Friday, May 23, 2008

Boiled Over - South Africa

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The last couple of weeks have been so tragedy laden. What with the cyclone that hit Myanmar, the earthquake is China and then the pipeline explosion at Ijegun. Now poor hungry black South Africans have turned on other poor hungry Africans. With all the talk of African unity it is amazing how easily African brothers turn on each other. In Nigeria it's Ife vs Modakeke, Umuleri vs Aguleri, Tiv vs Junkun e.t.c. If small tribes can fight each other over land and other such trivial matters while their taskmasters in high places wine and sup then you can imagine how easily tempers can become flared over "foreign occupiers". Tutsis and Hutus in Central Africa have hated each other for centuries eventually leading to wars in Rwanda and Burundi. Nigeria has had it's own issues with the Igbos claiming to be marginalised eventually leading to the Nigerian Civil War. The boiling Niger-Delta has continued to defy attempts at a peaceful resolution.

So what exactly happened in South Africa? We all know that a bunch of criminal gangs got together and decided that foreigners are the cause of their poverty, unemployment and lack of social amenities. Zimbabweans, Malawians and other nationals had put them into years of economic backwardness and repression. The solution? Kill all the foreigners and the jobs would come back, electricity would be restored and the shantytowns in Alexandra and Hilbrow would magically be converted to Sandton. So off they went on a killing rampage that has left 46 dead at the last count. But what could the real cause be?

In my humble opinion, the fault lies with Thabo Mbeki and the ruling African National Party (ANC) for a number of reasons:


  1. The South African Black Economic Empowerment (BEE) and Previously Disadvantaged Individuals (PDI) programmes were designed to correct years of imbalance in the earnings of blacks and whites post-apartheid. It was supposed to take ownership and management of companies away from whites while increasing the number of blacks occupying these same positions. But there was a snag. The apartheid South Africa had undereducated blacks and left very few qualified to take on these positions. Meanwhile SA companies that wanted to remain in business had to comply so they resorted to taking anyone that had even a whiff of a University degree. Never mind that they were put in non-technical positions where they couldn't so much damage or exert any influence. Instead of reducing the imbalance, it only created a new breed of rich blacks with strong ties to the ruling African National Party (ANC). People like Mosima Gabriel Sexwale (aka Tokyo Sexwale) and Cyril Ramaphosa have become billionaires because of this legislation. So rather than creating equality in wealth distribution it further widened the gap and eventually increased the level of violent crime. Why are South Africans so violent? Maybe years of toughening up under apartheid? South Africa has some of the world's worst levels of violent crime, with 52 people murdered every 24 hours, for an annual murder rate of 43.1 per 100,000 people. Added to that each year are 200,000 robberies, 55,000 rapes, and half a million cases of assault and attempted murder. (culled from Time). Unemployment is at an all time high of 40%.

  2. Secondly, Thabo Mbeki failed to apply the appropriate sanctions to the Government of Robert Mugabe for his years of misrule. Although the policy of land redistribution seemed smart at the time, taking well-run and productive farms from whites and turning them over to blacks who subsequently turned the farms into squatter settlements ruined Zimbabwe. Inflation of over 100,000% and a ruthless civilian dictator forced millions to flee to neighboring and more prosperous South Africa. Unless I'm missing something here, Thabo Mbeki should have stopped Robert Mugabe from ruining his country if only to prevent a refugee crisis on his hands. That's why Nigeria intervened in Sierra Leone and Liberia! Instability in one part of a closely knit region can easily spill over as it happened in the aforementioned countries and Rwanda/Burundi.

