Tens of thousands of chanting and dancing revellers waved the green and gold colours of the African National Congress as Africa’s oldest liberation movement celebrated its 100th anniversary today.
A dozen African leaders and more former heads of state along with African kings and chieftains attended a ceremony where President Jacob Zuma lit a flame, expected to stay alight the entire year, at the red brick, tin-roofed Wesleyan church where black intellectuals and activists founded the party in 1912.
Absent because of his frailty was Nelson Mandela, South Africa’s first black president who is just six years younger than his movement. He was jailed for 27 years by the racist white government and his organisation was declared a terrorist group by the United States.
The stadium at Bloemfontein, upgraded to a 45,000-seater for the 2010 soccer World Cup, overflowed today with crowds that spilled outside, dancing and singing under a blazing sun.
Dozens of buses lined up to drop off celebrants waiting for an afternoon address by Mr Zuma.
Mr Zuma has said the ANC will rule “until Jesus comes” but the next few years will be critical ones for the party that has won a landslide victory in every election for the last 18 years.
The ANC describes itself as the home of the working class and the poor, but inequality has grown in recent years even as a small black elite around the party have become multimillionaires flaunting lavish lifestyles.
Unemployment hovers around 36 per cent and soars to 70 per cent among young people. Half the country’s population lives on just 8 per cent of the national income, according to the Congress of South African Trade Unions.
A warning sign came from the town of Clarens, where stone-throwing protesters smashed the windows of a bus that was to transport supporters to the centenary
celebrations in Bloemfontein, 160 miles away.
Such protests have become daily events across the country, where political liberation has not been matched by economic emancipation as Africa’s largest economy remains in the control of the white minority.
Archbishop Desmond Tutu, who was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize for his part in fighting apartheid and is attending the celebrations, recently called for a tax on all whites who benefited from apartheid.
“Apartheid is not over,” American civil rights leader Jesse Jackson said after the church ceremony, “the agricultural apartheid, the manufacturing apartheid, the banking apartheid, the shipping apartheid, the layers beneath the skin colour are now the next century’s challenge.”
Former Zambian President Kenneth Kaunda, whose country was bombed by South
African warplanes attacking ANC guerrilla training camps during the struggle for
liberation, issued a warning at a banquet last night.
“Comrade Zuma, you have more serious problems than any of us. You are faced with the land question. I want to remind the South African youth that two wrongs can never make a right,” he said.
The ANC government has admitted its failure to return white-owned farmland to blacks — a key issue of the liberation struggle. In 1994 it set a goal of redistributing 30 per cent of agricultural land to blacks by 2014 — targeting a total of nearly 61 million acres (24.6 million hectares). Instead, it has bought only about six million hectares, of which a third has been resold by aspiring black farmers who failed to get enough support.