A Internacional

__ dementesim . . Do rio que tudo arrasta se diz que é violento Mas ninguém diz violentas as margens que o comprimem. . _____ . Quem luta pelo comunismo Deve saber lutar e não lutar, Dizer a verdade e não dizer a verdade, Prestar serviços e recusar serviços, Ter fé e não ter fé, Expor-se ao perigo e evitá-lo, Ser reconhecido e não ser reconhecido. Quem luta pelo comunismo . . Só tem uma verdade: A de lutar pelo comunismo. . . Bertold Brecht
Mostrar mensagens com a etiqueta Nelson Mandela. Mostrar todas as mensagens
Mostrar mensagens com a etiqueta Nelson Mandela. Mostrar todas as mensagens

sexta-feira, dezembro 06, 2013

John Pilger - Mandela’s Tarnished Legacy

From Apartheid to Neoliberalism in South Africa

Mandela’s Tarnished Legacy

by JOHN PILGER
When I reported from South Africa in the 1960s, the Nazi admirer Johannes Vorster occupied the prime minister’s residence in Cape Town. Thirty years later, as I waited at the gates, it was as if the guards had not changed. White Afrikaners checked my ID with the confidence of men in secure work. One carried a copy of Long Walk to Freedom, Nelson Mandela’s autobiography. “It’s very eenspirational,” he said.
Mandela had just had his afternoon nap and looked sleepy; his shoelaces were untied. Wearing a bright gold shirt, he meandered into the room. “Welcome back,” said the first president of a democratic South Africa, beaming. “You must understand that to have been banned from my country is a great honour.” The sheer grace and charm of the man made you feel good. He chuckled about his elevation to sainthood. “That’s not the job I applied for,” he said drily.
Still, he was well used to deferential interviews and I was ticked off several times – “you completely forgot what I said” and “I have already explained that matter to you”. In brooking no criticism of the African National Congress (ANC), he revealed something of why millions of South Africans will mourn his passing but not his “legacy”.
I had asked him why the pledges he and the ANC had given on his release from prison in 1990 had not been kept. The liberation government, Mandela had promised, would take over the apartheid economy, including the banks – and “a change or modification of our views in this regard is inconceivable”.  Once in power, the party’s official policy to end the impoverishment of most South Africans, the Reconstruction and Development Programme (RDP), was abandoned, with one of his ministers boasting that the ANC’s politics were Thatcherite.
“You can put any label on it if you like,” he replied. “ …but, for this country, privatisation is the fundamental policy.”
“That’s the opposite of what you said in 1994.”
“You have to appreciate that every process incorporates a change.”
Few ordinary South Africans were aware that this “process” had begun in high secrecy more than two years before Mandela’s release when the ANC in exile had, in effect, done a deal with prominent members of the Afrikaaner elite at meetings in a stately home, Mells Park House, near Bath. The prime movers were the corporations that had underpinned apartheid.
Around the same time, Mandela was conducting his own secret negotiations. In 1982, he had been moved from Robben Island to Pollsmoor Prison, where he could receive and entertain people. The apartheid regime’s aim was to split the ANC between the “moderates” they could “do business with” (Mandela, Thabo Mbeki and Oliver Tambo) and those in the frontline townships who led the United Democratic Front (UDF). On 5 July, 1989, Mandela was spirited out of prison to meet P.W. Botha, the white minority president known as theGroot Krokodil (Big Crocodile). Mandela was delighted that Botha poured the tea.
With democratic elections in 1994, racial apartheid was ended, and economic apartheid had a new face.  During the 1980s, the Botha regime had offered black businessmen generous loans, allowing them set up companies outside the Bantustans. A new black bourgeoisie emerged quickly, along with a rampant cronyism. ANC chieftains moved into mansions in “golf and country estates”.  As disparities between white and black narrowed, they widened between black and black.
The familiar refrain that the new wealth would “trickle down” and “create jobs” was lost in dodgy merger deals and “restructuring” that cost jobs. For foreign companies, a black face on the board often ensured that nothing had changed. In 2001, George Soros told the Davos Economic Forum, “South Africa is in the hands of international capital.”
In the townships, people felt little change and were subjected to apartheid-era evictions; some expressed nostalgia for the “order” of the old regime.  The post-apartheid achievements in de-segregating daily life in South Africa, including schools, were  undercut by the extremes and corruption of a “neoliberalism” to which the ANC devoted itself.  This led directly to state crimes such as the massacre of 34 miners at Marikana in 2012, which evoked the infamous Sharpeville massacre more than half a century earlier. Both had been protests about injustice.
Mandela, too, fostered crony relationships with wealthy whites from the corporate world, including those who had profited from apartheid.  He saw this as part of “reconciliation”. Perhaps he and his beloved ANC had been in struggle and exile for so long they were willing to accept and collude with the forces that had been the people’s enemy. There were those who genuinely wanted radical change, including a few in the South African Communist Party, but it was the powerful influence of mission Christianity that may have left the most indelible mark. White liberals at home and abroad warmed to this, often ignoring or welcoming Mandela’s reluctance to spell out a coherent vision, as Amilcar Cabral and Pandit Nehru had done.
Ironically, Mandela seemed to change in retirement, alerting the world to the post 9/11 dangers of George W. Bush and Tony Blair. His description of Blair as “Bush’s foreign minister” was mischievously timed; Thabo Mbeki, his successor, was about to arrive in London to meet Blair. I wonder what he would make of the recent “pilgrimage” to his cell on Robben Island by Barack Obama, the unrelenting jailer of Guantanamo.
Mandela seemed unfailingly gracious. When my interview with him was over, he patted me on the arm as if to say I was forgiven for contradicting him. We walked to his silver Mercedes, which consumed his small grey head among a bevy of white men with huge arms and wires in their ears. One of them gave an order in Afrikaans and he was gone.
John Pilger’s film, Apartheid Did Not Die, can be viewed onwww.johnpilger.com

