Mary
17 Sep, 2012
- 7:03 am
What has happened to Aung San Suu Kyi? After all
she witnessed Sabra and Shatila and founded MAP because of what she saw there.
Does everyone sell out in the end?
From Medialens
Aung San Suu Kyi, Pro-democracy campaigner
traveling to the USA to receive Congressional Gold Medal
Posted by Ed on September 17, 2012, 5:05 am
“Aung San Suu Kyi, Burmese opposition leader,
embarks on historic US trip
Pro-democracy campaigner will be awarded Congressional Gold Medal during 18-day trip that includes Washington and New York”
Pro-democracy campaigner will be awarded Congressional Gold Medal during 18-day trip that includes Washington and New York”
Pro-democracy
campaigner to receive the US Congressional Gold Medal…square those two
propositions if you can!
Maybe
she can a get a picture with war criminal/pro-democracy campaigner Tony Blair
showing his Congressional Gold Medal off too.
Posted by Plus Ultra on September 17, 2012, 5:57
am, in reply to “Aung San Suu Kyi, Pro-democracy campaigner traveling to the
USA to receive Congressional Gold Medal”
If she
has any sense, and if she truly cares about the cause of human rights, she will
tell them where they can shove their Congressional Gold medal. Let’s hope she doesn’t end up doing a
Mandela.
~~~
The word Mandela is linked to this piece by John Pilger
http://johnpilger.com/articles/south-africa-the-liberations-betrayal:
The word Mandela is linked to this piece by John Pilger
http://johnpilger.com/articles/south-africa-the-liberations-betrayal:
South Africa:
the liberation's betrayal
2 October 2008
The political rupture in
South Africa is being presented in the outside world as the personal tragedy
and humiliation of one man, Thabo Mbeki. It is reminiscent of the beatification
of Nelson Mandela at the death of apartheid. This is not to diminish the power
of personalities, but their importance is often as a distraction from the
historical forces they serve and manage. Frantz Fanon had this in mind when, in
The Wretched of the Earth, he described the "historic mission" of
much of Africa's post-colonial ruling class as "that of intermediary
[whose] mission has nothing to do with transforming the nation: it consists,
prosaically, of being the transmission line between the nation and a
capitalism, rampant though camouflaged."
Mbeki's fall and the
collapse of Wall Street are concurrent and related events, as they were
predictable. Glimpse back to 1985 when the Johannesburg stock market crashed
and the apartheid regime defaulted on its mounting debt, and the chieftains of
South African capital took fright. In September that year a group led by Gavin
Relly, chairman of the Anglo American Corporation, met Oliver Tambo, the ANC
president, and other resistance officials in Zambia. Their urgent message was
that a "transition" from apartheid to a black-governed liberal
democracy was possible only if "order" and "stability" were
guaranteed. These were euphemisms for a "free market" state where
social justice would not be a priority.
Secret meetings between the
ANC and prominent members of the Afrikaner elite followed at a stately home,
Mells Park House, in England. The prime movers were those who had underpinned
and profited from apartheid - such as the British mining giant, Consolidated
Goldfields, which picked up the bill for the vintage wines and malt whisky scoffed
around the fireplace at Mells Park House. Their aim was that of the Pretoria
regime - to split the ANC between the mostly exiled "moderates" they
could "do business with" (Tambo, Mbeki and Mandela) and the majority
who made up the those resisting in the townships known as the UDF.
The matter was urgent. When
FW De Klerk came to power in 1989, capital was haemorrhaging at such a rate
that the country's foreign reserves would barely cover five weeks of imports.
Declassified files I have seen in Washington leave little doubt that De Klerk
was on notice to rescue capitalism in South Africa. He could not achieve this
without a compliant ANC.
Nelson Mandela was critical
to this. Having backed the ANC's pledge to take over the mines and other
monopoly industries - "a change or modification of our views in this
regard is inconceivable" - Mandela spoke with a different voice on his
first triumphant travels abroad. "The ANC," he said in New York,
"will reintroduce the market to South Africa". The deal, in effect,
was that whites would retain economic control in exchange for black majority
rule: the "crown of political power" for the "jewel of the South
African economy", as Ali Mazrui put it. When, in 1997, I told Mbeki how a
black businessmen had described himself as "the ham in a white
sandwich", he laughed agreement, calling it the "historic
compromise", which others called a betrayal. However, it was De
Klerk who was more to the point. I put it to him that he and his fellow whites
had got what they wanted and that for the majority, the poverty had not
changed. "Isn't that the continuation of apartheid by other means?" I
asked. Smiling through a cloud of cigarette smoke, he replied, "You must
understand, we've achieved a broad consensus on many things now."
Thabo Mbeki's downfall is
no more than the downfall of a failed economic system that enriched the few and
dumped the poor. The ANC "neo liberals" seemed at times ashamed that
South Africa was, in so many ways, a third world country. "We seek to
establish," said Trevor Manuel, "an environment in which winners
flourish." Boasting of a deficit so low it had fallen to the level of
European economies, he and his fellow "moderates" turned away from
the public economy the majority of South Africans desperately wanted and
needed. They inhaled the hot air of corporate-speak. They listened to the World
Bank and the IMF; and soon they were being invited to the top table at the
Davos Economic Forum and to G-8 meetings, where their "macro-economic
achievements" were lauded as a model. In 2001, George Soros put it rather
more bluntly. "South Africa," he said, "is now in the hands of
international capital."
Public services fell in
behind privatisation, and low inflation presided over low wages and high
unemployment, known as "labour flexibility". According to the ANC,
the wealth generated by a new black business class would "trickle
down". The opposite happened. Known sardonically as the wabenzi because
their vehicle of choice was a silver Mercedes Benz, black capitalists proved
they could be every bit as ruthless as their former white masters in labour
relations, cronyism and the pursuit of profit. Hundreds of thousands of jobs
were lost in mergers and "restructuring" and ordinary people
retreated to the "informal economy". Between 1995 and 2000, the
majority of South Africans fell deeper into poverty. When the gap between
wealthy whites and newly enriched blacks began to close, the gulf between the
black "middle class" and the majority widened as never before.
In 1996, the office of the
Reconstruction and Development Programme (RDP) was quietly closed down, marking
the end of the ANC's "solemn pledge" and "unbreakable
promise" to put the majority first. Two years later, the United Nations
Development Programme described the replacement, GEAR, as basically "no
different" from the economic strategy of the apartheid regime in the
1980s.
This seemed surreal. Was
South Africa a country of Harvard-trained technocrats breaking open the bubbly
at the latest credit rating from Duff & Phelps in New York? Or was it a
country of deeply impoverished men, woman and children without clean water and
sanitation, whose infinite resource was being repressed and wasted, yet again?
The questions were an embarrassment as the ANC government endorsed the
apartheid regime's agreement to join the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade
(GATT), which effectively surrendered economic independence, repaid the $25
billion of apartheid-era inherited foreign debt. Incredibly, Manuel even
allowed South Africa's biggest companies to flee their financial home and set
up in London.
Certainly, Thabo Mbeki
speeded his own political demise with his strange strictures on HIV/Aids, his
famous aloofness and isolation and the corrupt arms deals that never seemed to
go away. It was the premeditated ANC economic and social catastrophe that saw
him off. For further proof, look to the United States today and the smoking
ruin of the "neo liberalism" model so cherished by the ANC's leaders.
And beware those successors of Mbeki now claiming that, unlike him, they have
the people's interests at heart as they continue the same divisive policies. South Africa deserves better.
No comments:
Post a Comment