Contributors

So what's it all about then?

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Well hello there. My name is Beshlie and I work for the Marine Management Organisation as a Marine Officer. I joined Prospect, the recognised trade union for marine officers, and soon became involved in union matters, including the young professionals network. I took on the role of environment rep and international development advocate because it is a subject I feel strongly about and thought it would be an opportunity to influence decisions affecting all MMO staff and have a positive influence outside the organisation. I have been working with management, fellow reps and Prospect officers on creating MMO’s sustainable development action plan, which ties in with the bargaining for international development project; the environment and people are very much linked in my mind. As a consequence, I applied for a two week trip to South Africa with ACTSA, an organisation described as the successor to the anti-apartheid organisation. Guess what.... I'm going and this blog will tell you about it. Eventually!

Monday, 6 September 2010

Stuff goes down in Swaziland.

Stuff going down......Oh my life! Swaziland. The other day, we met with a pro democracy organisation from Swaziland (remember country with the mad king and the terrorism?). I was lucky enough to sit next to one of the organisations youth leaders. We had a lovely evening, he was an inspirational man as he has been through so much in his short years and continues to fight for democracy. It is not for me to tell his story on the Internet. If you want to know, ask me when you see me. Anyway, said gent was a real giggle and even spent time trying to help me learn how to sing "Knocking on Heavens Door" in his native tongue and he did it without too much giggling at the fact I can not make the clicking noises required. (Listen to Ladysmith do it and you will see my problems).

My singing buddy is now in prison. He was arrested today, alongside 39 others. You see, next week is a week of pro-democracy action in Swaziland. Freedom of association is supposedly legal in Swaziland, but today we can see that clearly, that is not the case. Those native to Swaziland have been imprisoned and those who have arrived from other countries for the action, have been charged with invasion. Seriously; Invasion.

Please have a look at ACTSA's campaign in Swaziland and get involved; just fill in the form.








An African King, who abuses his kinand takes whatever he is able,lives in a land, hot and drybut politically unstable.
The people smile though times are hardand although they do their bestthe rich young King with his many wives
comes and takes the rest.
The African King who abuses his kinis not known for his kindness
and the Police brutality shown to the peopleis in the name of His Royal Highness.
In this country, you may not own landfor it belongs to the stateand with democracy as we know it bannedthe situation will not abate.
In this place are courageous peoplewho for freedom will risk their livesbut terrorists they will be brandedif at work they ask for a rise.
The H.I.V rate is massive here
and there is scant provision for educationbut the people in this hot dry land
are fiercely proud of their nation.
So what can we do, to help the causefrom our homes so far away?
Publicise, report and campaignfor freedom in Swaziland one day.

13: Big Business doing its bit?

Okay, so today we spent the day with Coca Cola. Before you start screaming in horror at the fact, hear me out. Although Coca Cola have a somewhat shady reputation globally, in Africa they appear to be doing their bit.


The Coca Cola Africa Foundation.

Established by the Company in 2001, The Coca-Cola Africa Foundation (TCCAF) is the entity that coordinates our corporate social investment programs and implements community initiatives in Africa . The Replenish Africa Initiative (RAIN) is the Foundation's flagship water program and is the umbrella under which all future water programs will fall. Launched in 2009, RAIN is a public-private partnership made possible through a six-year, $30 million commitment from The Coca-Cola Company. The initiative will provide sustainable, clean water sources, hygiene education and sanitation services to millions of people throughout Africa.

The Foundation also supports many other community initiatives throughout Africa, including HIV/AIDS & malaria prevention, access to education, job creation and humanitarian assistance.

Diepsloot; the township where we were today.


The outreach H.I.V and S.T.I education program at work.

This morning, we spent with a Coca Cola funded project called the Olive Leaf Foundation, with some inspirational people who are working in their community in Deipsloot. The OLF receives funding from several organisations, including Coca Cola. Diepsloot is a township to the North West of Jo'berg; the population is indeterminate due to the rapidly expanding squatter camps on the outskirts, but a conservative estimate would be 300,000 people. OLF currently have five projects underway;

1) The provision of basic education on H.I.V and sexually transmitted infections.

