While the Commission of Inquiry is investigating the tragic deaths of 34 miners killed by the police at Marikana, senior ANC politicians are fuelling unrest in the Western Cape fully cognisant that the same tragedies can occur here.
Burning down farms, setting tractors alight, overturning cars are hardly ways to negotiate for an increase in farm worker wages. For that we have all kinds of mechanisms within the trade union movement. But that is not what ANC Western Cape leader Marius Fransman is about.
He wants to destabilise the government in the Western Cape and injured protestors are the casualties of a higher ambition - his limitless quest for power. Fransman should be held to account for all the violent unrest caused and the loss of millions to farmers. Increasingly constitutional means do not appeal to a party that fails to win votes through the ballot. The ‘bullet' is far more effective.
For years now he has worked behind the scenes to incite poor people to protest so that he can be promoted to even higher office as a coloured person within an African nationalist party. That people endanger their lives using illegal means to strike is of no consequence to him. He must deliver the Western Cape to the ANC regardless.
Already two have died and several people injured in violent protests in De Doorns, Wolseley, Ceres, Bonnievale and Robertson. And so Fransman, the ringleader, irresponsibly exploits the poor to achieve his narcissistic ambitions.
There are legal ways to negotiate wage increases and the destruction of farmlands and tractors are counter-productive. Farmers can so easily make workers redundant with more mechanisation and the sooner they realise that Fransman does not give an iota about their wages, the better. When he was MEC for Transport he squandered millions and they should not forget his track record under Premier Ebrahim Rasool.