  3. Lastly his Government's inability to deal with the HIV/AIDS crisis also exacerbated the problem. His denial that HIV causes AIDS and his insistence that traditional methods cure AIDS increased the prevalence of the disease. He also appointed a Health Minister that shared his views on the matter. A high number of AIDS related deaths and illnesses added to existing levels of poverty means poor families' resources are directed towards taking care of the disease and fending for each other without the breadwinner. In some cases both parents die of AIDS leaving the children to relatives already burdened with taking care of their own children. The result? Further hopelessness and despair.
    So with this background, why would poor people turn on other poor people who are not the cause of their problems? Transferred aggression. If at all these people wanted to revolt, they could have turned on the affluent members of their society who keep getting richer while they get poorer. These poor foreigners are prepared to work while black South Africans think the Government owes them a living. Even if all poor foreigners are killed, the situation with black South Africans will not improve. More lasting solutions will have to be found. BEE should focus on equality for all South Africans and not just ANC cronies. It should ensure the word "township" is a thing of the past. Hey, this country has enough for everyone so this should not be happening. Focus should be on increasing the quality of education so that BEE can really make an impact.

With the impending presidency of Jacob Zuma it is doubtful things will change any time soon. What can Nigeria learn from this? Should we riot like we did in the late 70s chanting, “Ghana must go” and face the reprisal from Ghanaians as we are now experiencing? Kick out all Indians, Lebanese, Chinese and other foreign nationals? I doubt that what happened in South Africa can happen in Nigeria. Immigration is a natural occurrence and can lead to the development of a country as it has done for the US. We can't deny the contribution of other nations to Nigeria. So to my South African brothers I say, direct your anger elsewhere. Use all that aggression in a coal mine. Killing your brothers will not solve the problem.

5 comments:

An-Igbo-Dude said...

Nice write up

I did not even know half the facts and statistics in this write up. thanks for enlightening me

...i dont think Nigeria is free from such dastardly act. if we can willing kill our fellow brothers all in the name of religion and tribe, who come be oyibo abi foreigner. that one na sara killing

Anonymous said...

Nice one...but who wants to be poor and working in a coal mine?! Anyways, I think this article should have a more widespread readership...why dont you try to get it onto good S.A media links? I think people should read it and be made to think.

God Bless.

Unknown said...

Nice one...but who wants to be poor and working in a coal mine?! Anyways, I think this article should have a more widespread readership...why dont you try to get it onto good S.A media links? I think people should read it and be made to think.

God Bless.

Anonymous said...

Cut the South Africans some slack. Can you name one African country apart from SA that has had 5 million new immigrants within a short space of time? Do you know the implications of these numbers on social services in already impoverished communities? I would advise the nationals of Zimbabwe, Mozambique, Malawi, Nigeria, Congo, Kenya and Somalia to learn to live in their own countries and better themselves in their communities. Of course immigration helps in advancing a country but this depends on the quality of the immigrants not fraudsters, pimps, target workers, traffickers etc. Dont migrate if you do not have a job otherwise you will just contribute to the disintegration of the social cohesion of your host country. What is happening in South Africa is testament to this.

kshorty1 said...

@ an ibo dude's corner: Thanks for the comment.

@ donna: Thanks for the comment. The part about working in a coal mine was meant to illustrate the fact that there are still jobs in SA no matter how menial. How come Nigerians are able to set up businesses in SA and employ Zimbabweans? The SA Government needs to act and act fast else these things will continue to happen. For one tighten up the borders.

@ anonymous: I agree with your comment. The problem with SA is that the post-apartheid era exposed the "good life" that South Africans had been enjoying for many years. They decided that rather than try to cross the sea to get to Europe, SA would be a better option.

I wish you could understand that immigration is clouded by inadequate knowledge of what's on the other side. Many of these foreigners think the streets of SA are paved with gold.

Not all foreigners living in SA are fraudsters, pimps, target workers and traffickers. There must be a few honest ones. Which is why I said in my post that I blame the SA Government for not controlling immigration and not showing enough concern about the political situation in Zimbabwe.

But "Cut the South Africans some slack"? I won't because killing people will not solve the problem. It only worsens things. I really do pray teh SA Government can find a lasting solution to this problem.