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NEWS & LETTERS, October 2002

Who owns water in 'new' South Africa?

New York--A protest at the South African consulate here in August coincided with a court date for 87 people arrested in Johannesburg in April in a demonstration against electricity and water privatization. The "Kensington 87" were protesting electricity and water cut-offs and evictions from houses due to the failure of working class people to keep up with their bills. Their court date was postponed, but in New York, we let the South African government know that we support their cause.

The "87" were arrested while demonstrating at the mayor's house in the wealthy South Kensington section of Johannesburg, as part of a campaign that began in the poor suburbs of Soweto in 2000 to resist rising prices of public utilities and the ANC government's plans to privatize them, which is sure to raise prices even more.

New water fees were also levied by the public authority in northern Kwazulu-Natal, and many families were similarly cut off and started taking water from the river. The result was a cholera epidemic with thousands ill and hundreds dead.

According to the Soweto Electricity Crisis Committee (SECC), the April 6 arrests of the "Kensington 87" occurred when a busload of Soweto residents--pensioners, unemployed, and youth--marched onto the residence of Johannesburg mayor Amos Masondo.

They attempted to give the mayor a taste of his own medicine by turning off the electricity to his house. Mayhem followed as the mayor's bodyguard started firing live ammunition into the protesting crowd and wounded two people. The protesters retaliated with stones and windows were broken. The police came and arrested 87 people. The guard was not arrested, but the 87 face jail sentences of up to five years or huge fines.

The SECC was formed in May 2000, at a time when the electric company (ESKOM) was cutting off electricity at the rate of 20,000 households a month in Soweto. The government's response was to blame the victim and claim that there was a "culture of non-payment," that is, people were not overcoming the past habit of boycotting payments used as a weapon against the old apartheid regime. The government began plans to privatize electricity at that time.

The SECC, after some months of research and education activities, was transformed into a movement. When ESKOM cut people off, the SECC sent its struggle-trained technicians, called Operation Khanyisa, to re-connect the power. This was done under the slogans, "Electricity is a right, not a privilege" and "It is better to break the law than to break the poor." Many of Soweto's townships soon had Operation Khanyisa teams.

The ANC promised during the 2000 local elections to provide free basic water and electricity for all, but the promise never really materialized. Today it is the SECC that states it has adopted socialism as its vision for the future and is mobilizing behind the demand for free basic services for all. The SECC is an affiliate of the Anti-Privatisation Forum (APF), a coalition of mainly community-based organizations fighting against the effects of privatization and trying to unite labor and community struggles.

Our meeting, during the demonstration, with the South African consul revealed that the ANC government sincerely believes privatization is the best and only way to develop their country. But little free water is supplied to the poor, and the new policy of full cost recovery for electricity and water means great hardship for millions.

The situation illustrates how far to the Right the ANC has moved. It seems the only discussion of socialism today remains within that poor Black majority.

Activist author Barbara Garson was prominent in organizing the protest which was sponsored by NY Direct Action Network, NY Green Party, and the NY News and Letters Committee.

--Anne Jaclard

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