Saturday, April 12, 2014

Full text of the statement No. 35 of December 15, 1989 The evolution of South Africa, as we can per


1976 Soweto uprising Content article: Apartheid, a system ufpc of capitalist exploitation - The industrialization of the 60s and 70s - The ANC and the Black Consciousness-1973: the emergence of the working class on the stage social and political - 1976: Soweto - From 1979: the rise of workers' struggles and the unions - 1984/1986: two years of mass struggles - Elections-trigger rioting miners enter the fight - Following the extension movement, the South African bourgeoisie is concerned - 1985: the whole country in turmoil - July 1985: the state of emergency does not mean that the fight extends - The ANC: a radical nationalist politics but opposite the power of the masses - To abandon apartheid without changing anything essential, the regime and the bourgeoisie will they find the means necessary? - The working class and its unions very much alive - The regime and the bourgeoisie in search of interlocutors - The ANC in favor of a negotiated settlement with the regime - the working class she will play the role that should be hers. 2012 miners ufpc Marikana More than 20 years after the end of apartheid ufpc it is interesting to read this analysis 89 which illuminates many of the problems of South Africa today ... hope that readers eager to internet take the time to dwell on this statement may seem long but soon becomes exciting some attention
Full text of the statement No. 35 of December 15, 1989 The evolution of South Africa, as we can perceive today in Europe, seems contradictory. On one side are signs that seem to indicate the acceptance by the regime itself a change, there is some time, would have been considered unthinkable.
And the recent release of most of the historical leaders of the ANC, after 25 years in jail and prison. And acceptance of the independence of Namibia, the South Africa occupied for 70 years and where she lived a true colonial war for 20 years.
So even the recent official meeting - the second of its kind in six months - between the head of state, Frederic De Klerk (who succeeded Pieter Botha), and Nelson Mandela, the last of ANC leaders still in prison . On the other hand, apartheid - this monstrous racist system - is still in place and does not seem to move. Because small concessions which have been made: desegregation recent tracks or transport links were still reserved for whites only, constitution of some residential areas now open to all so-called races, seem to pale in light of the remains, deprivation ufpc of political rights, and enforced in special zones for all non-white homes. While we are on the verge of seeing the collapse of apartheid, after a struggle of oppressed black, made of strikes and riots, also made of thousands of deaths, a struggle that has hardly ceased since it took over 15 years ago, in 1973? Or the system does it a few concessions to the intention to better reflect the essential and the struggle of the oppressed it is still far from its end as his victory? Apartheid, a system of capitalist exploitation When, in 1910, the Union of South Africa was born of the newfound peace between English colonists and colonizers Afrikaner, the country was already a capitalist nation. The first laws of the Union of South Africa were laws that prolonged segregation inherited from colonialism. Whites appropriated 87% of the country ufpc while the rest had black in the less fertile regions of course. The accidents of history gave to South Africa this feature that was in the same country the colonial white society and black colonized world, the metropolis and the colony no longer thousands of kilometers away, but nested in the same territory. And what happened in all the countries of Europe in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, the fact that the working class metropolitan country has achieved an improvement of their living conditions due to the overexploitation of colonized peoples in South Africa took a particular turn. The leaders of the South African labor movement, like the labor bureaucracies of Europe, made themselves the defenders of their corporate interests by refusing any alliance ufpc in the struggle with black workers. And political corruption officers or

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