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South Africa: A victory for workers' solidarity with the Zimbabwean people
By Patrick Craven, COSATU
April 22, 2008 -- The Congress of South African Trade Unions (COSATU) welcomes the statement by a Chinese Foreign Ministry spokeswoman that the China Ocean Shipping Company which owns the An Yue Jiang, has decided to recall the ship because Zimbabwe cannot take delivery of the 77 tonnes of weapons and ammunition onboard.
If true, this is an historic victory for the international trade union movement and civil society, and in particular for the South African Transport and Allied Workers Union (SATAWU), whose members refused to unload or transport its deadly cargo.

Protest banner being removed from China's Pretoria embassy.
Today's meeting between the COSATU general secretary, Zwelinzima Vavi and the secretary general of the Movement for Democratic Change, Tendai Biti, confirmed beyond all doubt that the people of Zimbabwe are now facing a massive crisis -- a brutal onslaught from a regime that is determined to cling to power by stealing the elections and imposing its will through violence.
***
[For more background, go to http://links.org.au/node/352 and check the comments at the end of the article.]
***
In COSATU's view the ``government'' of Robert Mugabe is now illegal and illegitimate. Its term of office expired at the end of March when the people voted. Its has refused to release the results of the presidential
election and has illegally organised a recount of votes in 23 constituencies in which the ruling ZANU-PF lost narrowly to the MDC, long after the time limit of 48 hours had expired. It has even been ``recounting'' the presidential votes in those constituencies before they had been announced.
Combined with this blatant vote-rigging, the ruling party has unleashed a systematic campaign of violence against MDC members and supporters, which has already claimed at least ten lives. Thousands have been
displaced from their homes, five hundred injured and hospitalised and these numbers are increasing by the day.
Meanwhile the ``government'' is continuing to rule illegally, with the former ministers restored to their posts,even those who lost their seats in the parliamentary elections. COSATU demands that the governments of Africa refuse to recognise this despot who is desperately hanging on to power, and to stop inviting him to meetings of the Southern African Development Community or the African Union.
COSATU salutes the stand taken by its transport affiliate SATAWU and other unions around the continent, and now calls upon all its affiliates and Southern African trade union partners, to identify, and refuse to handle, any goods destined for Zimbabwe which could be used to assist the illegal government or be used to oppress the people.
The federation will be holding a meeting with civil society, church and NGO groups on Thursday, 24 April, at which plans will be finalised for a huge protest march in South Africa, in solidarity with the people of Zimbabwe, and to demand the removal of the Mugabe dictatorship and the installation of a government elected by a majority on 29 March 2008.
Congress of South African Trade Unions
1-5 Leyds Cnr Biccard Streets
Braamfontein, 2017
P.O. Box 1019
Johannesburg, 2000
SOUTH AFRICA
Tel: +27 11 339-4911/24
Fax: +27 11 339-5080/6940/ 086 603 9667
E-Mail: patrick@cosatu.org.za
[Patrick Craven is COSATU's national spokesperson. Visit http://www.cosatu.org.za]


Comments
SACP Political Bureau Press Statement on Zimbabwe
Political Bureau Press Statement
27 April 2008
The Political Bureau of the South African Communist Party met on the
25th April 2008 in the midst of a deepening crisis in Zimbabwe and
with serious challenges confronting the working class and poor of
South Africa.
Zimbabwe
The SACP condemns in the strongest terms the state-sponsored violence
and harassment directed against opposition supporters and communities
in Zimbabwe. Zimbabweans are being punished for rejecting at the polls
President Mugabe and the ruling clique in ZANU PF.
But the governments of SADC, including our own government, must also
assume some measure of responsibility for the latest crisis. President
Mbeki, in particular, stubbornly refused to learn anything from the
previous electoral events in Zimbabwe. This time around, once more,
SADC allowed Mugabe to run circles around it. Mugabe unilaterally
declared an election date before the mediation process was anywhere
near complete and in defiance of the SADC Protocols on elections.
Notwithstanding this, in the run-up to the most recent electoral event
we were being assured that everything was in place for free and fair
elections and there were just a few "procedural" matters outstanding.
This denialist complacency once more raised false hopes and once more
exposed millions of ordinary Zimbabweans to the wrath of Mugabe's
police state.
But, of course, the main culpability rests with Mugabe and the ZANU PF
leading clique. Now is the time for the maximum isolation of this
regime. The SACP salutes the role played by our alliance partner
COSATU, and specifically its affiliate SATAWU, in refusing to off-load
and transport the Chinese arms shipment. We call for the consolidation
of Southern African Zimbabwe solidarity networks that have
increasingly emerged in the recent weeks. We call on the South African
government to suspend visa waivers for Zimbabwean police and defence
force personnel. The easy access that they enjoy to South Africa (in
contrast to the majority of Zimbabweans) is shielding them from the
worst of the all-round socio-economic crisis in their country. We say
the Mugabe government must step down. Notwithstanding the flawed
nature of the elections, it is clear they lost. We say that either
SADC must urgently demonstrate in the following days its capacity to
deal decisively with the dangerous impasse, or international
intervention must be broadened to include the AU and UN.
Issued by the SACP
Contact: Malesela Maleka, SACP Spokesperson – 082 226 1802
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