Monday, 10 August 2009

Where memories drain away...


Ntlangano forms part of a very extensive wilderness system, the latter occupying much of the area between Mthatha and KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa. The Tsitsa drainage area starts northwest of Maclear; the Tina, Mzimvubu and Mzintlava – all of which converge close to the Tina-Tsitsa confluence – drains the entire area stretching well past Kokstad and Matatiele on the east. In other words, most of the southeast escarpment boundary with Lesotho ultimately drains into the Mzimvubu through Port St John’s.

These four great rivers develop into deeply incised river valleys that converge between Flagstaff, Lusikisiki, Libode, Tsolo, Qumbu and Ntabankulu. Despite the preponderance of villages on the ridges above these valleys, much of the area is remote, inaccessible wilderness. It invites a sense of mystery and the unexplored. It stands to reason that this area contains a vast biome of interesting, often endemic, plant life. It is a biological point of attraction.

The first picture in the sequence shows Tsitsa Falls. The one below is indicative of the terrain. Much of the river is crowded-in with inaccessible cliff-face, which generally drops around 600m.

The valley floor is repeatedly restricted by cliff-face, and the river is too deep to cross. The surrounding vegetation – dominated by Euphorbia and thorny thicket – is too dense and unforgiving to allow ready bypasses, even should the gradient permit for that.

Down here there’s an eerie coastal feel – lots of white sand, smooth rocks, and an almost coastal vegetation feel. Almost. There’s still an abundance of Euphorbia and assorted thorn bush. The path meets the very occasional homestead – clearly people who have defied the old betterment resettlement and moved back to ancestral homes (in the process compromising access to infrastructure such as roads, clinics, schools, taxis).




Above is the Tina river, and below is the gentler Tina valley. This area generally drops around 600m as well. The Ntlangano valley has long been an outlaw area, and there are historical accounts (around 90 years ago) of youths returning from the mines and being a law unto themselves in the valley. Stock theft repeatedly thrived in this dense, difficult to penetrate landscape.


Flood 2 Fun


This is a small tributary of the Tina river in the Ntlangano area of the Eastern Cape. (See previous entry for more details.) We had earlier driven through this river en route to the Tina Falls, but were cut-off for a few hours on our return after a severe thunderstorm. The river had swollen massively for a short while, but by the time these kids had entered, it was already receding. Out of sight (in front) was a minor waterfall, and at the time of the picture above the current was still far too strong to venture close to it.


By the time this picture was taken, the kid in the foreground was risking the current just above the little waterfall. Notice his intense concentration in the next picture.



Its a while later, and activity is generally far more relaxed. In the final picture kids have ventured onto the minor waterfall. Beyond was a far more serious waterfall that would still have swept away all-and-sundry.


Saturday, 25 April 2009

Class and the Loss of Innocence - Mzansi's post-liberation landscape

South Africa's rural areas will increasingly become central to political contestation. The country is urbanising rapidly, and the ruling party has a stronger urban legacy. Yet rural support is becoming the foundation of the ANC's continued electoral dominance.

The past week confronted me with the stark reality that many comrades from the past, who backed Mzansi's (South Africa's) ANC during the Eighties and into the post-1994 era, had abandoned the ANC for opposition parties, despite the (to me) obvious fact that a radical internal power and leadership transformation within the ruling party would sweep it back into power with a massive mandate.

Despite strong misgivings about the endemic levels of corruption, instances of poor governance, inverted racism and erosion of a human rights culture, I had little hesitation in re-affirming my support for the ANC.

Most of these comrades, from an earlier period in my life, had drifted virtually completely or at least partially out of my social universe, as I settled in a rural area, and most of them remained behind in urban middle class communities, career-building, and friendship circles. By contrast, I mixed more-and-more with people on the periphery of access to resources,  to Information technology, to jobs, to decent education and health, to basic infrastructure, and to power. My reference group also slowly became younger, and I became far more caught-up in the aspirations, value-systems and alienation of a post-liberation age set. 

