ZWELINZIMA VAVI AND COSATU - WORDS AND ACTIONS
It is hard not to like Zwelinzima Vavi. He passionately expresses views that most reasonable South Africans strongly endorse: he decries the parlous state of our education system; he warns us of the dire implications of unemployment, poverty and inequality; and he is scathingly critical of government corruption.
He expressed such views again on 17 October when he delivered UNISA's Annual Peace, Safety and Human Rights Memorial Lecture in Johannesburg. According to his hosts Vavi was chosen to deliver the lecture because he had "stood out as an exemplary leader espousing values and a vision for the best interests of our society..."
Well, what are Vavi's values and vision? Are they in the best interest of society - and how do they resonate with Cosatu's actions?
Vavi has in the past been rightly critical of our shocking education performance. And yet one of the main causes of the crisis (there are several others) is the undisciplined role played by Cosatu's affiliate, the South African Democratic Teachers Union (Sadtu). According to the National Diagnostic Report teachers in black schools (nearly all Sadtu members) spend only 3.5 hours per day teaching - compared with 6.5 hours per day in integrated former Model C Schools. Sadtu resolutely opposes performance agreements for school principals and has seriously damaged the prospects of matric writers by calling disruptive teachers' strikes.
In his lecture, Vavi warmly endorsed Abdullah Omar's exhortation that "resistance to oppression and tyranny is never over and we are required to constantly renew our commitment to the cause of development, equality and freedom". And yet Cosatu and its SACP allies are committed to the establishment of a socialist (i.e. communist) state in which there would be about as much freedom as there is in Cuba. At its 10th Congress in 2009 Cosatu commited itself "to build Marxism-Leninism as a tool of scientific inquiry " and to "build a socialist movement coalescing around the SACP." At its 2006 Congress, Cosatu asserted that "the dictatorship of the proletariat is the only guarantee that there will be a transition from National Democratic Revolution to socialism". How does Mr Vavi square this with its professed commitment to freedom - or with the democratic values in our Constitution?