
Focus on Xenophobia
Crisis? What crisis?
by David
Bullard
Before I
got axed from the Sunday Times I wrote a couple of columns commenting on
President Mbeki's rather dismissive attitude towards Zimbabwean immigrants. He
once made a remark along the lines of ''they are here so get used to it''. I
argued that we owed Zimbabweans fleeing from a despotic regime rather more than
that. Unless they were absorbed into society, given identity documents and
their talents utilized, we were in for big trouble.
Governments
don't like to be told what to do by journalists and that's partly why I am no
longer writing for the Sunday Times I suspect, and why I am unable to find
employment with any other newspaper.
I take no
delight in being proven right over these past two weeks. The mayhem in the
informal settlements is reminiscent of the 1980s with the difference that in
the 1980's, people were fighting for their freedom. That still didn't excuse the
necklacings and the kangaroo courts set up to decide if somebody was guilty of
being a ''traitor''. Today's situation is altogether more frightening and
irrational.
Or is it?
If you
still have absolutely nothing after fourteen years of democracy and a lot of
time on your hands, the chances are that you will look for some way to fill that
time. Adolf Hitler managed to convince a dispirited Germany that the Jews were to blame
for all their economic woes and the rest, as they say, is history.
If I imagine myself in the position of a township dweller, maybe I can understand
what all his anger is about. Incidentally, I got sacked for using the word
''imagine'' and asking readers to envisage what a South Africa without white
colonialism might have looked like. So if you are of a nervous disposition or
are liable to take every word I write literally, I suggest you stop reading at
this point because I am assuming a certain level of intelligence and
psychological maturity from here on.
Unemployment
is high in South Africa
and the government is expected to provide jobs for the unemployed. This is the
frequently chanted mantra from the unions and it's hardly surprising that
unsophisticated and gullible people living in shacks believe that the cause of
their misery is no job. No job means no money to feed the family and no money
for the occasional luxuries of life. No job means no prospects, and man's
natural desire is to better himself and lead a more comfortable life.
Unfortunately
governments don't provide jobs other than those in the civil service.
Government's job is to provide an economic environment conducive to job
creation. The private sector provides the jobs which pay the taxes that the
government uses to run a country's infrastructure. The private sector only
creates jobs if it sees that such an action will add to its bottom line.
Whether you are a fan of capitalism or not, that is the reality. Companies are
in business to make money and if they don't make profits they close down and
people lose their jobs.
Most
companies also demand a minimum level of education and skill when they employ
someone and they want to get the labour as cheaply as possible to maximize
profits. Before you get your blood pressure up on that last comment and accuse
me of supporting slave labour, let me assure you that exactly the same happens
in most companies including newspapers, where the freelance writing rate has
remained the same for twenty years.
So
unskilled and unschooled people don't stand much of a hope in a labour market
that is spoilt for choice. There's no shortage of people prepared to do menial
jobs in order to survive and if immigrants from Zimbabwe have better skills and are
prepared to work harder and for less then guess what?..they get the jobs. That
then lends credence to the view that the ''foreigners'' are coming here to steal
our jobs. After that it's not difficult to work up enough anger to accuse them
of stealing our women, jumping the queue for RDP houses and being the root
cause of crime.
All
irrational arguments as it happens. But a mob is never rational.
Let's be
brutally honest here. I doubt whether many of the panga carrying hoodlums
running around baying for blood are reading the often smug analysis of the
xenophobia problem in the pages of our newspapers.
They are
living in a different world entirely, as I pointed out to a fellow guest at a
party in Sandton the other night. As we sipped our expensive malt whiskies in
luxurious surroundings, I commented that less than ten kilometers as the Hadeda
flies people were living in fear of another night's xenophobic mayhem.
And that,
in essence, is our problem.
Two
completely different societies living cheek by jowl.
If the
violence were to threaten the comfortable suburbs where most of our politicians
now choose to live, I have no doubt the government would react swiftly. But
while it's contained in the squalid and inhuman conditions of an informal
settlement then there's no problem. Crisis? What crisis? Now if it were to
threaten the 2010 World Cup then that would be different.
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