South African politics have come through 2 distinct period: 
  1. Firstly, nebulous notions of feel-good nation-building rainbow-people characterisation - the Mandela era. It was an essential step in pacifying a tense, diverse 'nation', and creating the breathing space to, first, take command of the political and state apparatuses; and, secondly, etsablish the framework for a vastly different developmental state, It was characterised by sound bytes such as the 1994 elections and inaugaration; the rugby World Cup and soccer African Nations championships; strong human rights statements around Nigeria and our own new constitutional order; and the virtual deification of Mandela. it briefly seemed to continue into the Mbeki era, with the latter's I am an African speech, and the intellectual and institution-building emphasis on the African Renaissance.

  2. Secondly, the establishment of a technocratic and centralised state; with a mixed track record in lean, mean efficiency (the fiscus) and structures inviting of corruption and poor capacity (most local government bodies). This state co-incided with rapid establishment of an often poorly capacitated middle class (affirmative action; fast-tracking) and a parasitical new capitalist strata, that included luminaries of the political struggle era, and often focussed on rapid capital accumulation through deal-making at the expense of expanding capital (black economic empowerment, crony capitalism, deal-making through influence and position).
The new era unfolding, signalled through Mzansi's (South Africa's) bitter politics of the last few years, has culminated in the election to power of Jacob Zuma and a very diverse set of class ineterests backing that ascendancy. Common to this class alliance is, hitherto, exclusion from the benefits, spoils and active participation in a growing economy.

We've already seen the emergence of divisions far more bitter than what unfolded at Polokwane: suffice to refer to the ANC Women's League and Youth League elections. There is a diversity of capitalist and aspiring capitalist elements vying for hegemony in policy implementation with the leftwing agendas of the trade union movement and the South African Communist Party. The left dictated the intellectual discourse of the pre-liberation period, and it senses the return of that power.

Time has moved on. The current context revolves around the re-definition of state-sponsored accumulation - to me its a straight struggle between the politics of greed (but a new pack, sidelined by the Mbeki era) and the politics of development. In each case there's dense layering: the left incorporates a spectrum from pushing for social contract politics, favourable to the poor and the working classes (with room for expansive capital accumulation), to conservative posturing for expanded social welfare hand-outs (complete with latent conservatism in basic human rights issues or complete disregard for environmnetal and other costs). The latter discourse, seldom articulated intellectually, runs rampant in the rural government institutions and rural support base that consolidated so massively behind the ANC in the elections.

I should have little surprise that comrades from the past abandoned the ANC, in a realistic assessment of their own realities - the issues that confront them, the value systems, the practical impacts on their lives. These are friends and comrades that embraced vibrant urban living-styles, with an intellectual and human rights discourse at odds (or more precisely out of synchronised priority) with developmental realities in the rural areas. (Apartheid was an all-embracing glue that papered over fundamental cracks of the past: for example, the co-habitation of marxist feminism, conservative womens' rights discourses, and practically marginalised but intellectually noisy radical feminist streams.)

Perhaps more disturbing are the comrades from the present, rural or township in origin, that wryly observes the potential for Zanufication: the slow diffusion of urban support for the ANC, and the tightening of a rural compact. The ANC consolidates its rural base - ANC for Life; My vision, My future. Given the media's obsessive pre-occupation with individual leadership - its all about Zuma (its actually very little about Zuma); there should be little surprise that there was hardly a murmur of disapproval of this fundamental break with ANC culture. The ANC historically did not embrace the cult of the personality; it kept Mandela's power vigorously in check (and Mandela himself gave vigorous leadership in that regard, from devolving so much power - monetary policy, defence and intelligence policy, party leadership - to Mbeki in particular (but also selectively to others: Manual, Mboweni), to again-and-again deferring in speeches to the collective 'my people' as the force for decision-making and leadership).

My people was at once shorthand for the struggle (and the general population that experienced the brunt of the impact), and comrades in the struggle, in the movement for liberation

Ultimately, Mbeki went because of a rupture with and a reaction to his highly centralised, neo-authoritarian style. Yet Zuma ushers in the new era with 'my vision; my party'.

The Polokwane contestation continues in a new form, and this time it is fundamentally defined by class, if not ideologically presented as such. I saw a comment, from a historical supporter of the ANC that voted for the opposition, celebrating the liberating impact of the decision and the perceived political maturity thereof. I beg to differ. Your class context matures and re-shapes you. It can be a digression. It can be a false liberation. It must be a recognised reality, or we shall harvest bitter fruits of conflict.

