Echoes
of the Past:
Marikana, Cheap Labour and the 1946 Miners Strike
Chris Webb
On August 4,
1946 over one thousand miners assembled in Market Square in Johannesburg, South
Africa. No hall in the town was big enough to hold them, and no one would have
rented one to them anyway. The miners were members of the African Mine Worker's
Union (AMWU), a non-European union which was formed five years earlier in order
to address the 12 to 1 pay differential between white and black mineworkers.
The gathering carried forward just one unanimous resolution: African miners
would demand a minimum wage of ten shillings (about 1 Rand) per day. If the
Transvaal Chamber of Mines did not meet this demand, all African mine workers
would embark on a general strike immediately. Workers mounted the platform one
after the other to testify: “When I think of how we left our homes in the
reserves, our children naked and starving, we have nothing more to say. Every
man must agree to strike on 12 August. It is better to die than go back with
empty hands.” The progressive Guardian newspaper
reported an old miner getting to his feet and addressing his comrades: “We on
the mines are dead men already!”[1]
The massacre of
45 people, including 34 miners, at Marikana in the North
West province is an inevitable outcome of a system of production and
exploitation that has historically treated human life as cheap and disposable.
If there is a central core – a stem in relation to which so many other events
are branches – that runs through South African history, it is the demand for cheap labourfor South
Africa's mines. “There is no industry of the size and prosperity of this that
has managed its cheap labour policy so successfully,” wrote Ruth First in
reference to the Chamber of Mines ability to pressure the government for
policies that displaced Africans from their land and put them under the boot of
mining bosses.[2]
Masters and Servants
Mechanisms such
as poll and hut taxes, pass laws, Masters and Servants Acts and grinding rural
poverty were all integral in ensuring a cheap and uninterrupted supply of
labour for the mines. Pass laws were created in order to forge a society in
which farm work or mining was the only viable employment options for the black
population. And yet the low wages and dangerous work conditions kept many
within the country away, forcing the Chamber of Mines to recruit labour from as
far afield as Malawi and China throughout the nineteenth and twentieth
centuries. Sordid deals between Portuguese East Africa and Apartheid South
Africa ensured forced labour to be recruited for the mines and by 1929 there
were 115,000 Mozambicans working underground. “It has been said,” wrote First
in her study of migrant Mozambican miners, “that the wealth of Reef gold mines
lies not in the richness of the strike but in the low costs of production kept
down by cheap labour.”[3]
When AMWU was
formed in 1941 black miners earned 70 Rand a year while white workers received
848 Rand. White miners had been organized for many years, but there was little
solidarity between the two groups as evidenced by the 1922 Rand Rebellion led
by the whites-only Mine Workers Union. White miners went on strike against
management's attempt at weakening the colour bar in order to facilitate the
entry of cheaper black labour into skilled positions. Supported by the
Communist Party of South Africa under the banner of “Unite and Fight for a
White South Africa!” the rebellion was viciously crushed by the state leaving
over 200 dead. The growth of non-European unions in the 1940s was dramatic and
for the very first time the interests of African mineworkers were on the table.
Their demands threatened the very foundations of the cheap labour system, and
so in 1944 Prime Minister Jan Smuts tabled the War Measure 1425 preventing a
gathering of 20 or more on mine property. Despite these difficulties the union
pressed on and in 1946 they approached the Chamber of Mines with their demand
for wage increases. A letter calling for last minute negotiations with the
Chamber of Mines was, as usual, ignored.
By August 12th
tens-of-thousands of black miners were on strike from the East to the West
Rand. The state showed the utmost brutality, chasing workers down mineshafts
with live ammunition and cracking down on potential sympathy strikes in the
city of Johannesburg. By August 16th the state had bludgeoned 100,000 miners
back to work and nine lay dead. Throughout the four-day strike hundreds of
trade union leaders were arrested, with the central committee of the Communist
Party and local ANC leaders arrested and tried for treason and sedition. The
violence came on the cusp of the 1948 elections, which would see further
repression and the beginning of the country's anti-communist hysteria.
While it did
not succeed in its immediate aims, the strike was a watershed moment in South
African politics and would forever change the consciousness of the labour
movement. Thirty years late Monty Naicker, one of the leading figures in the
South African Indian Congress, argued that the strike “transformed African
politics overnight. It spelt the end of the compromising, concession-begging
tendencies that dominated African politics. The timid opportunism and begging
for favours disappeared.”[4] The Native
Representative Council, formed by the state in 1937 to address the age old
‘native question,’ disbanded on August 15th and ANC president Dr. A.B. Xuma
reiterated the demand for “recognition of African trade unions and adequate
wages for African workers including mineworkers.”[5]
The 1946
mineworkers strike was the spark that ignited the anti-apartheid movement. The
ANC Youth League's 1949 Program of Action owes much to the militancy of these
workers as does the Defiance Campaign of the 1950s and the emergence of the
ANC's armed wing Umkhonto we Sizwe (Spear of the
Nation) in the 1960s. It is too early to say what sort of impact the current
Lonmin strike will have on South African politics, but it seems unlikely that
it will be as transformative as those of the past. The National Union of
Mineworkers (NUM), arguably the heirs to the 1946 strike are currently engaged
in a series of territorial disputes with the breakaway Association of
Mineworkers and Construction Union (AMCU). Meanwhile COSATU's muted response has
echoed the ANC's line of equal-culpability and half-mast public mourning. The
increasingly incoherent South African Communist Party has called for the arrest
of AMCU leaders with some of its so-called cadres defending the police action.