segunda-feira, julho 19, 2010

Fidel diz ser improvável Obama deter conflito com Irã


Mundo

Vermelho - 18 de Julho de 2010 - 20h56


O líder cubano Fidel Castro disse neste domingo (18) que o presidente dos Estados Unidos, Barack Obama, está impossibilitado e desinteressado em deter um possível conflito bélico com o Irã que, na sua opinião, desencadearia uma catástrofe nuclear.

.

"Por todos os elementos da realidade que percebo, não vejo a mínima possibilidade" de que vença o senso comum e se evite a guerra, uma realidade que "nem Obama poderá alterar, nem mostrou em nenhum momento a decisão de fazê-lo", afirmou Fidel em um artigo publicado no site "Digital Cubadebate".
.
Fidel, que está perto dos 84 anos -- sendo os últimos quatro deles afastado do poder por conta de uma doença -- dedicou nove artigos ao tema, publicados desde 1º de junho, e nos últimos 10 dias fez cinco aparições públicas onde abordou o assunto.
.
"Penso que seria muito mais prático que nossos povos se preparassem para encarar a realidade. Nisso consistirá nossa única esperança", afirmou no artigo, escrito poucas horas depois de uma mensagem ao ex-presidente Nelson Mandela, onde pede a ele que use sua influência para manter a África do Sul longe das bases militares dos Estados Unidos e da Otan (Organização do Tratado do Atlântico Norte).
.
Disse também que o Irã já conseguiu fabricar 20 quilos de urânio enriquecido a 20%, "suficientes para construir um artefato nuclear, o que enlouquece ainda mais aqueles que há pouco tempo adotaram a decisão de atacá-los".
.
Essa guerra nuclear "seria a última da pré-história de nossa espécie", sentenciou.
.
Fidel diz que, apesar dos riscos, "a humanidade ainda pode preservar-se dos golpes demolidores da tragédia nuclear que se aproxima, e da ambiental que já está em andamento".
.
Fonte: France Press
.
.

segunda-feira, julho 14, 2008

Os “terroristas” – de Nelson Mandela às FARC


TERRAS DE PENALVA ONDE «A LIBERDADE É A COMPREENSÃO DA NECESSIDADE» E A CDU «UM PROJECTO DE FUTURO, UMA PRESENÇA DE LUTA POR UMA VIDA MELHOR»
Segunda-feira, 14 de Julho de 2008
Os “terroristas” – de Nelson Mandela às FARC

1. Quando foi preso pela última vez em 1962, Nelson Mandela era o comandante do braço armado do ANC, «Umkhonto we Sizwe», a «Lança da Nação». Tal prisão só foi possível por informações passadas pela CIA à polícia política do regime do apartheid na África do Sul. Mandela era considerado um perigoso terrorista e comunista. O «Umkhonto we Sizwe» manteve-se activo até ao fim do apartheid, desenvolvendo acções de sabotagem e de guerrilha, algumas das quais atingiram civis inocentes. Durante os 27 anos de prisão Nelson Mandela sempre recusou a sua liberdade condicional em troca de uma declaração de renúncia à luta armada.