Tuesday, 21 April 2009

Why Zuma does not matter - South Africa's elections, 2009

As South Africa goes to the polls on 22 April 2009, there is an obsessive pre-occupation with the unique personalities of Jacob Zuma and Julius Malema. Yet Polokwane was essentially a mass thrust by branch-based rank-and-file, through democratic means, to rid the ANC of an unpopular leader, perceived to be authoritarian, unresponsive to civil society, deeply flawed in policy direction around AIDS and the content of economic change. That process culminated in a much more vigorous National Executive that prioritises democratic debate and robust analysis.

Mbeki’s legacy, once the emotions dissipate, will show that he was an icon of the liberation struggle, and the driver of essential technocratic institutionalisation and modernisation. Zuma and Malema matter little. Malema is a gadfly, a devil’s advocate, void of the responsibility to govern.

Zuma is the preferred agent, based on his proven negotiations skills, and on his ability to withstand intolerable pressure, to provide the necessary analytical and leadership space to effectively address the issues below – issues that matter, and should matter, to the South African electorate.

The key electoral issue is not whether Zuma is corrupt or not (we’ll never know for sure – it is only the media that fabricated a so-called ‘generally corrupt relationship between Shaik and Zuma’, not the supposed author of this statement, the trial Judge, as he was quick to correct both the media and the not-so-very-god-like Constitutional Court; a prosecution proves nothing until there’s a conviction or acquittal).

The key issue is whether the ruling party key policy documents, approved by the very same overwhelming democratic thrust that changed the leadership, and guarded by the extensive and by no stretch of the imagination homogenous National Executive, will translate into effective leadership on the key issues that face us as a society caught-up in global duress and local opportunity.

If anyone doubts the vigorous independence of thinking within the ruling party, then how do you defend the sharply opposite viewpoints expressed – on the one hand - by the President of the country, Deputy-President of the ANC, and clearly one of the most powerful leaders over the last 15 years (Motlanthe); and – on the other hand – the head of the ANC election campaign (and self-proclaimed maker and breaker of the Mbeki Presidency, and again maker of the Zuma Presidency) and former ANC Youth League leader (Mabula), over Mabula’s scathing attack on Mbeki.

Economic Growth

Productive societies do things differently, and do that better than others. As a country, we need to embrace new products. Historically, we travel an Internationally-defined path, from Agriculture to Industry to Services. Service productivity is, today, explosively defined by growth in Information technologies, products and services. The food and resource crises necessitate that we re-define our base technologies and products. It is a path to failure to embrace the mechanistic, massively industrialized, environmentally degrading practices of Europe and America. It is also a path to failure to embrace the knowledge-defying environmentally-destructive short-term impact realities of much of the developing world.

I want to know that we will have in place a Government that can look at new and alternative agricultural and industrial processes, that studies dynamic high-impact growth economies such as China, India and Brazil (and forge active links with them), yet learns from the vigorous environmental debates in the failing economies of the western military-industrial states, and embraces the modern knowledge-expanding technologies of these same states – states caught in globally-impactful contradictions, but full of both the negative and positive.

I understand full well that we have a ruling party that made economic decisions that allowed our economy to be one of the most resilient of the G20 economies in the face of global crisis, and that is basing its stimulus response on durable infrastructure, not bailing out greed-blinded banking or auto sectors. I’m aware that we face our own overwhelming set of contradictions, contracting industries and above all else employment and social welfare time-bombs. I want to know that we can change course based on the strengths of the past 15 years. To that, the ruling party stands committed. What claim to fame has COPE or the DA?

Agricultural productivity

South Africa faces a potential loss in food productivity of up to 50% over the next 70 years, as a direct consequence of climate change.

I want to know that as we face increasing demand for irrigated agriculture and more productive output, we’re not trading that for higher salinization of soil, destruction of soil macrostructure and fertility, and erosion, leading to desertification. We need a governing party that is seriously committed to developing our natural land potential in rural areas such as Transkei, and that comprehend that mainstream agro-industry models cannot work (as a combination of topography, market access, market culture, land tenure, information & knowledge access, historical practices and emerging environmental realities), and that we need to learn from societies successfully engaging alternate models. Only the ANC currently enjoys those societal linkages and potential for networking. Our middle-class parties are simply out of their depth, and this issue is way too critical to entrust to adventurers.

