| Reports
on Ethnic Relations / Rapports sur les relations
éthniques |
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The
following section is consisted of part, full or summaries of
articles from diverses sources (newspapers, newsletters, etc...).
La section suivante est constituée d'exraits, de la totalité
ou de résumés d'articles provenant d'origines
diverses (journaux,bulletins, etc..).
04
/ 24 / 2003
PANANFRICA
NEWS AGENCY
The article: "Strong
reaction to Madikizela-Mandela's conviction"
There
has been widespread reaction to the conviction on Thursday of
African National Congress Women's League president, Winnie Madikizela-Mandela,
on 68 criminal charges.
Madikizela-Mandela,
dubbed "the mother of the nation" for many years despite
her frequent run-ins with the law, is once again in the spotlight
after the latest court action against her.
The
official opposition Democratic Alliance reacted to Thursday's
judgement by saying that a Member of Parliament convicted on 43
charges of fraud should not stay on in Parliament.
"Unless
Mrs Winnie Madikizela-Mandela resigns immediately, the ANC should
terminate her membership of Parliament without any further delay.
The ANC kept her in Parliament long past the time when they should
have fired her," said DA MP Douglas Gibson.
The
ruling ANC said it respects the court ruling.
"We
will be studying the findings of the judgement accordingly, while
awaiting sentencing. Any necessary steps will be taken when this
legal process has been concluded," ANC Parliamentary spokesman
Vusi Mahaye said.
Former
President Nelson Mandela, who was married to Winnie before their
acrimonious divorce in 1992, issued a statement through his spokesman.
"Mr
Mandela and the Nelson Mandela Foundation have always and will
continue to respect the judiciary and the verdicts they decide
upon in South Africa. We are of the opinion that the legal process
was allowed to take its course in this case," said Mandela's
spokesman Zelda la Grange.
The
trial was postponed to Friday for argument in mitigation and aggravation
of sentence. Bail, previously set at 5,000 rand (666 US dollars),
was extended.
04
/ 16 / 2003
IRIN
The article: "UN
welcomes diamond certification plan"
A
UN General Assembly resolution on Tuesday welcomed a decision
to implement a global certification scheme for rough diamonds,
supporting international efforts to break the link between the
illegal trade in diamonds and armed conflict.
The
plan, known as the Kimberley Process Certification Scheme, establishes
minimum acceptable international standards for national certification
covering the import and export of rough diamonds, the UN news
service reported.
The
Kimberley process, spearheaded by South Africa, was launched by
southern African diamond-producing countries in 2000 to stem the
flow of rough diamonds used by rebel forces to finance armed conflict,
and to protect the legitimate diamond industry upon which many
countries depend.
The
scheme includes the participation of countries that produce and
trade in the gems, the European Community, industry representatives
and civil society. It went into effect on 1 January 2003.
The
General Assembly resolution welcomed the willingness of South
Africa to chair the process during its first year of implementation,
and encouraged UN member states to join the scheme, stressing
that the widest possible participation was essential for its success.
04
/ 02 / 2003
IRIN
The article: "Focus
on rural civilian protection"
Controversy
over rural security has deepened in South Africa with a government
decision to phase out a paramilitary force that was part of the
apartheid state's security apparatus.
The
announcement in February by President Thabo Mbeki that commando
units were to be disbanded has elicited sharply divergent views.
White farmers say commandos are an integral part of rural security,
while black officials and policemen claim that they have persisted
in perpetrating rights abuses.
"The
first ones to go will be the ones where there've been allegations
of [rights abuses] the problematic areas," a defence ministry
spokesman, Sam Mkhwanazi, told IRIN.
The
allegations of rights abuses have played a significant role in
the government's decision to phase out the part-time force.
Responding
to calls for the commando units to be retained, Minister of Defence
Mosioua Lekota was quoted as saying: "A structure like that,
which is not under proper training, proper regulation, and doesn't
even have arresting powers - they are just citizens armed with
weapons - that [think] they can do anything they choose to do,
cannot be allowed in a constitutional order."