A história depois da sua libertação em 1990 é por demais conhecida. O que poucos leitores deviam saber é que Mandela e o seu partido, o ANC, estiveram na lista negra do «terrorismo» americano até bem recentemente (ver o PÚBLICO de 6/7). Segundo uma lei aprovada no mandato de Ronald Reagan, poderiam deslocar-se à sede das Nações Unidas, mas não estavam autorizados a viajar no resto do território americano. Finalmente a 1 de Julho de 2008 (!!!) o Presidente Bush promulgou a lei aprovada pelo Senado a 27 de Junho.

2. A comunicação social dominante em Portugal nada disse nestes dias sobre o facto do Presidente da Colômbia, Álvaro Uribe, enfrentar uma crise política grave. Sessenta parlamentares da sua base de apoio estão incriminados num escândalo de corrupção, ligações com o narcotráfico e os paramilitares. Tem um primo e conselheiro político, Mário Uribe, preso pelos mesmos motivos. O Supremo Tribunal contesta a legalidade de sua reeleição em 2006, obtida mediante a compra de votos confirmado pela confissão da ex-parlamentar Ydis Medina. Não possui uma base política sólida e nem um sucessor de confiança, o que o leva à tentação de mudar de novo as regras do jogo e tentar um terceiro mandato.

Dizer que o governo Uribe é o mais à direita da América Latina dá apenas uma pálida imagem do seu posicionamento político e ideológico. Ele e sua base de classe são com frequência comparados aos regimes nazi-fascistas. Sobretudo depois de a oligarquia colombiana ter entrado no ramo das drogas e ter criado os paramilitares. A Colômbia não é apenas o único país das Américas que vive uma experiência guerrilheira. É também campeã do mundo em assassinatos de sindicalistas e de jornalistas: mais de metade dos sindicalistas assassinados em todo o mundo.

Mais de 11.200 colombianos foram assassinados desde que Uribe foi «eleito» (não inclui os mortos em combate entre as guerrilhas e as Forças Armadas). O número de desaparecidos ronda os 30 mil. São homens e mulheres, novos e velhos, com nome. Mas a comunicação social dominante cala-se, ou refere friamente os números. Não são mediáticos. Não podem aparecer nas televisões. Jazem sob sete palmos de terra.

Aparentemente quem fala e escreve sob a Colômbia ignora também que as forças democráticas de esquerda deste país (socialistas, sociais-democratas e comunistas) estão aglutinadas no seio do Pólo Democrático Alternativo (PDA). Em 2007 o PDA elegeu 9 deputados em 166 e 11 senadores em 100. Destes 1 senador e 1 deputado são membros do PCC. O candidato do PDA às últimas eleições presidenciais na Colômbia, Carlos Gaviria Díaz, foi o 2º mais votado com 22,04% dos votos. Em 2008 o PDA conquistou, entre outros, o município de Bogotá.

Notas finais: Para quem não sabe, na Colômbia há várias organizações que se reclamam do marxismo-leninismo: o PCC, as FARC, um PCC clandestino criado pelas FARC, o PC da C (m-l), o PCC-M, o PPS.

Já por três vezes, a propósito das mentiras das sucessivas administrações americanas, indiquei nesta coluna o sítio do National Security Archive da George Washington University. Vão lá e revisitem o inqualificável passado e presente de Álvaro Uribe e dos seus mais próximos colaboradores. Talvez revejam algumas ideias feitas…

Especialista em Sistemas de Comunicação e Informação

In jornal "Público" - Edição de 11 de Julho de 2008

sinto-me:
publicado por António Vilarigues às 00:03
,
,

quarta-feira, abril 16, 2008

EUA - «Demo-Cracia» e «Terrorismo» - Nelson Mandela

Nelson Mandela ainda é considerado terrorista nos EUA

O Prêmio Nobel da Paz e ex-presidente sul-africano, Nelson Mandela, e o seu partido, o Congresso Nacional Africano (ANC), ainda estão na lista de organizações terroristas dos Estados Unidos.

