 workers accused of selling out were callously murdered. This is how the total number of dead following the infantile disorder arrived at 44. A real spectre of the working class.
ReplyDeleteThank you Afri-Indaba, the points are duly noted and corrected.
ReplyDeleteHuman life is never profane but sacred, the shootings seem to send a message that the state at one moment can try to speak from an oxymoron position of "justifiable" and/or "non-justifiable" shootings. There are numerous propositions of handling riotous situations from the state's side but shooting is not one of them... above all trade unionism and collective bargaining is a constitutional right in that republic as well as the bulk of SADC nations. To commission or not to commission investigations, one thing that must be underlined is that the state should fully account for the loss of these lives and showcase modalities of ensuring that the citizens will not be shoot again.
ReplyDeletetrue that Rebels Word... true that...the Commission may end up papering over the cracks and targeting the unions for blame
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