Sad to observe Jeremy Cronin succumbing to the ANC nationalists
Racial utterances dished out by some African National Congress (ANC) nationalists in the past confirmed the fact that black people can be racist. In August 2002, the Deputy General Secretary of the South African Communist Party and member of the ANC's National Executive Committee, Comrade Jeremy Cronin, found himself on the receiving end of raw racism. Cronin had accused the then ANC President, Thabo Mbeki, of abusing and centralising power.
Cronin termed this "the Zanufication of the ANC" - a clear reference to the Zimbabwean ruling party, the ZANU PF, which has been perceived by some observers as undemocratic. A prominent supporter of Mbeki and member of the ANC's NEC, the late Dumisani Makhaye, responded swiftly in defence of Mbeki. The then Member of the Executive Committee (MEC) for Housing in Kwazulu-Natal, Makhaye, lambasted Cronin for attacking Mbeki and accused Cronin of being a "factory fault". As if that was not insult enough, Makhaye rubbed more salt into Cronin's wound by reminding him that ANC did not need "a white messiah" to save it.
Suddenly, Cronin was no longer a comrade; he was a white messiah and factory fault. I asked myself why these racial undertones now? What happened to the ANC's philosophy and policy of non-racialism? What happened to the ANC being a broad church? Some SACP leaders tried to defend Cronin. Makhaye retorted and called them, together with Cronin, dogs: "There are dogs who are biting the ANC and these dogs are calling themselves our friends. The ANC would not be defeated, the ANC is strong. Some of us are prepared to die for the ANC and to kill for the ANC" (Independent Online, 18/08/2002).
You see; the former President of the ANC Youth League, Julius Malema, wanted to kill for Jacob Zuma long after Dumisani Makhaye would kill for Mbeki. But I digress; let's go back to Cronin. I had thought that the ANC would come down hard on Makhaye for crossing this line. Non-racial party members should not be allowed to refer to their comrades as factory fault, white messiah and dog? I was wrong.
Smuts Ngonyama, who was then the Spokesperson and Head of Mbeki's ANC Office, came out in defence of Makhaye and praised him for the work well done. The message was clear: it was a white man (Cronin) who was wrong and he should apologise. Who does this guy (not comrade) think he is? We open up the ANC to them and embrace them, now they think they can talk to us the way they like?