A secretária de Estado norte-americana, Condoleezza Rice, disse perante uma comissão do Senado que "é vergonhoso que ainda tenha que intervir pessoalmente para autorizar a entrada no nosso território do meu homólogo sul-africano, para não falar do grande dirigente Nelson Mandela".

.

.

quarta-feira, maio 16, 2007


Nelson Mandela
Origem: Wikiquote, a coletânea de citações livre.

Nelson Rolihlahla Mandela (nascido a 18 de julho de 1918, em Umtata, Tanskei, África do Sul). Líder político africano. Foi presidente da África do Sul de 1994 a 1999, depois de atuar como principal representante do movimento anti-apartheid, como ativista, sabotador e guerrilheiro.

"Uma boa cabeça e um bom coração formam sempre uma combinação formidável."
"Não há caminho fácil para a Liberdade."
"A derrubada da opressão foi sancionada pela humanidade, e é a maior aspiração de cada homem livre."
"A luta é a minha vida. Continuarei a lutar pela liberdade até o fim de meus dias."
"A violência do governo só pode fazer uma coisa: gerar a contra-violência."
"A educação é a arma mais poderosa que você pode usar para mudar o mundo."
"Sonho com o dia em que todos levantar-se-ão e compreenderão que foram feitos para viverem como irmãos."
"Marcados nessas pedras você vai encontrar a dor de nossa luta, a tristeza de nossas perdas e os alicerces de nossa vitória."

- Nelson Mandela, presidente da África do Sul, em visita à prisão da Ilha Robben, em 1995, onde passou parte de seus 27 anos de cadeia

"Nascemos para manifestar a glória do Universo que está dentro de nós. Não está apenas em um de nós: está em todos nós. E conforme deixamos nossa própria luz brilhar, inconscientemente damos às outras pessoas permissão para fazer o mesmo. E conforme nos libertamos do nosso medo, nossa presença, automaticamente, libera os outros."

in Wikiquote

ver mais in    http://pt.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nelson_Mandela

Fotografia:   Un portrait signé Jurgen Schadeberg de Nelson Mandela réalisé en 1994.

© photographers gallery za



'UNITE! MOBILISE! FIGHT ON! BETWEEN THE ANVIL OF UNITED MASS ACTION AND THE HAMMER OF THE ARMED STRUGGLE WE SHALL CRUSH APARTHEID!'

This message was Mandela's call after the Soweto uprising of 1976. It was published by the ANC on 10 June 1980, with an introduction by O R Tambo, President of the ANC at the time.

The African National Congress brings you this URGENT CALL TO UNITY AND MASS ACTION by political prisoners on Robben Island to all patriots of our motherland. Nelson Mandela and hundreds of our comrades have been in the racist regime's prisons for more than 17 years. This message by Nelson Mandela addressed to the struggling masses of our country was written to deal with the present crisis gripping our enemy and in the aftermath of the Soweto uprisings. It was smuggled out of Robben Island prison under very difficult conditions and has taken over two years to reach us. None the less we believe the message remains fresh and valid and should be presented to our people. His call to unity and mass action is of particular importance in this Year of the Charter - 25th anniversary of the Freedom Charter. The ANC urges you to respond to this call and make 1980 a year of united mass struggle.

Oliver Tambo: President, ANC

MANDELA'S CALL

RACISTS RULE BY THE GUN!

The gun has played an important part in our history. The resistance of the black man to white colonial intrusion was crushed by the gun. Our struggle to liberate ourselves from white domination is held in check by force of arms. From con- quest to the present the story is the same. Successive white regimes have repeatedly massacred unarmed defenceless blacks. And wherever and whenever they have pulled out their guns the ferocity of their fire has been trained on the African people.

Apartheid is the embodiment of the racialism, repression and inhumanity of all previous white supremacist regimes. To see the real face of apartheid we must look beneath the veil of constitutional formulas, deceptive phrases and playing with words.