2) Volunteering for testing

3) Orphaned and vulnerable children

4) Granny Project

5) Gender based violence.

Today, we got involved with the project on H.I.V and S.T.I's. When I say involved, I mean that the OLF were happy to take us out in their community and engage with people in order to educate them about the dangers of unprotected sex. Basically, the main educator had a book with very graphic images of what can happen to you and did impromptu talks to anyone who would listen. It was truly fabulous to be a part of it, standing in a Shebeen, watching the mainly male audience recoil in horror at what could happen. After the talk ended, the audience were invited to a workshop at their local centre, which would aim to discuss and educate the community on attitudes towards sex. The transmission of H.I.V in the region is a very real concern and education is an absolute must if the situation is ever going to change. The workshop was well attended and was set to be very interesting. Sadly due to time constraints we had to leave before it had finished, but it was nonetheless fascinating and is an undoubtedly valuable service in the community.

In the afternoon, we went to the Coca Cola bottling plant, where we heard all sorts of useful facts, but unfortunately there was not anyone there who could answer the ethical and environmental questions posed. I did find out though, that in Africa, Coca Cola fund a project called RAIN - Replenish Africa Initiative. The RAIN project is funded with $30 million of Coca Cola's money. It has the goal of providing at least two million people in Africa with access to clean water, launch over 100 water programs including healthy watershed, sanitation and hygiene programs, contribute to sustainability of water resources across Africa and provide people with sanitation and hygiene education by 2015. 






Another thing Coke are doing is sponsoring the international coastal cleanup (woooooo). Here's the spiel:

In 2008, Coca-Cola launched a multi-year partnership with Ocean Conservancy through a $1 million pledge to support the International Coastal Cleanup (ICC). The Ocean Conservancy is a non-profit, environmental advocacy organization that promotes healthy ocean ecosystems and opposes practices that threaten ocean life. The organization began in 1986, and Coca-Cola has supported global Cleanup efforts for 15 years.

This is the 25th anniversary of the International Coastal Cleanup, which is the world's largest single-day volunteer effort to eradicate litter and debris from the world's beaches, inland waterways and oceans. In addition to debris removal, the Cleanup includes a data collection effort by which volunteers record the specific types of debris recovered, providing insight into marine pollution. The data is compiled and analyzed, and a report is published the following spring.

Last year alone, nearly 42,000 Coca-Cola system associates, their friends and families in 32 markets around the world participated, contributing nearly 265,000 hours of volunteer time. And, the entire Cleanup effort resulted in all most 500,000 volunteers in 108 countries collecting more than 7.4 million pounds of trash.


I've signed up to take part....... perhaps some of my friends and colleagues will too........?

We have all heard the stories about Coke in Columbia and India, but I reckon that in Africa, they are doing a little bit of good. I don't know about the damage they do here.

12: Beer, guitairs and apartheid.

Beer and guitars. Both things quite dear to my heart. Why, I hear you ask, would I call this blog, of the day I visited the Apartheid museum after beer and guitars?


Wait and see......

A brief journey through time: (I'm hoping that I managed to make sense of an entire museum in so few words...)

50,000 years ago, the African Bushmen lived in Southern Africa; hunter gatherers living off the land, making little impact on their surroundings. Over time, the Khoisan people began painting their history; Bantu speaking farmers from the North came to settle in the area as it was rich in natural resources and these had the skills to work with iron and gold. As the newcomers grew in number, the pressure on the land became more and more, until the people began to fight each other. After some time, white settlers came the the region, armed with muskets. The San people fought the settlers and lost and eventually the San dispersed and disappeared, becoming people of the mist.

In the 17th century, Europeans arrived at the Cape, bringing with them slaves from places as far flung as Indonesia. In 1846, the British arrived on the Cape and became involved in a series of frontier wars with the previous European settlers. Over 1000 people were killed; when the Chief of the local tribe went to the British to ask for peace, he was taken hostage, shot and then his body mutilated.