Military spending

Despite the obsessive media mongering around the supposed arms scandal, this country spends much less on military expenditure as a percentage of Government expenditure than the UK, France, Australia, Argentina, Canada, Namibia or Egypt. We spend vastly less, as a percentage, than the USA, Russia or China. Such expenditure is ultimately destructive of genuinely productive and sustainable economic growth.

I want to see that our military spending helps to control conflicts that impact destructively on global stability and localised human rights (where localised populations cannot escape poverty as a direct result of such conflicts), in disaster management, and in resource protection, such as our (and our neighbours’) vulnerable coastlines.

To that effect, I believe we have a Government that strives for relative balance, relative quality of military expenditure.

Human rights

I never ever again want to see xenophobic violence rampant as we recently witnessed. I was deeply distressed by the absent reaction of our African renaissance leader (Mbeki), and I do not trust the DA or COPE leadership to put in place macro-framework policies that will minimise this potential. I am more trusting – not convinced, just more trusting – of the exile history and greater warmth and affinity (and skill in negotiations, as witnessed in central Africa and particularly KZN) displayed by Jacob Zuma; or the on-site emotional response by Winnie Mandela.

I accept the need to step carefully around Zimbabwe. We cannot – cannot – afford a social and economic implosion on our border. I take heart from the fact that strong components of the current leadership – COSATU, the SACP in particular – have been in the forefront of condemning Mugabe’s excesses. That will ensure a more balanced tempering of our vital strategic and security interests in dealing with the Zimbabwean issue.

The Dalai Lama – with a chequered history of insurrection and flight – is of very little consequence in the far more overwhelming human rights needs of fighting poverty, unemployment, and atrocious health & educational disparities. If those needs can be better met through partnership with China, so be it in assessing our self-interest to dictate that we take unpopular decisions. It is not satisfactory. Perhaps at this time we have to reconcile ourselves with a democratic system that allows for vigorous disapproval – even from a minister – but ultimate subjugation to global political considerations.

Legal and Constitutional order

The legal challenges around the Zuma case has resulted in an extremely dynamic and vigorous self-examination, by different courts, commissions, prosecutorial authorities and public institutions, including those established as part of our constitutional order. That strengthens the establishment of a democratic and constitutional state, and the evolution of a law-driven society. If you cannot see or accept that, you are merely reflecting your emotional entrapment in a preferred outcome, shaped by media trial, shaped by the class interests of the past and their enthusiastic parasitical emerging black capital collaborators. I – and most South Africans – do not care for your blinkered interpretation of justice - it looks suspiciously like the narrow group-justice so preferred before 1994.

The debate will continue, not with any semblance of relevance through the populist calls to override judicial independence and try-by-political-demand, but through the Constitutional Court addressing the conflicting Nicholson and Supreme Court judgments, and the NPA de-politicising, transforming and professionalising itself.

I will not trust a party (COPE) that selected its leadership through undemocratic means, in order to avoid internal conflict, to protect the main pillar of post-1994 democracy – our constitutional order. The ANC, by contrast, enjoyed an extraordinarily intense, if very bitter, democratic contest for leadership. COPE’s founders could not accept the verdict of that democratic contestation. Nor can the DA accept that the ANC has, for 10 years, not had the reason to use its two-thirds majority to change the constitution simply because it actually played the overwhelming lead role in establishing that constitution. COPE and the DA exhibit imbecile populism around these issues – and I am expected to embrace their infantile and convoluted latent totalitarianism.

Corruption and crime

The ANC’s Strategy and Tactics outline the base analysis that underpins policy development. I simply do not see any analysis remotely as sophisticated emerging from either the DA or COPE. That does not mean there’s not been a failure in policy. That also does not negate the reality that a party with 70% electoral support attracts corrupt opportunism. It will be a defining challenge for the incoming administration – and that is why addressing it is a core pillar of the ANC’s election manifesto.

I am not really interested in South Africans from the diaspora screaming blue murder around corruption, when they readily chirp about what a lovely country the demonstrably corrupt and reactionary Berlusconi’s Italy is. Yes, it’s white and western. Good for your sense of self-righteousness. Come and address the problem; bring solutions. In case you didn’t notice, corruption is out in the open because of the media freedoms protected by the current constitutional order. We no longer have National Party ministers using state helicopters, away from media scrutiny, for demented hunting trips in vassal territory. And crime is no longer bottled-up (through a murderous police state) in the townships, where your parents and their politicians never gave a hoot about it, as it didn’t impact on their lives.

