Portland Observer South Africa: Behind the uprisings by J e u tfe r D eri» On June 16th South African police fired into a peaceful demonatratton by proteat ing students in Soweto - a totally aegre gated Black area 14 mile« outside Johan neaburg During the following weeka. vi olent confrontations shook many of the ghettos in the Witwatersrand triangle, which encloaea the largest single concen­ tration of industriea and coal and gold mining in South Arica. Violence flared also in distant country areas, involving students in at least three widely separat ed Bantustans, as the reservations (re­ serves) assigned to Africans are called. The official death toll was 170, two white, 168 Black. Africans on the scene reported 1.000 killed and many more wounded, beaten and arrested. The immediate spark that fired the explosions was Black student opposition to the use of Africans in the teaching of history and mathematics. Afrikaan, the language of the ruling white Nationalist Party, is identified as the language of the oppressor, and the Government has al­ ways had great difficulty in forcing A fri­ cans to accept iL But using it in the schools is onl^ a symbol of the whole system of “Bantu education" which has been a focus of Black resistance every since its introduction in 1963. In turn Bantu education is only one element in the complex apartheid system that has been constructed to produce white privilege at the cost of Black dis­ possession. Press reports have consistently refer ed to the June events as riots led by "tsotis" - young hooligans - with the implication that they are aimply isolated eruptions of mindless, directionless vio- ence. It would be more accurate to see them as part of s new phase in the African struggle for liberation, a penod of increasing militancy and resistance af­ ter a long lull. There has been African resistance ‘to white conquest and approp­ riation of wealth and power since the beginning of colonization 900 years ago. The brutal repression of the poat-Sharp- enville 1960's, the banning of Black politi­ cal organization, and the arrest and/or exile of Black leaders slowed the process; now it is growing again and with rapidly increasing momentum. There have been many signs of new moves towards active struggle - a dra­ matic wave of strikes among the African workers, the formation of a Black student organization (SASO) firmly dedicated to bringing about radical political change', and a growing number of political trials of so called terrorists. Almost 1.5 million Africans live in So­ weto (South Western Township), an area artificially created in the 1950's by the forcing of thousands of Black families from their homes in segregated enclaves (PNS) "People outside the Caribbean may think of us as living in some Garden of Eden." says Jamaican artist and schol ar Rex Ncttleford. “but we are not a primitive or innocent people. Innocence left us when the first slsve reached this land." Nettleford was a key organizer in the recent Caribbean Festival of the Arts (Carifesta “76) in Kingston, an eleven-day spectacular that gathered thousands of artists, performers, writers and others from across the Caribbean to “convince ourselves thaTwe are a people capable of culture". In Jamaica as throughout the Carib­ bean. the search lor stability through national and regional identity is emerging against a backdrop of political turmoil and cultural division that Nttleford com­ pares to America's own post independ­ ence ferment As more Caribbean natins become po^ litically independent - many still remain colonized ar. like Jamaica, have achieved independence only within the past fifteen years - they face enormous economic, linguistic and even psychological barriers to genuine independence. The Caribbean's colonial heritage is the chief hurdle. "We must reshape our social order and Put our own people at the center," says Nettleford. It will be a difficult task, involving whst people here call "nation building" - forgoing dependence on others and look ing more to the present and future than to the past. Celeaial Legacy The history of colonialism in the Carib­ bean, which began with the arrival of Columbus nearly 500 years ago, has not been a noble one. Around 12 million native Indians were exterminated in the Caribbean region in a mere forty years after the Spaniards came, according to a Spanish priest of the era named Bartholomew de las Casas. In Jsmaica snd Puerto Rico alone, the na­ tive populations of 300,000 were reduced to s few hundred. Of the some 25 million people who now live in the Caribbean region - which extends 2,000 miles from the Bahamas off Paga 9 Inside Africa _ inside the “white” city to what was seen as a less threatening location 16 miles away. The ghetto was deliberately built to be easily isolated and controlled - placed in an open flat area (easily access ible to planes snd helicopters), circled by a ring of roads, with few major exits. As a place to live, Soweto is both a product and a victim of the apartheid system. It has an official population of 800,000 but an actual population of close to 1.6 million. The difference is accounted for by over half a million men, women and children who live, work and hide illegally in the area. It is this whole system that thousands are rebelling against when they take to the streets. Immediate targets for their anger are the offices of the Bantu Admin istration Boards, many of which have been burned, thereby destroying the rec­ ords by which their lives are so merci lessly controlled. The Liquor stores and bars, all owned by that board, were also attacked, as were other symbols of the white government. But it was the police, not the people, who unleashed uncontrol led brutal violence. Outside the segre­ gated morgue in Johannesburg, one week after the first shootings, John Burns of the New York Times talked with a Sow­ eto undertaker, waiting with some fami­ lies who had come to seek out their dead. He described three of the bodies he was preparing for burial as those of children ■8®<1 12. 