Christ once said that "in the world you will have tribulation". Not maybe, will. So why are we always so distressed when we experience turmoil in our daily lives? Somehow turbulent times are also associated with change in our different societies. So it is here in Southern Africa and we should not be too disturbed by these conditions when they happen, rather we should look for the opportunities they represent.
When I turned on the TV and saw the police open fire at Marikana I turned to someone who was with me and said "this is a game changer in South Africa". Nothing I have seen since changes my mind about that - Zuma broke away from the SADC summit underway in Maputo and rushed home and has been able to do not much else but damage limitation since then.
When I saw Malema trying to make political capital out of the situation it did not take a genius to put all the different factors together - the demand that the mine pay a minimum salary of $1500 a month, the availability of simple weapons like new panga's and the use of Nanga's from the Eastern Cape. The clear signs of organisation and motivation and the systematic use of force to ensure compliance of strike instructions made it clear to me that this was no ordinary strike action. This was being planned and managed and was well funded.
I am sure that the South Africans are also aware of this and are dealing with it in their own way, but while the struggle goes on under the water, the collateral damage to the wider economy and to the image of South Africa as a stable democracy is very serious. Why the media has not picked up on the implications of how this "industrial action" was executed is a mystery to me.
They treat it as if it was a normal event, only the over reaction of poorly trained and prepared police seems to make this anything out of the ordinary. No one in the media - regional or international has examined the completely unreasonable demand for the minimum wage - three times what the industry can probably afford and no one has carefully analyzed the accounts of the targeted companies.
To me the timing of the original action at Marikana was also significant - in the middle of the crucial SADC summit in Maputo where the Zimbabwe crisis was centre stage and just ahead of the COSATU Congress (running today) and the elective Conference of the ANC later this year. Clearly the operation had all of these events and situations in their sights, quite clever really, but the killings have now served to concentrate the minds of all involved on the real issues and not the immediate given basis for the Marikana action. In my mind those poor workers were pawns in a much wider and deadly game.