My dear
friends and fellow South Africans,
Come election
time, the ruling party periodically engages in a
curious exercise. As it launches its election
campaign, the ANC expresses an ardent desire for a
merger or, as the ANC President Mr Jacob Zuma
devoutly put it when addressing believers at the
Twelve Apostles Church in Emgababa last year, for a
"marriage" with the IFP. Whatever the motives of the
ruling party, these regular overtures inevitably
ignite a debate about reconciliation. One must, as I
do, draw a clear dividing line between the notions
of reconciliation, peace (which, I would argue, is
more than the mere absence of violence) and
hegemony.
Then again
last Saturday, Mr Zuma returned to his theme in an
address to the General Council of the ANC in
KwaZulu-Natal. He said, in apparently unscripted
remarks, "I had a meeting with Prince Buthelezi just
before the elections to talk about tolerance between
members of our parties. I also mentioned the
issue of uniting our parties and we agreed we should
talk about it after the elections. I was
unable to pursue the matter after the elections
because I was busy forming the government. I am
about to finish and we will start again".
Two weeks
ago, 27 June, at a birthday dinner for Mr Joe
Matthews, I sat next to the Deputy President who
also holds the same office in the ruling-party. He
mentioned too that the ANC had a discussion with the
Secretary-General of the IFP, Reverend Musa Zondi,
about talks on reconciliation between the two
parties based on a proposal by the late Mr Cleopas
Nsibande.
The Deputy
President said every Monday they would find Mr
Nisbande already at Luthuli House and he would
always ask what progress had been made. The Deputy
President then told me that he and Reverend Zondi
had agreed that such talks need to take place not at
the level of the respective organisation's
Presidents, but a lower level.
After the
dreadful period of the "black on black" violence, we
have gone through the stage of the Government of
National Unity in which the IFP participated in a
coalition government in terms prescribed by the
interim constitution until 1999.
In 1999,
President Thabo Mbeki decided that the IFP should
continue to participate with the ANC in the
government even though it was no longer prescribed
by the Constitution after the provisions of the
interim constitution lapsed.
The two
parties also worked together in a coalition
government in KwaZulu-Natal where the IFP enjoyed an
outright majority from 1994-99 and again from
1999-2004 when the IFP was the largest party in the
provincial legislature. After the 2004 election, the
ANC emerged as the largest party and decided to end
the coalition arrangement, and mandated that the
government was an ANC-led one in which the IFP MECs
were invited to participate by the grace of the ANC.
But in the provincial government, the ANC was not
honest with the IFP.
When Inkosi
Mhlabunzima Hlengwa, who was IFP, passed away,
Premier Ndebele replaced him, without any
consultation with the IFP, with Mrs Johnson, a
member of the ANC. Later, when Mr Narend Singh
resigned, the Premier again replaced him with an ANC
member without any consultation with the IFP.
A few months
later Premier Ndebele removed the only two MECs who
were still in his Government, Inkosi Nyanga Ngubane
and Mr Blessed Gwala.
This was also
without any consultation with the IFP.
So the
experiment of working together in government in
KwaZulu Natal was a dismal failure. It was difficult
as even during the Coalition period ANC MECs did
their damnedest to undermine whatever proposal of
governing the IFP Premier proposed.
A glaring
example is that of the Constitutional Court case
concerning Nevirapine, a medication that pregnant
mothers who are HIV positive take in order to
prevent their unborn babies being born already
infected with HIV. The IFP worked to supply this to
pregnant mothers.
The ANC at
both provincial and national government level did
not want to supply Nevirpine to pregnant mothers. So
we instructed the IFP Premier to join the Treatment
Action Campaign who were taking this issue of
Nevirapine to the Constitutional Court.
Dr Zweli
Mkhize, who was an MEC serving under the IFP Premier
Dr Lionel Mtshali, decided to go to court in an
effort to prevent Dr Mtshali from proceeding with
the case in the Constitutional Court. Dr Mkhize
argued that he, as MEC for Health, had the executive
authority when it came to health matters in the
Province. The Court ruled that the ultimate
authority of the Province vested in the Premier.
It is
important to quote this as an example of how the
efforts that were made to bring about reconciliation
through working together in a Coalition Government
failed.
At national
level, the same happened. When I piloted my
Immigration Bill the ANC led by its President and
Head of Government did everything to obstruct me to
the extent that in the end President Mbeki as Head
of Government sued me as his Minister on the issue
of regulations for the Immigration legislation -
something unprecedented.