That doesn’t mean it must be anything but smashed. It does mean that populist and inhumane calls for capital punishment and police state methodology, and reflective of the more reactionary ways of past societies globally and locally, is not going to be on the agenda. And I trust the ANC a damn lot more to guard against base instinct vulgar politics.

The rural poor

Above all else, the middle classes – insulated in their dynamic growth and very opulent lifestyles, allowed so unabatedly the past 10 years in particular – do not have the (seeming) personal need or integrity or Dutch / Scandinavian-style social contract mentality to calculate the cost and enormity of Apartheid’s legacy around issues of health, education and security. I understand that these issues represent failure in state policy. I believe that a change in leadership in a political movement clearly rooted in the rural poor is more likely to address these issues than a change to COPE or the DA’s leadership, living in gated communities with gated mind-sets. The ANC branch rank-and-file that swept Zuma into power do not live such lives.

I live – and have for 22 years now - in a township that has slowly transformed from rural peri-urban village to loxion, complete with devastating decline in crime indices, health (AIDS and TB), food security, and cultural values and attitudes of youth; added to the long-established environmental degradation, atrocious educational standards, poor infrastructure. I have witnessed some developmental delivery (atrociously implemented and maintained water systems, poorly thought-through electricity connectivity, sub-standard housing – lacking imaginative pro-active urban planning considerations). I have also witnessed a rise in (general) income levels, a greatly expanded social welfare net, and a rapid decline in fear associated with the past disrespect for basic human rights. I’ve witnessed the development of political tolerance and an eradication of the supremacist value systems that accompanied first colonialism and then apartheid.

In this area, as in the rural hinterlands of South Africa, none of us want to witness the latent-arrogance of an urban elite in dictating our spatial, economic and political development. It was completely the norm for more than a hundred years, epitomised in the stupid racism of forcing black people, by threat of fines and physical abuse, off the pavements of Mthatha, or charging them labour or money to cross expropriated ancestral land. That urban and cultural elitism has slowly crept-back, in the form of dramatically skewed economic growth, through the consequences of the Mbeki-era growth models, and declining respect for human rights and democratic debate. It no longer has an automatic white face. That does not make it less ugly.

In these areas we will, in overwhelming numbers, assume that the middle-class and urban leadership (and membership) of the DA and COPE will increase such elitism and disdain. We don’t accept the limited delivery of the past 10 years. We demand change in course. That is exactly what Polokwane concluded, and the ANC will change course, based on its own lessons learnt. We don’t want the strengths and successes of the past 15 years abandoned.

Change has a strong foundation. We have a legal and constitutional order that is globally one of the finest. We are renewing infrastructure both within the context of the World Cup and of our own development priorities, on an uninterrupted scale, basically not compromised by the global melt-down. We did not defer our economic policies to the rampant greed that destroyed western banking systems.

ANC forever?

Only in the dreams of the living dead, incapable of learning lessons, and in the populist electoral rabble-rousing of the day. Liberation movements, great parties and great agendas stultify and fail. Politics by definition attract those tending towards corrupt greed and grandiose delusional power. I see more reason to vote ANC in 2009 than to support the charlatans and faith healers of COPE and the DA. But that will quickly change if I see increasingly poor environmental and energy management; more enthusiastic aping of western dehumanisation and its coke culture; a retreat of hard-fought progressive societal advances such as gay rights or the abolition of capital punishment; or declining economic growth.

I live in a massively better society than Apartheid South Africa. We do not engage in genocidal adventures in other countries. The standards are set. That is what must determine political support, not nebulous hatred of an individual. Zuma does not matter. The policy driver and its mechanisms matter – the internal political democracy, the constitutional order, and state capacity to deliver.

It helps to have a relatively sound economic track-record in a global context.

Thursday, 19 February 2009

Soccer and composite rural entertainment

Cultural activities are being seriously degraded across South Africa as a component of a tourism industry dominated by values derived from European settlement. Despite the emergence of a significant black leisure market, much product packaging remains tailored to American, European and white South African tastes and value systems.