13. and 16. The militancy which has finally erupted in Soweto proved to be a nationwide phenomenon. July and August saw the growth of a continuous series of actions all over South Africa in towns. Black universities, urban and rural communi­ ties Thousands are now in jail, including children as young as nine years held under brutal security regulations which allow for indefinite detention in solitary confinement, with no trial or right of access to lawyer, family, or friend. We are witnessing a new crucial stage- of the liberation struggle in South Africa. (Editor's Note: Jennifer Davis, Research Director of the Africa Fund, is s political exile from South Africa. The above is adapted from an article by Ms. Davis which appeared in the July 19, 1976 issue of Christianity A Crisis The full text is available from the American Committee on Africa, 305 East 46th Street, New York, NY 10017, on receipt of a self addressed stamped envelope. An exten­ sive list of reading materials on southern Africa will be included. The American Committee on Africa, founded in 1953 to oppose apartheid, has since been active in the support of independence and libera­ tion movements throughout Africa.) Jamaica seeks cultural roots by Shepherd Bliss Tfcareday, September 9th. 197« the coast of Florida to Guyana on the of the Caribbean movement for "total northern tip of South America - most are independence” from its colonial legacy. of African descent, brought as slaves. Though Jamaica won its political inde­ But ethnic diversity is considerable: pendence” from England in 1962, colonial along with the Blacks are native Amer­ vestiges are still apparent: cars ride on indians, some Chinese, Indians brought the left side of the road, an English from India as indentured servants, a few governor is titular head of state, Jamaica Europeans and a sprinkling of other na­ remains in the British Commonwealth. tionalities. With two million inhabitants it is the Languages are nearly as diverse: Eng­ largest of the Caribbean's English speak­ lish, Spanish, French, Dutch and numer­ ing nations. ous local dialects, producing gulfs be­ But while the U.S. is its main trading tween island neighbors infinitely wider partner, Jamaica is now seeking active than the turquoise tropical waters. ties with other non-aligned Third World The colonial economic order was based countries in an effort to achieve more on the “plantation system" - first with favorable trade relations with the devel­ slaves under masters, later with inden­ oped world. tured servants and low-wage workers “Developed countries export their garnering and processing for export the manufactured goods to us in exchange for region's raw materials: bananas, sugar, our raw materials,” says Finance Minis­ oil, rum and bauxite. ter David Coore. “But they determine the Now, the region faces what Jamaican price in both cases. We pay for manu­ Prime Minister Michael Manley terms factured goods on the basis of the stan­ the "Caribbean dilemma" - the economic dard of living in the developed world and consequences of colonialism: “internal must sell at a price which determines our lower standard of living. Only by the economic imbalance, external economic disadvantage and foreign economic con­ united action of Third World countries trol . . . with all the legacies of poverty can we change this." that remain and are yet to be defeated." Jamaica in recent years has turned to I t is the material flaw in the tropical what it calk “democratic socialism". Ac­ paradise image. cording to Coore, “This means parlia­ But of all the colonial legacies perhaps mentary democracy, but we go further. the most difficult to overcome is the least We see a country as democratic when the visible. “Our deepest problem is psycho­ majority has a say in the development of logical", says Manley. “The enslavement the society in ways other than with the of the body which endured until 1838 was vote." as nothing to the enslavement of the mind Concentration of wealth in the hands of which has persisted since." a few, says Coore, is not consistent with And according to Guyana writer Yan such a democratic society; he advocates Carew, “To rob people of thier names and land reform, regulation of excessive prof­ countries was to set in motion a perma­ its, and worker participation in industrial nent psychological distortion." and agricultural pknning. Now, increased pride is emerging in But “we do not want the state to be­ the Caribbean toward its African heri­ come the effectual owner of the means of tage. The perspective of Haitian poet production," Coore says (what he calk Rene Depestre, speaking in Jamaica at Carifesta “76, offers a distinctly Carib­ bean view of Cuba's Angola involvement: “The Cuban troops took the reverse route of our exile", he said. “For the first time in the history of Africa and America, an African nation saw boats coming from the Caribbean. On board were a people who were bringing armed good news." “state capitalism"). “Nor do we want' comriunkiu." After winning an overwhelming elec­ toral victory in 1972, the Manley govern­ ment has jo t had a smooth course. “We get criticized by both the extreme left saying we are going too slow and rtnhrn saying we will soon end up in chaos or communism", says Coore. Meanwhile, there is much talk in Jam­ aica about U.S. involvement in the Chile­ an coup of 1973, with fears of similar destabilization here. “By Miking steps like pkeing a levy on bauxite we have made some powerful enemies," says Coore. “But no country can be destabilized unless the internal condition for such destabilizaion exkts.” Since June 19th Jamaica has been in a state of emergency declared by the gov­ ernment, designed to reduce the