Oscar Mpetha

Oscar Mafakafaka Mpetha was born in Mount Fletcher 5 August 1909 - 15 November 1994) was a South African trade unionist and political activist.

Personal life

Mpetha was educated at local schools and at Adams College. In the 1930s, he married Rose Constance Nombunga Mpetha, they had two children. He died on 15 November 1994 at his Gugulethu home.[1]

Political career

In 1934 he went to Cape Town as a migrant worker.

He started his union activities when he was a road labourer in 1940[2] and began working as an assistant foreman. He had also previously been employed as a dock worker, waiter, hospital orderly, and later as a factory worker.[3]

He joined the Food and Canning Workers' Union when he worked at a fish canning factory in Laaiplek,[4] he was involved as a trade unionist and political leader in the AFCWU in the late 1940s and early 1950s and in 1951 he became the General Secretary. In 1954, he joined the Communist Party,[5] he also attended the conference of the South African Trades and Labour Council. The council was dissolved in October 1954 and the Trade Union Council of South Africa (TUCSA) was established with a constitution that accepted and registered trade unions that excluded African trade unions. In 1955, he was part of a union delegation that denounced the exclusionary racial policies of the newly formed TUCSA. He then became one of the founding members of the first non-racial trade union body in South Africa, the South African Congress of Trade Unions (SACTU)[6]

Between 1958 and 1960, He led the Cape ANC, until it was banned. He was detained and banned under the Suppression of Communism Act until the late 1970s. After his banning order lapsed, he assisted in the successful Fatti's and Moni's strike of 1978.[7] In August 1980 he became a founding member of the Nyanga Residents Association which campaigned for decent housing, health facilities and adequate transport for residents in the Nyanga area. In 1981 he was seen as a threat to the Apartheid regime after he issued a statement condemning the role of the police in a fatal incident involving protestors which occurred on August 1980.[8] In 1983 he was sentenced to five years in Pollsmoor Prison after being convicted of terrorism and inciting a riot at the Crossroads squatter camp in August 1980. In the same year he was elected as one of three co-presidents along with Archie Gumede and Albertina Sisulu of the United Democratic Front, a new umbrella group of anti-government forces. When FAWU was established in 1986, he was elected as a leader.[9] Later in 1981, he was released from Pollsmoor Prison on bail pending an appeal but, he was re-arrested in 1985 to become the country's oldest ever political prisoner when he was 76. During this time he was held at Groote Schuur Hospital under armed guard. He suffered from partial blindness, lung problems, kidney problems and diabetes, which resulted in the amputation of both his legs. He was released from hospital detention on 15 October 1989 and despite his poor health, he took on an active role in the lead-up to the first democratic election in 1994. His wife died in 1986 while he was at the hospital. He was eventually released from prison in October 1989 and he continued to speak at rallies around South Africa.[10]

gollark: It is funny that people keep losing to a fairly trivial piece of code which just decides how good a move is by playing 100 *entirely random games* starting from it and seeing how many it wins.
gollark: Okay, I am now decreasing my estimate of your programming competence.
gollark: I don't know if there's a general strategy. The main thing to exploit is that the AI can't really respond to two threats at once.
gollark: I don't think you saw the number I just posted.
gollark: Unfortunately, it has to run in your browser and I don't have much compute, so I can't use very state-of-the-art methods like muzero. Not that I know how that works in much detail.

See also

References


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