These pictures were taken at a soccer tournament held to launch a business development venture in a deep rural part of the Wild Coast (Cwebe village). The tournament guaranteed attendance of large numbers of villagers, and allowed an assortment of cultural groups to showcase traditional dancing.

What makes these pictures unique is that the activities were directed at local residents, without the trappings and compromises involved in the tourism industry. More pictures will be released in subsequent postings. The event took place in a particularly picturesque valley, surrounded by village dwellings and indigenous forest, with the sea clearly visible close by.

While older participants naturally organised their performances in synchrony with their experience of traditional activities and dress, organisers of the youth groups are dedicated and highly committed crafters of traditional culture, operating without financial or logistical support.

Wednesday, 18 February 2009

Succulent groundcovers: Plectranthus species

Here are two tough Plectranthus groundcovers that prefer dry conditions.

Plectranthus spicatus typically grows predominantly in the sun on cliff-faces, with fairly shallow soils and high wind exposure. It will cover an embankment very rapidly, and is another plant that will colonise downwards on a tightly-packed retainer wall, albeit more slowly than Crassula multicava (see previous posting). Whereas C.multicava is more likely to spread via the tiny seedlings that form as the flower dries-up, P. spicatus will root from dislodged pieces - which provides the clue to rapid cover, if you have the time to do it manually.

I love its bright green, serrated (dentate) texture. It is very hardy to drought, but gets damaged by fairly light frost (it should recover in Spring, unless the frost is severe). It has a long flowering period (Autumn to early Spring), and the flowers provide curious interest at times, but on the whole it detracts from a particularly spectacular foliage. It handles much more (dry) shade than commonly assumed.

Plectranthus lucidus is typical coastal dune vegetation undergrowth. Mthatha's climate is extremely hot in summer, but with lots of cloud. Wet summers can give the area a very sub-tropical feel (but with much less humidity). A dry summer, as we're currently experiencing, has more of a harsh karoo-like or thicket feel to it, but with much more cloud. Winters are crisp (warm-to-hot at midday; below freezing at dawn), dry and sunny. This Plectranthus does extremely well here under dry shade, and does not mind the fine clays typical of the area. It spreads fairly slowly, and needs protection from frost (solid tree cover will do). It is a delicate plant in size and appearance (tough in practice), with fine texture and bright foliage. It is a great plant for contrasting alternate repetitions. I'm currently using it to some effect with a Crassula species that I received from Ryder Nash of Simply Indigenous. Unfortunately, discussions with botanists and long searches through hundreds of Crassulas have failed to yield a name. I now call it Crassula sp. 'Ryder'. I'll do a separate posting on it.

Succulent groundcovers: Crassula species

I work with several indigenous Crassula species, including the more shrub-like form plants (and great, albeit different, bonsai material) C. ovata and C. arborescens. I personally enjoy the weird leaf form and spectacular flowers of C. perfoliata, and find that C. pellucida combines well with trailing Arctotis species.

However, it is to C. multicava and C. spathulata that I turn for tough Crassula groundcovers in the shade.

Crassula multicava is pictured here underneath Plectranthus ecklonii, during late winter (when the Plectranthus is in poor shape and fairly open). It spread itself, via seeding, down the very hostile retainer wall. It is a relatively moist area, and this Crassula does enjoy some degree of moisture. However, there's a gap as wide as the blade of a knife behind each of those retainer blocks - not much more than dust settles there. Once roots grow away, they should find a bit of soil in the blocks. The aspect is also tricky - north-facing; hot sun most of the day, most of summer; virtually no sun in winter (tall surrounding walls cut the sun). The picture was taken a year after planting the Crassula on top only. It is now 2 years since the picture, and the wall is densely covered - but nutrient deficiency is starting to show, as there's a yellowing of the leaves, particular where the sun is more persistent. I definitely prefer this Crassula in the shade.

Crassula spathulata has a very similar flower, for a much longer period, and at a different time than C. multicava. I do not rate the flower, though, finding that it gives an untidy appearance. This is a Crassula that I prefer for its leaves. It handles hot sun with less scorching, and looks better in dry locations than C.multicava. It has exceptionally beautiful texture and gloss, particularly in the shade. And that is my preferred location: dry shade.