political violence that took the lives of 163 Ja­ maicans in the first half of th k year. The state of emergency has seen the arrest and detention of important leaders of the opposition Jamaica Labor Party, whom Manley’s People’s National Party government accuses of instigating vio­ lence. The state of emergency is set to last another five months and the government has until next February to call for elec­ tions. The critical political question now fac­ ing Jamaica, according to Coore, k whether a Third World developing coun­ try can operate a multiparty democratic system and survive. "We believe we can,” Coore says, “but it’s not easy. So many of the Third World countries have opted out of the demo­ cratic system because of the danger it presents to nation-building in a small, poor country, subject to many internal and external pressures." laereaeed U 8 leaaa for South Africa N EW YORK (P N S /A N ) - U.S. and other international banks are increasing their volume of loans to South Africa, despite that country's rising racial ten­ sions and economic problems. U.S. banks and their foreign subsidiaries have al ready extended over $350 million worth of loans to South Arican state owned cor porations and projects, including Trans kei, a Bkck “homeland" scheduled for independence next month. The loans to South Africa's government will at least partially oil set a dramatic drop in direct foreign investment in the country's pri­ vate sector reported by Johannesburg’s Nedsual Bank. Among the major U.S. banks partici­ pating in the lending are Chase Manhat­ tan, Citibank, Manufactureres Hanover, Morgan Guaranty and Barckys Interna tional. Because of the increase lending activity, U.S. and international financiers are gaining an important position in the South African economy that may give them additional leverage on the govern­ ment's racial policies. N ew Zimbabwe splinter repudiated SALISBURY. R H O DESIA - Forma tion of a new party of Zimbabwean (Rho­ desian) nationalists has sparked suspic- kns here that “political opportunkts and confidence tricksters" are attempting to undermine further the already splintered nationalkt movement against the white minority government of Ian Smith. The Reverend Thompson Tirivari announced in Salkbury that he had been elected chairman of the new Zimbabwe Reformed African National Council (ZRANC), and that Robert Mugabe, exiled in Mozam­ bique, was named president. However, Mugabe, a well known nationalkt leader with close ties to the guerrilk army, said the “new party k a complete surprise”. He charged that ZRANC k proposing a strategy of compromise with the white minority government on conditions un­ acceptable to the guerrillas. Meanwhile, a BBC correspondent’s description of the Reverend Tirivari and others in the r.ew party as “political non-entities” has set off specuktion as to who k actually behind the ZRANC. South African riots hncked to gold prices P R E TO R IA - Persistent rijts and strikes by South African workers are giving rise to official concern here that revolution may come from forces within the country, rather than from guerrilk attacks form neighboring Bkck nations. P reto rk’s defense strategy has been pre­ pared for the k tte r possibility, but the threat of internal revolt has not been regarded as serious until now. Charles Simkins, a Capetown Univer sity researcher, estimates Bkck unem­ ployment is now around 20 per cent, or two million of the Bkck kbor force. Of ficials are worried that the figure could rise drastically if international gold prices continue to drop, forcing reductions in mining, where many Blacks are employ ed. Every ten-dolkr drop inprices means an annual loss of about $238 million in South Africa’s foreign exchange, as well as reduced production and employment. Meanwhile, economkts predict a long recession in South Africa complicated by further declines in gold prices and an inability to attract foreign capital for pri­ vate investment These factors, combined with the government's recent curbs the Balck trade union movement will likely escalate rack! tensions. N e African lenders at Transkei Independence JOHANNESBURG - The only Bkck African leader prepared to attend the independence ceremonies for South A fri­ ca's Transkei next month has been re­ jected by South Africa because of hk “poor international reputation”. The gov­ ernment has informed Central African Republic President Marshal Bokassa, who indicated that he would attend the October 26th ceremonies, that he is not welcome. Bokassa was the only Bkck African leader to ingore the decision by the Organization of African Unity not to recognize the Transkei's independence. Ruler of one of the world’s poorest coun­ tries, he has recently strengthened his nation’s economic links with South A f­ rica, which k building a hotel in the Republic's capital of Banqui. East African community «-m — N A IR O B I, K E N Y A -- The nine year old East African Community (EAC) - a com­ mon market and economic federation of Kenya, Tanzank and Uganda - has suf­ fered permanent and perhaps terminal damage as a result of the near war be­ tween Uganda and Kenya. Though the two nations have agreed to normalize rektions, lingering tensions between the governments and stark economic differ­ ences make the once-bright future of the EAC bleak, at best. Tanzank's socialist strategy has conflicted with Kenya’s commitment to a free market system, and the erratic leadership of Idi Amin h«« nearly bankrupted Uganda. T » n 7» n i . h . . pulled out of the Harbors and Railway Corp., Kenya has threatened to abandon the East African Railway in k v o r of national networks, and Uganda has al­ ready established its own national airline apart from the Community's East African Airways. Meanwhile, EAC employees are being expatriated to their home coun­ tries. 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