So at both
these levels reconciliation did not take place
between the ANC and the IFP.
It is no use
talking about reconciliation in abstract terms.
These were efforts which were meant to bring the two
parties together and to consolidate reconciliation
between us. It was a flop.
And within
these years, there have been acrimonious exchanges
between members of the ANC and the IFP, the latest
being the utterances of Mr Julius Malema about me
during the election campaign. Although President
Zuma apologized to me about Malema's utterances, Mr
Malema never apologized to me. In fact, Mr Malema
had also insulted the ANC Minister of Education, Ms
Naledi Pandor. The media reported that Mr Malema was
apologizing to both of us. In the case of Ms Pandor,
Mr Malema wrote her a letter of apology, but he did
not do so in my case.
There have
been many acts which are hostile from members of the
ANC which have been directed at the IFP through
State organs. For example, the deployment of members
of the National Intervention Police Unit in Nongoma
during the election, which was not the first time.
The manner in which this Police Unit intimidated
members of the IFP included the humiliation of the
Rev. Musa Zondi, who was made to lie down and be
searched in Nongoma in broad daylight.
Then there
are the activities of the ANC members, including
MECs and the President, during the elections for
both the District Local House for Traditional
Leaders and for the Provincial House of Traditional
Leaders. These are not acts of people who want
reconciliation between us.
There cannot
be such reconciliation until we go through the whole
history of how we have hurt each other. This
includes my vilification both here and
internationally and my portrayal as an enemy of the
people and "a sell-out". This includes publications
such as "Gatsha Buthelezi, Chief With a Double
Agenda" by Mzala (Nobleman Nxumalo) which a few
months ago the present Minister of Higher Education
and Training, Dr Blade Nzimande and the President
suggested should be reprinted and disseminated.
We are quite
willing to sit down and have discussions which can
result in reconciliation. Reconciliation cannot be
achieved through just talking about it without going
through the painful history we have gone through as
two organisations.
The issue of
merging can hardly be on the agenda before we make
clean breasts to each other about these unjustified
attacks and vilification of me and the IFP.
So, in this
extended newsletter to clarify the matter once and
for all, I will lay out my position, and that of the
IFP, about how we view the process of reconciliation
and the party's role in the democratic order. Some
of the following material I have placed on record
before, but it is of the essence.
First, as a
believer and follower of Christ, I take seriously an
exhortation to prayer from wherever it comes. I
believe in the power of prayer to "move mountains"
and have long participated in prayer meetings for
our nation. Equally, I believe in the power of love
to shape national destinies, as well as those of
individuals. Prayer alone, however, cannot resolve
issues that we are quite capable of resolving in
face to face dialogue as two competing organisations
seeking reconciliation. God does not expect us to
expect Him to do what we can do ourselves.
At this
point, let me have a word about the concept of
reconciliation.
In my view,
it is too often spoken about in chocolate box
language. By the nature of its participants
(human-beings), reconciliation is imperfect, often
uneven and a work-in-progress. There is little
wonder that the concept is often inspired by
theological notions particularly the Judeo-Christian
principle of redemption - notions which Mr Zuma,
showing characteristic affability, tapped into when
he urged the Emgababa congregation last year to pray
for a marriage between our two organisations.
And yes, if I
were to point to what I believe is the single
greatest achievement of our democracy, it would be
the inculcation of a spirit of reconciliation
amongst our communities. If one looks to the other
countries seeking to heal internecine divisions, be
it in Chile, Rwanda, the former Yugoslavia, Ireland
or elsewhere, it is clear that South Africa emerges
as a model, indeed a golden template of
reconciliation. People here took the Bill of Rights
enshrined in our Constitution to heart. To a large
extent this success has been due to the fact that
reconciliation has been an organic 'from the
community upwards', rather than a 'top-down',
process. African people are slowly finding each
other - too slowly, but at least the train is going
in the right direction.
As for the
process of reconciliation between the IFP and the
ANC, I would contend, however, the process has
largely been the inverse of the national project.
Whilst the relationship between the national
leadership has been defined by civility and even a
little humour, much work at grassroots level has yet
to be done. And then, of course, there is peace
which follows genuine reconciliation. We remember
that the 20 000 people who died in a low-intensity
civil war in the late 1980s and early 1990s were
members and sympathizers of both organisations.
