Poverty And Unemployment Remain The Enemy Of Workers

13 Days(s) Ago    👁 47
poverty and unemployment remain the enemy of workers

Alex Mashilo

April 27 marked the 30th anniversary of our first ever one-person one-vote elections without regard to race and gender. The oppressed and most exploited workers were no passive victims or bystanders in our liberation struggle that ended the apartheid regime. Missing this point could culminate in the fatalistic notion of expecting workers to be passive recipients of post-1994 development progress.

The working class fought in all the key sites of the struggle- the workplace, the community and the ideological terrain, among others, and in all its four pillars- mass mobilisation, underground organisation, the armed struggle and international isolation of the apartheid regime.

In 1922, a year after its founding, the Communist Party faced a contradiction. White mineworkers in the Witwatersrand went out on strikes in a confrontation with the mining capital. However, their demands included racist content. Some from within the strike racially distorted the Marxist slogan, Workers of the world, unite. Workers of the world unite for a white South Africa, they said. To resolve the contradiction, the Communist Party condemned the racist demands and slogans and called for worker non-racial unity to take forward the legitimate struggle against exploitation.

The colonial state sided with the racist workers. Under the laws it passed, black workers were not recognised as employees. This was coupled with the oppressed workers being deprived of workers rights, including the right to organise into a trade union and take part in collective bargaining.

The racially oppressed workers had t o fight to achieve legal recognition and labour rights. They organised illegally, defying the racist laws. Bit by bit the workers, supported by the Communist Party, realised progress. The party, whose leaders and members played a key role in the 1946 African Mineworkers Strike, subsequently faced a ban by the apartheid regime in 1950. In response, it reconstituted itself underground and continued to play an active role in the pursuit of non-racial workers struggles.

While the workers achieved progress in workplace struggles, this remained limited before 1994 as the apartheid regime prevailed. The workers had connected the workplace and broader political struggles. During the transition in the 1990s, the working class ensured that workers rights without regard to race and gender were enshrined in our countrys constitution and labour law. The working class also focused on broader human rights and women, children, socio-economic and political rights, shaping the democratic state make-up and contesting policy direction.

In celebrating May Day this year, the working class will be celebrating its contribution to end apartheid, and to the progress that millions of our people realised during the 30 years of our democratic dispensation.

The progressive labour legislation that workers have realised has empowered them to confront unfair labour practices, participate in workplace skills development and benefit from employment equity. This has contributed to improved working and living conditions. In addition, workers achievements include the national minimum wage.

The ANC-led government, with the ANC in alliance with the Communist Party and the progressive trade union movement, has provided over five million serviced stands or brick-and-mortar houses, in the main, for free of charge, benefitting more than 17 million working-class people.

Over 82% of households in South Africa gained access to piped water either inside or outside their dwellings, according to Statistics South Africa census 2022. The distribution of households that use a flush toilet has increased, from a racially skewed low base before 1994, to approximately 71% in 2022.

Household electrification expansion has covered the formerly oppressed excluded by successive racially oppressive regimes for a hundred years from 1894 to 1994. Households using electricity as the main source of energy, at least for lighting, have increased to approximately 95%.

The National Student Financial Aid Scheme (NSFAS) has funded over five million students. After establishing the NSFAS, the government expanded it to cover college students, commendably contributing to the provision of free education through bursaries.

Healthcare expansion, including free healthcare for pregnant women and the elderly, among others, as well as HIV treatment, is also an important achievement. The governments HIV programme has increased testing, leading to 79% of those who know their status receiving treatment and 93% of them being virally suppressed. This turned the tide against falling life expectancy.

Nearly 19 million people receive social grants. By the end of March 2023, 8.5 million unemployed people received the Social Relief of Distress Grant, bringing the total number of people who received social grants to over 26 million.<