Wednesday, February 04, 2009

Fears of pre-poll violence resurface

Get out your barf buckets. Listen to this porker from Carl-Imafuckwad-Niehaus: "ANC national spokesman Carl Niehaus said in a statement that the party had never used violence in the past, and "did not need to so in the 2009 elections." Blehhhggg....

As campaigning for South Africa's general elections starts in earnest, fears of violence have resurfaced in the east-coast province of KwaZulu-Natal.

The province is run by the African National Congress (ANC), who won it from the Inkatha Freedom Party (IFP) by a slim majority in the previous elections in 2004. Bitter feuding between the two parties in the 1980s and early 1990s left thousands of people dead.

Violence erupted on Sunday 1 February when the ANC decided to hold a rally in Nongoma, an IFP stronghold in northern KwaZulu-Natal, on the same day and in the same place as its political rival. Three ANC members were shot and injured and there were clashes between IFP supporters and the police.

The IFP's national organiser, Albert Mncwango, said the ANC had "provoked IFP supporters" by the timing of its rally. The ANC denied the allegations.

In a statement the ANC said it was asserting its democratic right to campaign and evoked the right to "freedom of speech, press and association" enshrined in the constitution. Independent violence monitor Mary de Haas warned that "violence could get worse", as the "stakes were high in these elections."

Jo-Ann Downs, leader of the opposition African Christian Democratic Party, commented: "There are real fears that the level of violence might build up closer to the elections."

Part of the reason for an increase in political temperature has been a split in the ANC after it decided to oust Thabo Mbeki from the leadership of the party late last year, leading to the formation of the Congress of the People (COPE). "This will undermine ANC's support base in the province," said de Haas.

The leadership of the ANC is in the hands of Jacob Zuma, a Zulu, which is widely regarded by analysts and opposition parties as a threat to the IFP's attempts to reclaim the province. The IFP's heartland is mainly in rural KwaZulu-Natal controlled by traditional Zulu leaders. "Zuma's support base cuts across party lines in KwaZulu-Natal," noted Aubrey Matshiqi, a political analyst.

The IFP is keen on winning total control of the province, its sole political stronghold in the country. After the first democratic elections in 1994 it had to settle for running the province jointly with the ANC to maintain peace until elections in 2004.

Lots of guns
"There has always been a high level of intimidation in the rural areas and the province is awash with guns, and with thugs and warlords in both parties, anything can happen," said de Haas. "But it will not probably escalate to the pre-1990s level."

The Independent Electoral Commission (IEC) has condemned the violence, saying in a statement that it was "dismayed by the signs of disregard for the freedom of association and the right to assemble for political campaigning" in KwaZulu-Natal.

Any party should have the right to hold rallies in a democracy; perhaps "we are still a growing democracy and we have not reached that level of tolerance and maturity," said Matshiqi.

Political parties across the ideological spectrum in KwaZulu-Natal have their hopes pinned on peace. "I think it is just a bit of huffing and puffing before the elections and peace will prevail during the elections," said Tino Volker, a former New National Party member, who until recently was the longest-serving legislator in the province.

Neither of the parties wants a rerun of the pre-1990s. "We don't want to slip back to that," said Mncwango.

ANC national spokesman Carl Niehaus said in a statement that the party had never used violence in the past, and "did not need to so in the 2009 elections."

4 Opinion(s):

Anonymous said...

Dobe,
Could you please stop that Zulu from singing "Hoe ry die boere...." every time one opens your webpage, refresh, or return to the main page after reading comments?

Doberman said...

Sorry. It is on auto-run (not by my doing) but will disappear once the post moves from the front page.

Anonymous said...

I quite like that Zulu. He's one of the nicer ones.

Anonymous said...

Remember this? The quota system has turned out to be an absolute disaster as predicted. Buthelezi recommended that employers hiring foreigners pay a levy, which was kicked out by Frene Ginwala as being a money bill, and therefore not within his mandate to propose. Buthelezi threatened to take Ginwala to the Constitutional Court as his own counsel was of the opinion that the levy was not a money bill. Mbeki then kicked Buthelezi out of office, something he had been itching to do for years.

It's all academic now as the Department of Home Affairs is a total stuff up and anyone can get into the country, but they are not likely to get work without paying massive bribes to corrupt Home Affairs officials. It would have been better to have employers hiring immigrants to pay the levies to Home Affairs to finance a more transparent and accountable way of doing business.

Buthelezi slams quota system
23/05/2002 17:13 - (SA)

Cape Town - Home Affairs Minister Mangosuthu Buthelezi on Thursday warned that the quota system, proposed in the controversial Immigration Bill, was the worst possible option for processing work permits.

Buthelezi assured delegates that the department would try make the system work for as long as it was the law of the land, but warned that it would be difficult and expensive to implement.

"In my opinion, it is by far the worst possible option in terms of difficulty of implementation and because of the procedures it requires...

"It is going to be difficult, but we will leave no stone unturned to try to make it work to the best of our capacity." The department had not considered this system as an option after it was ruled out almost completely at the outset of the Green Paper process.