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Title: Against the WCAR Author: Zabalaza Date: March 2002 Language: en Topics: South Africa, protest, anti-globalization, Zabalaza Source: Retrieved on 6th August 2021 from https://zabalaza.net/2002/03/02/zabalaza-2-march-2002/ Notes: Published in Zabalaza #2.
About 20 000 protesters took to the streets of Durban to protest the
hypocrisy of the United Nation’s World Conference Against Racism, and to
raise other issues associated with racism such as poverty, landlessness,
religion and globalisation.
On arrival everything seemed quite disorganised and chaotic but everyone
was anxious to get going. After a few groups had marched around the
fields and a skirmish broke out over free T-shirts, it was time to
march. It seemed clear at this point that there was no, or very little,
co-ordination between the different groups as to what our objectives
really were. Heads of the Durban Social Forum had previously agreed that
a memorandum was to be taken to the International Conference Centre
(ICC) and that either Thabo Mbeki or UN Secretary General Kofi Anan
receive it in person. Was this made clear to everyone present? Had
anyone considered what we would do in the event that Mbeki and Anan
refused? Not from what I could tell.
The protesters were very lively, singing and dancing to keep themselves
motivated whilst others carried colourful banners or juggled on one
wheeled bikes and stilts. In all, the turnout was quite impressive and
the police presence not too intimidating. Once we began the march, the
police filled in just meters behind the last bloc, preventing us from
being able to retreat if we had to, but there were few or no roadblocks
closing off the roads intersecting our route. The walk was quite
uneventful, with one or two unsuccessful attempts to stage a sit down
across an intersection to block traffic.
When we arrived at the ICC there were people with loudspeakers preaching
religion from on top of their cars and groups of people sitting all over
the place. Maybe they were waiting for the revolution to fall from the
sky or be given to them by god! It seemed as though we had been led into
a dead end. There was a barricade outside the entrance to the conference
centre where Mbeki and Anan were expected to receive the memorandum of
demands. Apart from the riot police and armoured vehicles there was a
huge reel of barbed wire, which had not been utilised. Potentially, had
we tried to storm the conference, this could have been seized and used
to prevent the police from closing us in from behind. Finding an
alternative means of gaining entry to the centre when Anan and Mbeki
wouldn’t come out was not seriously considered.
An attempt was made to break past the barricade but was stopped when an
internal struggle erupted between two members of the Anti-Privatisation
Forum. One of whom, a trot, attempted to stop an autonomous comrade from
pushing the barricade, but was knocked down by other militants who are
understandably tired of constantly delivering memorandums and demands
and then going home to wait for change which doesn’t come. It is to such
militants that I appeal to act directly against the state, which is
using racism in all its manifestations, sexism and xenophobia, not to
forget religion of every denomination, to keep us divided and fighting
amongst ourselves instead of rising up and reclaiming what rightfully
belongs to everyone, equally: the collective ownership and control of
the means of production and distribution, to satisfy the needs of all.