Unemployed People's Movement
Statement
to the National Council of Provinces Hearing on the Secrecy Bill 2
February 2012 Port Elizabeth
As the Unemployed People's
Movement we reject all provisions in this bill which will hinder the
free flow of information.
We are clear that this bill will
compromise our democracy in important ways. Democracy means the free
and open participation of all people in the life of the country. Any
attempt to privatise access to information or to intimidate people
from sharing information is inherently anti-democratic.
We have asked ourselves why this Bill
has come at this point. There is no evidence that the state is under
threat from foreign intelligence agencies. The claims that are often
made about the rebellion of the poor, and the poor people's movements
that have emerged from this rebellion, being controlled by foreign
governments are baseless. People are rebelling because they have no
jobs, no houses and no future. People are rebelling because they have been lied to and betrayed.
In our view the real reason why the
Bill has come at this point is because (1) the government has
realised that popular protest will continue to develop and (2) the
media will continue to expose the rampant corruption that began with
the arms deal and has most recently resulted in the wholesale plunder
of Limpopo. The government is moving to protect itself against
dissent and debate by militarising the police, repressing poor
people's movements and clamping down on media freedom and the free
flow of information.
We all know that almost twenty years in
to democracy it is clear that the current version of democracy has
failed most of the people. But the solution to this is to deepen
democracy rather than to weaken it.
Instead of censoring and
intimidating the media that currently exists we need to diversify the
media and create proper support for independent and diverse community
controlled media.
Instead of allowing officials to keep
important matters secret we need legislation to enhance
openness.
Instead of allowing party politics to become
corrupted and dominated by the interests of big money we need to stop
private and secret funding for political parties.
Instead of
thinking that democracy means voting every few years we need to
democratise schools, work places and communities. Democracy must be
an everyday part of our lives and not something that only happens at
elections.
The Secrecy Bill, like the proposed media tribunal,
like the militarising of policing and like the politicisation of the
intelligence agencies is a serious threat to our democracy. We wish
to place on record our complete rejection of the bill.
We also
wish to note that while the ANC has been elected to power its violent
intolerance towards popular dissent has been well documented. The
repression of movements like Abahlali baseMjondolo and the Landless
People's Movement by the ANC has been well documented. The gross misuse of the criminal justice system to repress these movements has also been noted. We too have
suffered repression including violence at the hands of the police and
the misuse of the criminal justice system for political ends. The ANC
has been elected but this does not mean that it is a democratic
organisation. It cannot claim that because it has been elected everything
that it does is therefore democratic. In fact the real measure of whether or not a government is really is democratic is whether or not it gives the people freedom to criticise it and to organise against it.
The government can't forever claim that
everything that it does is democratic because there are elections.
The arrest of Mzilikazi wa Afrika and the murder of Andries Tatane
have taken the hidden culture of repression into the light. When the
Western Cape Anti-Eviction was repressed in 2000 and the Landless
People's Movement activists were tortured in 2004 it happened in
secret. But these days repression is happening in public and on TV.
The truth is now there for everyone to see.The days when some people could be blind to state repression have passed.
We do not accept the argument that is
being made which states that because other countries, like the USA,
have repressive laws we to should have these laws. Since when was the
USA, the most violent and ruthless imperialist power in the world
today, the standard for our democracy? The USA has attacked
democratic movements and governments around the world for years and
years. Since when did we allow oppressors to set the standard for
what counts as democracy? This argument is disgraceful.
We
call on the members of the National Council of Provinces to break
ranks with their party bosses and to, instead, declare their
solidarity with the people of South Africa and to reject this bill in
its entirety.
If this bill is passed we will support mass
action against it and in support of democracy as well as an appeal to
the Constitutional Court to have it declared unconstitutional.
Pammy Isaac 084 781 5832
Ayanda Kota 078 625 6462
Ben Mafani 078 087 5177