With the advent of such battles, the Boer settlers moved away from the Cape towards Jo'berg, giving their reasons for moving as the loss of land and the British abolition of slavery. Diamonds were discovered at Kimberley, bringing with them the wealth and the insatiable appetite for prospecting. 1876, gold was discovered in Jo'berg, which led to a need for labour in the newly established mines. Black people and migrant workers were set to work in the mines, as a cheap supply of labour. The government at the time introduced measures that would force more and more Africans to mine labour, including taxes that only Africans would have to pay, for example hut tax and poll tax. Some Chiefs refused to pay the taxes, which led to them and their people being forced to live in remote places and facing starvation. Some were killed.

In 1899, the greed conflicts led the Boer people to go to war against the British in a war where black South Africans fought with us.; 20,000 died. It is at this point that we find that the British were responsible for the first concentration camps; filling areas with captured Boer women and children, where they faced starvation and tens of thousands died. In 1902, the Boer asked for peace. In 1910, the African National Congress (ANC) was formed to fight for the disenfranchised Africans.

In 1913, the government introduced the Land Act, which forced Africans to live in reserves; essentially took away their farm land and left them destitute (unless of course they went to the mines).This left many displaced Africans, who flocked into the city of Jo'berg to find work..... The Land Act was brutal on its own, more so when you consider the fact that with no right to land, those who died often had difficulty being buried.

Following the Land Act, there were so many people flocking to the cities that the authorities became worried that their fragile power would become swamped by Africans, so they began introducing legislation which would prevent this happening. In 1922, the Native Urban Areas Act was passed, which meant that the city slums were cleared and that there were separate locations around the country for Africans to live. The influx of Africans into areas resulted into the Pass system being created; (previously mentioned at Langa) which meant that people needed to carry a pass which stated where they were allowed and had to be produced when the Police asked for it. The system of apartheid was written into law and people were classified in terms of colour. One of the "scientific" tests used was the pencil test; if a pencil was put in your hair and stayed there, you were black. Apartheid was a brutal reality and the things that have stuck with me the most are the fact that the Government did not allow black people to drink alcohol until 1938; when they eventually relaxed the laws, they brewed a 2% proof beer specifically for black people called Bantu Beer; it was found in 1995 that this beer contained sterilising agents that would make people infertile; the Government was systematically abusing people's human rights in every way. For the record, the people responsible were given amnesty and those affected have not had justice. Another fact that struck me, was that if anyone dared to pick up a guitar and play it in public, they could be arrested for public disorder! Beer and Guitars. These facts may not be the worst things seen during apartheid, but I think they are things we can all relate to. Imagine going out on a Friday night and drinking a beer that your government had designed to make you infertile.

In the 1940's, the Afrikaner National Movement gained power and the laws of apartheid became further entrenched. simple things, like the freedom to choose which bench you sat on and which bus to take were not allowed for black and coloured people. I remember Mr. Rooth, my year five primary teacher telling me that when he was in South Africa, even the beaches were segregated and the non-whites were given areas that were known to be shark breeding grounds.

Protests at the Government ensued from the 1950's onwards,such as the Civil Disobedience movement, which aimed to make South Africa ungovernable. These were, for the record, peaceful. The move to direct and violent action came when the peaceful protests turned; guns used against unarmed citizens. The Sharpeville Massacre was one such protest, where people had decided to demand arrest in order to fill jails and force the Government to re-write legislation. A large crowd gathered at the police station; they fired and killed 69 people and injured 180.

Resistance, often led by the youth, had gained strength by 1985, which led to many of the townships becoming ungovernable. The Government declared a state of emergency, which gave them extra powers and created further violent struggles. By the end of the 1980's a political deadlock had been reached; but it was 1989 that put South Africa on the road to democracy. F.W de Clerk unbanned political groups that had opposed apartheid. He released political prisoners, including Mandela and began negotiations for a New South Africa with the ANC and others. While the talks were underway, a further 14,00 people were killed in political violence. The National Party , the ANC and other political parties eventually agreed to hold an election; the Democratic election in the history of the country. The ANC with Mandela leading won. The rest is, as they say, history.

Or is it? Although apartheid is no longer written into legislation, there still seems to be tensions between ethnic groups in some areas. Not suprising when you consider what you have read so far.......