As
recently as 2001, Human Rights Watch (HRW) called on the South
African government to investigate the commandos, following allegations
of violent criminal conduct towards black people in the rural
Mpumalanga Province. [See www.hrw.org/press/2001/08/safrica0822.htm]
HRW
published recommendations that "commando units should not
be deployed for policing purposes. Civilians who wish to be involved
in policing on a part-time basis should be police reservists,
and should receive training in policing skills and instruction
on the laws of South Africa and respect for human rights."
RURAL
INSECURITY
Organised
agriculture, however, does not share the view that commandos are
a threat to South Africa's constitutional order and human rights.
"We need commandos, and we see them as one of the backbones
of the rural protection plan, without a doubt," Agri-SA Chairman
Kiewiet Ferreira, a farmer in the central Free State Province
town of Harrismith, told IRIN.
In
October last year, IRIN reported that incidents of violent crime
on farms, the so-called "farm attacks", had increased.
But the police differ with Agri-SA over the reasons behind such
crimes. The motive was more often than not theft, and not the
political goal of chasing white farmers off the land as Agri-SA
members feared, the police said. [See: www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=30499]
Police
statistics have indicated an increase in the number and violence
of farm attacks between 1997 and 2000. In 1997, the total number
of incidents was 433. By 1998 the number had increased to 769.
It jumped to 813 in 1999 and to 906 in 2000.
In
what has become a highly politicised issue, police crime figures
for 2001 have not been cleared for release. However, Agri-SA has
put the number of incidents at about 1,000.
In
1997, there were 88 murders connected to farms attacks. By 1998
the figure had jumped to 142 and was at 144 in 1999. It stabilised
at 144 murders in 2000. The figures for 2001 were said to show
a small increase over the 2000 statistics.
Ferreira
pointed out that in 1998, former President Nelson Mandela included
the commandos in a rural security plan, and "encouraged farmers,
especially white farmers, to join the commandos and help in rural
protection".
Ferreira
warned that the government was miscalculating in its new approach.
"We believe commandos are a very important structure in combating
not only farm attacks, but also general crime in rural areas,"
he said. "We know the minister said commandos are too white,
and there were a lot of racial incidents on the white side of
the commandos, but there's only been a few incidents of that [nature]."
"If
you take [into account] how many operations commandos have been
involved in under the police - more than 50,000 operations in
2001 and 37,000 operations in 2002 (most of them road-blockades,
foot patrols, vehicle patrols, farm visits, manning of observation
posts) - that's nearly 90,000 operations in two years," Ferreira
said.
"Yet,
since 1996, according to our records, there were only 30 criminal
cases involving the commandos taken to the courts. If you have
nearly 90,000 operations in two years and, we believe, 30 criminal
cases since 1996, that's not bad."
However,
he admitted that the commandos were not reflective of South Africa's
demographic mix. "The minister was saying commandos are too
white. At this very moment, 42 percent of all commandos are African,
coloured [mixed-race] or Asian groups," Ferreira said. "Yes,
for sure, on the officer side, it is mostly white, just over 90
percent. But that's also due to a lack of funding: in the last
nine years, they have cut funds and human resources for commandos,
so there's not a lot of money to train officers," he said.
The
government had indicated that a special police unit would be responsible
for rural security, Ferreira said. "Our experience in April
2002 when the SANDF [South African National Defence Force] took
away all the regular services from the Lesotho borders, with KwaZulu-Natal
and Free State, and left it to the police to protect that border
and conduct crime prevention, was that they [the police] could
not manage."
"On
the Free State side, they asked the Fouriesburg commandos to help
the police with that work," said Ferreira, who maintained
that commandos were the "eyes and ears on the ground, from
the people for the people".