Former ANC Youth League leader Julius Malema's plea for miners to hold the line
and form a more militant union reek of political opportunism.
Still Dependant on Cheap
and Flexible Labour
What no one has
dared to say, aside from the miners themselves, is that the mining industry
remains dependant on cheap and flexible labour, much of it continuing to come
from neighbouring countries. This has historically been the source of most
miner's grievances. A recent Bench Marks Foundation study of platinum mines in
the North West province uncovered a number of factors linked to rising worker
discontent in the region. Lonmin was singled out as a mine with high levels of
fatalities, very poor living conditions for workers and unfulfilled community
demands for employment. Perhaps most significant is the fact that almost a
third of Lonmin's workforce is employed through third party contractors.[6]This form of
employment is not new in the mining industry. In fact, since minerals were
discovered in the 19th century labour recruiters have scoured the southern half
of the continent for workers. The continued presence of these ‘labour brokers’
on the mines and the ANC's unwillingness to ban them – opting instead for a system
of increasing regulation – is the bloody truth of South Africa's so-called
‘regulated flexibility.’
There are a
number other findings from the Bench Marks study that are worth mentioning as
they illuminate some of the real grievances that have been lost amid photos of
waving pangas. The number of fatalities at Lonmin has doubled since January
2011, and the company has consistently ignored community calls for employment,
favouring contractors and migrant workers. A visit by the Bench Marks
Foundation research team to Marikana revealed:
“A
proliferation of shacks and informal settlements, the rapid deterioration of
formal infra-structure and housing in Marikana itself, and the fact that a
section of the township constructed by Lonmin did not have electricity for more
than a month during the time of our last visit. At the RDP Township we found
broken down drainage systems spilling directly into the river at three
different points.”[7]
In fact, the
study predicted further violent protests at Marikana in the coming year. The
mass dismissal of 9000 workers in May last year inflamed already tense
relations between the community and the mine as dismissed workers lost their
homes in the company's housing scheme.
Once again,
these facts are hardly new in the world of South African mining. Behind the
squalid settlements that surround the mineshafts there are immense profits to
be made. In recent years the platinum mining industry has prospered like no
other thanks to the increased popularity of platinum jewellery and the use of
the metal in vehicle exhaust systems in the United State and European
countries. Production increased by 60 per cent between 1980 and 1994, while the
price soared almost fivefold. The value of sales, almost all exported, thus
increased to almost 12 per cent of total sales by the mining industry. The
price rose so dramatically throughout the 1990s that it is on par with gold as
the country's leading mineral export.[8]South Africa's
platinum industry is the largest in the world and in 2011 reported total
revenues of $13.3-billion, which is expected to increase by 15.8% over the next
five years. Lonmin itself is one of the largest producers of platinum in the
world, and the bulk of its tonnage comes from the Marikana mine. The company
recorded revenues of $1.9-billion in 2011, an increase of 25.7%, the majority
of which would come from the Marikana shafts.[9]
For risking
mutilation and death underground workers at Marikana made only 4000 Rand, or
$480 a month. As one miner told South Africa's Mail
and Guardian newspaper that, “It's better to die than to work
for that shit ... I am not going to stop striking. We are going to protest
until we get what we want. They have said nothing to us. Police can try and
kill us but we won't move.” These expressions of frustration and anger could be
from 1922, 1946 or today. They are scathing indictments of an industry that
continues to treat its workers as disposable and a state that upholds
apartheid's cheap labour policies. •
Chris Webb is a
postgraduate student at York University, Toronto where he is researching labour
restructuring in South African agriculture. He can be reached at
christopherswebb_AT_yahoo.ca.
Endnotes:
1. Monty Naicker,
“The African Miners Strike of 1946,” 1976.
2. Ruth First,
“The Gold of Migrant Labour,” Spearhead, 1962.
3. Ruth First,
“The Gold of Migrant Labour,” Spearhead, 1962.
4. Monty Naicker,
“The African Miners Strike of 1946,” 1976.
5. Dr. A.B. Xuma
quoted in Monty Naicker, “The African Miners Strike of 1946.”
6. The Bench Marks
Foundation, “Communities in the Platinum
Minefields,” 2012.
7. The Bench Marks
Foundation, “Communities in the Platinum
Minefields,” 2012.
8. Charles
Feinstein, An Economic History of South Africa, Cambridge:
Cambridge University Press, 2005, 211.
9. Marketline Advantage Reports on
South Africa's Platinum Group Metals, 2011.
_____________________________________________
From: Petrus Potgieter <potgieter.petrus@gmail.com>
Date: 2012/8/22
Subject: "Echoes of the past"
To: christopherswebb@yahoo.ca
I tried to publish the following comment at the end of your article but failed:
Date: 2012/8/22
Subject: "Echoes of the past"
To: christopherswebb@yahoo.ca
I tried to publish the following comment at the end of your article but failed:
CREDIBILITY AS SHOT AS THE 34
"These expressions of frustration and anger could be from 1922, 1946 or today. They are scathing indictments of an industry that continues to treat its workers as disposable and a state that upholds apartheid's cheap labour policies."
1922 and 1946 were BEFORE the apartheid National Party was in government and TODAY that shining champion-of-human-rights ANC has been in government for nearly the last 20 years -- almost HALF the time that the racist Nationalists were in charge.
The Nationalist government upheld the Jewish-owned mining corporations' cheap apartheid labour policies - that was their greatest mistake.
Rather have a look here: http://mierleeu. blogspot.be/
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