ANC talks tough on mines research

[miningmx.com] — ALL structures within the ANC must stop casting aspersions before real research work on the nationalisation of mines begins, spokesperson Brian Sokutu said on Wednesday.

“We are setting the record straight…the ANC NEC resolution to engage and appoint researchers to investigate the issue of nationalisation of mines, is consistent with that of the national general council,” he told Sapa.

Sokutu was responding to the ANC Youth League’s earlier statement that it did not want academic research on the nationalisation of mines, and it did not want the research to be independent of the ANC.

“We wish to reiterate that the ANC NEC sub committee, on economic transformation, will provide terms of reference for such a research, and will also give us a reference group to oversee the work on behalf of the NEC.

“We therefore call on all our structures to give this important process a chance,” Sokutu said.

Earlier, ANCYL spokesperson Floyd Shivambu, when asked to clarify a statement reacting to the ruling party’s announcement that two independent researchers would be appointed, said the youth league was not interested in “so-called independent views”.

“We are not that naive. How can they be independent if they are researching an ANC political programme?

“No, that one, it can’t be independent of the ANC. It does not make sense,” he told Sapa.

Shivambu said all the ANCYL wanted the researchers to find out was “detail of what is the best way to handle this (nationalisation)”.

He said the researchers needed to keep “political realities” in mind.

“… a depoliticised research outcome, which ignores the politics of the national democratic revolutionary agenda will not find resonance in the African National Congress,” he said in the statement.

“We raise this point because neo-liberal politics and economics were previously smuggled into the ANC through what is called independent research and expertise.”

ANC secretary general Gwede Mantashe on Monday announced that two researchers would be appointed to look into state involvement in mines.

This was decided by the national executive committee (NEC), as a direct result of discussions held at the ANC’s National General Council (NGC) meeting in September.

Mantashe said: “The NEC has resolved to appoint two senior researchers and a project manager to investigate successful models that could be considered on the role of the state in mining…

“We are engaging the research institutions to provide researchers (for) the project… we are going to try and get researchers who are independent of the ANC,” he said, according to SABC radio news.

But the youth league, which has been at the forefront of pushing for the nationalisation of mines, said in the statement it would support the research on certain conditions.

“The ANCYL will support all research on nationalisation of mines which is not depoliticised and taken out of its original political context and strategic vision of the ANC, the Freedom Charter,” Shivambu said in the statement.

“Nationalisation of mines by the ANC-led government is neither a technocratic, nor academic exercise, but a political and economic transformation programme expressed in the Freedom Charter.

“We hold a strong view that the researchers who will be appointed should not re-invent the wheel and ignore the essence of what NGC commission on economic transformation established greater consensus on.”