RACIAL
DIVIDE
But
for many South Africans, the commandos remain a tangible reminder
of the apartheid-era military machine. The controversy sparked
by their removal indicates the distance South Africa still has
to travel to achieve reconciliation.
A
senior black police officer in the tiny rural Free State town
of Warden told IRIN that most black officers welcomed the government's
decision to phase out the part-time force.
On
the wall in the charge office of the Warden police station is
a poster that reads: "SAPS [South African Police Service]
is ready to serve the farming community that feeds our nation."
The officers IRIN spoke to at the station made it clear that SAPS
would much prefer doing this without the "interference"
of the commandos.
"The
government's plan to have commandos was a good plan, but some
of them - not all of them - were misusing their powers,"
said one senior police officer, who asked not to be named. "They
were using that uniform to exact revenge against non-whites, black
people. If you are a black person you cannot travel on a farm
at night, because [if they catch you] you will get it."
He
alleged that "these people, they want their [apartheid] government
back, they want to rule again. But they have no chance, so they
capitalised on the brown [army] uniform of the commandos. You
can tell from the language they use, they are telling people 'you
think this is Mandela's land' if they catch you on a farm."
However,
Jan Wessels, the officer commanding Bravo Company of Harrismith
Commando and a farmer in Warden, believes most residents don't
trust the police. "There's a bridge to cross before that
will happen," he said. "Lots of people, white and black,
don't trust all policemen. Crime does not get investigated, the
police themselves are deep into corruption. There's a big bridge
to cross [in terms of trust]. If they don't get their house in
order, the people won't join them."
The
police service has been through an intense and largely successful
transformation process, unlike the army, which still has a predominantly
white top brass.
"With
the phasing out of the commandos, the members of the permanent
[defence] force will come and take back their camouflage clothes
and R4 [assault] rifles. But that does not mean the end of the
Harrismith Commando, that does not mean the end of us in the Warden
area," Wessels said. "We have the structures in place.
If a fire breaks out, these structures will be used to fight the
fire."
IRIN
interviewed Wessels at the command centre of Bravo Company, situated
in an open field a short distance from Warden's main street. On
one wall is an Afrikaans-language poster reading: "Identification
of the Enemy". It details the "enemy's" purpose
(to destabilise); orders (to commit crime); modus operandi (method
of operating); motive (economic, political, revenge); and time
frame ("African time").
Wessels
was adamant that no member of his commando had been involved in
violating the rights of people in the area. He said he had felt
insulted by reported comments of provincial government ministers
regarding the commandos and their attitude towards their black
compatriots. "We feel really bad about this political announcement,"
he told IRIN. "Commandos are made to seem like a lot of hooligans.
We are trained soldiers, we fought a war for this country [against
the Basotho in 1858], and now the politicians of the day make
us seem like a bunch of hooligans."
"These
extreme-right people, we are not part of them. They are not farmers.
It has been suggested that we should fight this perception that
it's 'Boer commandos' doing things like planting bombs,"
he said in reference to a recent bombing campaign conducted by
far-right-wing groups.
"I'm
30 years in the army now, and never have I had commandos doing
such things," said Wessels. "If you are in my commando
and you are doing such things, you will get legally charged. We
are a very proud commando unit."
By
contrast, Selo Letawana, the mayor of three rural Free State towns
- Warden, Vrede and Memel - has hailed the president's decision
as "long overdue". "There's significance given
our history. We want to be policed by police, not the army or
a part-time army force. The commandos have done nothing to improve
the relationship between farmers and workers. Commando members
are mainly farmers, and there are those who exploit and abuse
workers... so it becomes a problem with revenge attacks,"
he said.
"We
had organised a TV for all stakeholders to watch the president's
speech, and when he made that announcement [on the commandos],
people exploded with applause," Letawana said.
According
to the government's information system, the phasing out of commando
units was part of an overall transformation of the SANDF. [see:
www.gcis.gov.za/buanews/index.html]
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