We South
Africans know all too well that war is a grisly
wasteland.
People on
both sides of this bitter war suffered and inflicted
painful suffering. I am sure more information, much
more, pertaining to human rights violations
committed by all sides could be unearthed if we
continue to dig. But, alas, the fragile process of
reconciliation between the two political forces is
still marred by acts of sporadic violence because, I
argue, the former has still not been completed to
anybody's satisfaction.
Just now
there is some carnage involving the two
organisations in Greytown. Two IFP councillors have
been murdered. One ANC councillor has been killed
and some ANC aligned people have been murdered. One
IFP councillor is an intensive care unit.
Reconciliation, as I see it, is not about merging
the two parties. The IFP and the ANC are two very
different political parties, rooted in different
philosophies and co-existing in direct competition
for votes. Behind the rhetoric of merger and
marriage, the ANC leadership, I have a reason to
believe, is not serious about genuine
reconciliation. If they were, the successive ANC
leaders would have promptly addressed the
outstanding issues of reconciliation raised in my
and my organisation's many (unanswered) letters over
the years. This includes letters that I wrote to Mr
Zuma himself.
In addition,
there have been too many agreements that were
concluded between the IFP and the ANC only to be
unilaterally broken by the latter. Take the joint
rallies which Mr Mandela and I agreed to attend in
the name of reconciliation in the early 1990s and
which never took place. Take the so-called coalition
government formed between the IFP and the ANC
between 1994 and 2004 which, for all our efforts,
never brought any real reconciliation us. The
eye-opening moment came in 2004 when the ANC
received more votes than the IFP and this, as far as
they were concerned, marked the end of coalition
politics. In the interest of reconciliation, the IFP
joined the ANC-led provincial government as a junior
partner only to be ejected from it at the earliest
opportunity two years later.
Although the
ANC and the IFP co-governed at national level
between 1994 and 2006 and between 1994 and 2004 at
provincial level in KwaZulu-Natal, this co-operation
did not reach a stage where it could cascade to the
local government level where it would really
matter.
This, in
itself, is not intrinsically a bad portent for
multi-party democracy in the province. The ANC
repeatedly alleged that the IFP destroyed the
relationship between the two parties by co-operating
with opposition parties in various municipalities in
KwaZulu-Natal.
This is a
canard. The ANC has itself ganged up with some of
these political parties and took control, sometimes
with the help of floor-crossers, of several
municipalities at our expense.
In 1999,
President Mbeki's offer that I should become Deputy
President of South Africa came to nothing. President
Mbeki told me that the ANC leaders in KwaZulu-Natal
forced him to demand from the IFP the position of
KwaZulu-Natal Premier in exchange for the position
of the Deputy President. They knew of course that
this was quite out of the question. One Minister in
President Mbeki's cabinet fingered Mr Zuma himself
as the author of this suggestion as he wanted to be
appointed Deputy President himself.
In many ways,
the relationship between the ANC and the IFP took a
sharp turn for the worse in 2004 when the ANC gained
political dominance in KwaZulu-Natal. Matters
reached a nadir last year when the business of the
provincial Legislature was marred by the conduct of
a Speaker who, the IFP maintained, was not fit to
run the legislature in the spirit of multi-party
democracy. This is was in stark contrast to the
period of 1994-2004 when the Legislature, managed
jointly by the multi-party Executive Board, enjoyed
the reputation of an institution committed to
impartiality, tolerance and political pluralism.
This period coincided with the IFP's tenure of
office.
The ANC's
tenure of office in KwaZulu-Natal after 2004, by
contrast, has seen unprecedented politicisation of
the civil service. It is quite acceptable, indeed
desirable for any political party to seek to build a
leadership and intellectual class. Yet one is
concerned about how ANC supporters are being given
preferential treatment and fast-track advancement in
the civil service. In the relentless pursuit of the
National Democratic Revolution, civil service
employees perceived to be aligned to the IFP have
been persistently retrenched or sidelined. The
ruling party has referred to this practice in its
internal documents as "cadre development" and "ANC
career planning".
The one
government policy that must have brought home to
everyone how far the process of reconciliation has
slid since 2004 when the ANC took power in
KwaZulu-Natal is the ruling party's initiative of
Taking Parliament to the People. This is an absurd
contradiction in terms if there ever was one. The
IFP believes that the taxpayers have elected MPs to
Parliament to do a job. It is scandalous for
parliamentarians to hold regular jamborees to tell
the electorate what a fabulous job they are doing
when this is often hardly the case. It is
patronising, self-serving and wasteful and it has
been consistently criticised by the IFP as such.