The rattle of gunfire and the rumbling of Hippo armoured vehicles since June 1976 have once again torn aside that veil. Spread across the face of our country, in black townships, the racist army and police have been pouring a hail of bullets killing and maiming hundreds of black men, women and children. The toll of the dead and injured already surpasses that of all past massacres carried out by this regime.

Apartheid is the rule of the gun and the hangman. The Hippo, the FN rifle and the gallows are its true symbols. These remain the easiest resort, the ever ready solution of the race-mad rulers of South Africa.

VAGUE PROMISES, GREATER REPRESSION . . .

In the midst of the present crisis, while our people count the dead and nurse the injured, they ask themselves: what lies ahead?

From our rulers we can expect nothing. They are the ones who give orders to the soldier crouching over his rifle: theirs is the spirit that moves the finger that caresses the trigger.

Vague promises, tinkerings with the machinery of apartheid, constitution juggling, massive arrests and detentions side by side with renewed overtures aimed at weakening and forestalling the unity of us blacks and dividing the forces of change - these are the fixed paths along which they will move. For they are neither capable nor willing to heed the verdict of the masses of our people.

THE VERDICT OF JUNE 16!

That verdict is loud and clear: apartheid has failed. Our people remain unequivocal in its rejection. The young and the old, parent and child, all reject it. At the forefront of this 1976/77 wave of unrest were our students and youth. They come from the universities, high schools and even primary schools. They are a generation whose whole education has been under the diabolical design of the racists to poison the minds and brainwash our children into docile subjects of apartheid rule. But after more than twenty years of Bantu Education the circle is closed and nothing demonstrates the utter bankruptcy of apartheid as the revolt of our youth.

The evils, the cruelty and the inhumanity of apartheid have been there from its inception. And all blacks - Africans, Coloureds and Indians - have opposed it all along the line. What is now unmistakable, what the current wave of unrest has sharply highlighted, is this: that despite all the window-dressing and smooth talk, apartheid has become intolerable.

This awareness reaches over and beyond the particulars of our enslavement. The measure of this truth is the recognition by our people that under apartheid our lives, individually and collectively, count for nothing.

UNITE !

We face an enemy that is deep rooted, an enemy entrenched and determined not to yield. Our march to freedom is long and difficult. But both within and beyond our borders the prospects of victory grow bright.

The first condition for victory is black unity. Every effort to divide the blacks, to woo and pit one black group against another, must be vigorously repulsed. Our people - African, Coloured, Indian and democratic whites - must be united into a single massive and solid wall of resistance, of united mass action.

Our struggle is growing sharper. This is not the time for the luxury of division and disunity. At all levels and in every walk of life we must close ranks. Within the ranks of the people differences must be submerged to the achievement of a single goal - the complete overthrow of apartheid and racist domination.

VICTORY IS CERTAIN !

The revulsion of the world against apartheid is growing and the frontiers of white supremacy are shrinking. Mozambique and Angola are free and the war of liberation gathers force in Namibia and Zimbabwe. The soil of our country is destined to be the scene of the fiercest fight and the sharpest battles to rid our continent of the last vestiges of white minority rule.

The world is on our side. The OAU, the UN and the anti-apartheid movement continue to put pressure on the racist rulers of our country. Every effort to isolate South Africa adds strength to our struggle.

At all levels of our struggle, within and outside the country, much has been achieved and much remains to be done. But victor~ is certain!

WE SALUTE ALL OF YOU!

We who are confined within the grey walls of the Pretoria regime's prisons reach out to our people. With you we count those who have perished by means of the gun and the hangman's rope. We salute all of you - the living, the injured and the dead. For you have dared to rise up against the tyrant's might.

Even as we bow at their graves we remember this: the dead live on as martyrs in our hearts and minds, a reproach to our disunity and the host of shortcomings that accompany divisions among the oppressed, a spur to our efforts to close ranks, and a reminder that the freedom of our people is yet to be won.

We face the future with confidence. For the guns that serve apartheid cannot render it unconquerable. Those who live by the gun shall perish by the gun.

UNITE! MOBILISE! FIGHT ON!

Between the anvil of united mass action and the hammer of the armed struggle we shall crush apartheid and white minority racist rule.

AMANDLA NGAWETHU! MATLA KE A RONA!

in   http://www.anc.org.za/ancdocs/history/mandela/64-90/anvil.html