Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- Acknowledgements
- Acronyms and Abbreviations
- Introduction
- 1 Repression, Revelation and Resurrection: The Revival of the NIC
- 2 Black Consciousness and the Challenge to the ‘I’ in the NIC
- 3 Between Principle and Pragmatism: Debates over the SAIC, 1971−1978
- 4 Changing Geographies and New Terrains of Struggle
- 5 Class(rooms) of Dissent: Education Boycotts and Democratic Trade Unions, 1976−1985
- 6 Lenin and the Duma Come to Durban: Reigniting the Participation Debate
- 7 The Anti-SAIC Campaign of 1981: Prefigurative Politics?
- 8 Botha’s 1984 and the Rise of the UDF
- 9 Letters from Near and Afar: The Consulate Six
- 10 Inanda, Inkatha and Insurrection: 1985
- 11 Building Up Steam: Operation Vula and Local Networks
- 12 Between Fact and Factions: The 1987 Conference
- 13 ‘Caught With Our Pants Down’: The NIC and the Crumbling of Apartheid 1988−1990
- 14 Snapping the Strings of the UDF
- 15 Digging Their Own Grave: Debating the Future of the NIC
- 16 The Ballot Box, 1994: A Punch in the Gut?
- 17 Between Rajbansi’s ‘Ethnic Guitar’ and the String of the ANC Party List
- Conclusion: A Spoke in the Wheel
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index
10 - Inanda, Inkatha and Insurrection: 1985
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 07 October 2022
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- Acknowledgements
- Acronyms and Abbreviations
- Introduction
- 1 Repression, Revelation and Resurrection: The Revival of the NIC
- 2 Black Consciousness and the Challenge to the ‘I’ in the NIC
- 3 Between Principle and Pragmatism: Debates over the SAIC, 1971−1978
- 4 Changing Geographies and New Terrains of Struggle
- 5 Class(rooms) of Dissent: Education Boycotts and Democratic Trade Unions, 1976−1985
- 6 Lenin and the Duma Come to Durban: Reigniting the Participation Debate
- 7 The Anti-SAIC Campaign of 1981: Prefigurative Politics?
- 8 Botha’s 1984 and the Rise of the UDF
- 9 Letters from Near and Afar: The Consulate Six
- 10 Inanda, Inkatha and Insurrection: 1985
- 11 Building Up Steam: Operation Vula and Local Networks
- 12 Between Fact and Factions: The 1987 Conference
- 13 ‘Caught With Our Pants Down’: The NIC and the Crumbling of Apartheid 1988−1990
- 14 Snapping the Strings of the UDF
- 15 Digging Their Own Grave: Debating the Future of the NIC
- 16 The Ballot Box, 1994: A Punch in the Gut?
- 17 Between Rajbansi’s ‘Ethnic Guitar’ and the String of the ANC Party List
- Conclusion: A Spoke in the Wheel
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
The government had hoped that co-opting coloureds and Indians as junior partners of the apartheid state, as well as facilitating a settled urban African population with access to an industrial relations machinery, would create the conditions for political stability and economic recovery. Instead, the UDF pushed back against state control in many townships and began establishing alternative forms of power.
The government responded by declaring a partial state of emergency covering key areas in the country on 22 July 1985, the first since 1960. On 24 July, two days after the emergency was declared, Oliver Tambo called on South Africans to ‘make apartheid unworkable and the country ungovernable’. The partial state of emergency expired on 7 March 1986, but as resistance continued, the state of emergency was implemented nationwide on 12 June 1986 and would continue in Natal until October 1990.
The state of emergency served as a lightning rod for dissent and confrontation. Protests grew more violent, and consumer boycotts and other grassroots resistance intensified. While the state of emergency acted to escalate the anti-apartheid struggle, it also brought to the surface conflicts with deep roots in the histories of local communities, including racial tensions in Inanda, and led to the arrest of large numbers of activists. Under these circumstances, the NIC found it difficult to maintain the support it had enjoyed among Indians in the first half of the 1980s. Moreover, its internal divisions would become public and its organisational weaknesses exposed.
Violent protests that drew in workers, students and the unemployed erupted throughout South African townships. They were sparked by myriad issues that included low wages, high levels of unemployment and exorbitant transportation costs. Robert Price labels these protests an ‘insurrection’, such was the ferocity of the revolt against apartheid authority. Fatima Meer placed young people at the heart of the ‘ insurrection’ in African townships:
The townships are charged today with the explosive energy of the youth who form the single most populous group and who are neither at school nor in formal employment … They are under constant police and military surveillance, and subjected to brutal attack from both the state and state-instigated black vigilantes. They organise through fragile, makeshift structures … [engage in] consumer and rent boycotts and set up street barricades and take on the military and the police and suspected informers.
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- Information
- Colour, Class and CommunityThe Natal Indian Congress, 1971-1994, pp. 171 - 190Publisher: Wits University PressPrint publication year: 2021