At one point
the IFP's criticism coincided with a mass public
protest against the initiative in the town of
Vryheid. I believe the people who disrupted the
ANC's idyll, were more concerned about social
deprivation, poor service delivery, high rates of
joblessness, drug and alcohol misuse and our 'broken
society' in general. These fine people were not
taken in by the ruling party's velvety production.
The ANC must have been mortified at the people's
anger even though, true to form, they had done their
best to bus in their own supporters from afar to
dilute the local opposition.
Taking
Parliament to the People, despite numerous
objections from the opposition parties, continues to
lack an inclusive spirit and remains a public forum
for the ruling party to garner votes for whatever
election follows next. All practical arrangements
surrounding this initiative, including public
transport and catering, appear to complement the
ANC's intention to abuse government business for
political gain. This is blatant misuse of taxpayers'
money; it is a form of corruption: the ruling
party's outrageous attempt to control the people
with their own money.
The dynamics
of political culture in the highly contested
KwaZulu-Natal, as illustrated by the ANC's conduct
in government, have their roots in the struggle for
political liberation. The ANC conceived the armed
struggle as the lightening rod, as it were, for
establishing political hegemony of the liberation.
Unity for the ANC in the struggle was synonymous not
only with its internal unity but with the unity of
all the liberation movements. Democratization was
not the priority of the ANC and its associates, but
rather 'regime change'. Inkatha, by contrast,
advocated diversity of roles within the liberation
movement as the basis for political pluralism after
liberation.
The ANC's
post-liberation pursuit of the National Democratic
Revolution has had far reaching impact upon the
prospect of reconciliation. As the ANC would not
accept the IFP's vision of unity within the
liberation movement, expressed in a diversity of
roles before 1994, the ruling party today expects
uncritical consensus around particular programmes of
social action. Unquestioned loyalty to the movement
and the shaping of a single liberation narrative
have defined today's ruling political elite, in
which state and party are equated. And the line is
blurred between them.
The ruling
party's view, and I am pretty sure Mr Zuma's view,
is that opposition parties should not be
adversarial, confrontational or even 'constructive'
in their criticism of the government (one should be
fair, at this point, and commend the President for
the respect with which he has accorded the
opposition in parliament since assuming office). If
the opposition fails in this test, as it invariably
does, it is often labelled as being
counter-revolutionary, regressive, unpatriotic or
un-African. The latter two labels, I am happy to
say, are pejoratives that the ANC leadership, for
all its travails, has found difficult to pin on me
personally.
The current
argument about multiparty democracy in South Africa
is therefore not about its relative merits but
rather its sheer survival.
It is not the
self-proclaimed victors of the liberation struggle
in the ruling party who keep our democracy alive; it
is us on the opposition benches. Our own survival is
indeed the survival of multiparty democracy. And we
can only survive in a political culture with
flourishing tolerance; a culture which only we can
assist the ruling party to recreate, maintain and
perpetuate.
We may well
have already prodded the ANC in the right direction.
The last days of Mr Mbeki's stewardship of his party
were characterised by a vigorous debate about the
so-called "two centres of power" - whether it would
be desirable for the leader of the party and the
leader of the country to be different people. The
debaters fudged the question until it was answered
by events, namely the popular choice of Mr Zuma over
Mr Mbeki at the party's Polokwane conference in
December 2007.
The ANC, of
all organisations, has demonstrated that political
parties should not be converted into machines for
the election of a monolithic leadership.
In conclusion
I can only say while I share the ANC's and Mr Zuma's
desire for our two parties to enjoy a good
functioning relationship befitting our parliamentary
democracy, a merger or "marriage" is not on the
agenda today, tomorrow, or in the future. In short,
the IFP will be fighting and fighting to win
elections as a political competitor, reconciled, but
distinct, in word and deed, from the ANC.
We
nevertheless feel that it we owe it not to
ourselves, but to posterity to have talks about
reconciliation rather than any other merger. We need
to disagree without being disagreeable and without
killing each other. We need to distinguish between
robust criticism and "killing talk" that triggered
the black on black violence between the followers of
the ANC and the IFP.
Yours sincerely,
Prince Mangosuthu Buthelezi MP
Contact: Liezl van der Merwe, 083
611 7470.