Xaba Sbusiso

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Sbusiso Xaba[1]
SXaba.jpg
In office
2005–2007
Preceded by
Succeeded byMmbara Hulisani Kevin
In office
2003–2005
Preceded by
Succeeded byMmbara Hulisani Kevin
Personal details
Born (1973-06-10) June 10, 1973 (age 48)
Political partyPan Africanist Congress, Pan Africanist Youth Congress of Azania

Sbusiso Xaba is the Deputy President of from 2014 in South Africa.

Early life[]

Sbusiso attended Thomas More College (South Africa) in 1992.

Thereafter he attended his tertiary education at the University of Johannesburg (Former Technikon Witwatersrand, where he got engaged in politics through () then PASO, as a student activist.

Politics[]

Background[]

Sbusiso served in the International Central Committee of the African Socialist International. He has served as member of the National Executive Council and National Working Committee of Pan Africanist Congress of Azania, President of Pan Africanist Youth Congress and Member of Technikon Witwatersrand Student General Council. His visionary and innovative leadership has contributed to these institutions work towards the attainment of African working class hegemony that is desired to ensure elimination of all forms of exploitation in industry or on the land and advance cause for a just society. He continues to organise communities into African working class organisations in pursue of their revolutionary aspirations.

In 2007, as president of PAYCO, Sbusiso travelled to Zimbabwe for the Southern Africa Pan African Youth Summit in Zimbabwe.[2]

He served an interim chairman of Johanneburg Region in the in 2007 and then chaired the Tshwane Region from 2011 - 2014. This was before being elected to the position of Deputy President.

Student Activism[]

Student activism through Student Chapter of the , and () of Azania has deeply involved Sibusiso in the struggle for broad transformation of pedagogy and epistemology in institutions of learning in order for them to be accessible to the African working class, improve quality of content, endorse socialist values and espouse African oriented curriculum.

It is in pursuit of uncontaminated education that he is involved in lobbying Southern African Universities and Governments to introduce African Studies in mainstream education system. He is tasked with duty of directing the reparations work through the World Tribunal on Reparations for Africa and African People.

PAYCO Presidency[]

Sbusiso was elected president of PAYCO in 2005

Sbusiso, as president of PAYCO, on the eve of the June 16 commemoration in 2006 called on the then president of the Republic of South Africa, Thabo Mbeki, to create the Youth Ministry which will have a sole mandate of attending to youth affairs, this is the official position of PAYCO. In this call he also highlighted the failure of youth structures such as the New York City and .[3]

Sbusiso, as president, also participated in local and national discourses. One of the major issues was that of Name change, were the ruling ANC was changing the names of towns and streets. However, in Kwazulu-Natal the ANC decided it was premature to be preoccupied with name changes in that province. Sbusiso, spoke again the position of the ANC claiming that it was South Africans' responsibility to ensure 'that everlasting monuments of our heroes are built through infrastructure naming and our real identity comes through the names of our towns and cities'."[4]

While a president for PAYCO Sbusiso continued to have interest in student activism. His engagement in student issues was mostly through Azania (PASMA), he every now and then commenented and got involved directly. After the 2006 South African National Matriculation Exam results release, Sbusiso hinted the need for students to be taught "in the language of their choice".[5]

On November 11 and 12, 2006 Sbusiso, as president of PAYCO, attended the Day in Philadelphia, PA.[6] In this event, Sbusiso was also a speaker. He opened his "presentation by quoting Nigerian leader Nnamdi Azikiwe, 'we are independent in everything, neutral in nothing', stating that in the African struggle, there is no middle ground between liberation and imperialist imposed violence; "We are faced with two options, democracy and terror…democracy is not elections, it is not even the right to speak…democracy is power, democracy is power lying the right hands…"

Sibusiso opened his last Congress as President of PAYCO, in 2007 at Durban where the new leadership of PAYCO was elected. In this congress, Under theme "Mobilizing Youth Power to Build Socialism and African Unity,","emphasised the need to strengthen our African working class movement to wrestle power from imperialist forces by being involved in all matters affecting Africa and Africans everywhere."[7]

African Socialist International(ASI)[]

Sbusiso is a member of the International Central Committee of the African Socialist International. Sbusiso, as PAYCOpresident, hosted the president of African Socialist International(ASI), Chairman Omali Yeshitela, in his tour to South Africa.[8]

Other activities[]

Professional Memberships[]

Sbusiso has been a member of various professional bodies including the , International Council on Systems Engineering, Gauteng Board of and Board.

Business Operations[]

He also operated at corporate level of companies in steel manufacturing, retail and communication sectors. He is involved in leadership of various worker controlled commercial initiatives operating in Azania and Zimbabwe with interest in facility management, property, logistics, risk management, management consultancy and micro-enterprise finance.

Community Services[]

Sbusiso served as a member of that is tasked with community oversight of South African Police Service with intention of stopping police corruption, prevention of police brutality, ensuring fair distribution of resource with conscious bias to working class areas and combat crimes directed to the African workers.

Sbusiso is and has been involved in protracted campaigns against evictions in various informal settlements with the City of Johannesburg and City of Tshwane.

Controversies[]

The memorandum against the "US retaliatory strikes in Afghanistan"[]

In October 2001, as a provincial organizer for PAYCO in Gauteng,"Leading about 2000 protesters, who converged on the Union Buildings in Pretoria, Payco provincial organiser Sibusiso Xaba handed the memorandum to Foreign Affairs spokesman Ronnie Mamoepa".[9] The memorandum was against the "US retaliatory strikes in Afghanistan", one of the wars against terrorism by America in Afghanistan.

"Cost of freedom vs cost of submission"[]

In a document prepared for TalkZimbabwe titled "Cost of freedom vs cost of submission",[10] Sbusiso writes on the freedom and self-determination of African people. But it is in the same documents where he called multi-national bodies like the United Nations Security Council "imperialist clubs".

In the same document Sbusiso claims that "It has been for 3,000 years that integrationists among African leadership have condemned African people to slavery."

Education[]

Sbusiso holds the following qualifications:

References[]

  1. ^ "ASI 2006 Reports - Azania - Sbusiso Xaba". uhurunews.com.
  2. ^ "Southern Africa Pan African Youth Summit in Zimbabwe". assatashakur.org.
  3. ^ "Welcome to Dispatch Online". archive.is. 2012-07-24. Archived from the original on 2012-07-24. Retrieved 2018-01-09.
  4. ^ NAC News Brief on Sbusiso's response to the KZN ANC's position[permanent dead link]
  5. ^ "Business Day - News Worth Knowing". archive.is. 2007-05-03. Archived from the original on 2007-05-03. Retrieved 2018-01-09.
  6. ^ Philadelphia Independent Media Center's coverage of the event mentioning the presentation by Sbusiso Archived January 9, 2009, at the Wayback Machine
  7. ^ "Congress sets PAYCO's priority to unite African youth movement in Southern Africa". uhurunews.com.
  8. ^ A report on the tour Archived December 29, 2008, at the Wayback Machine
  9. ^ A news report on the March by PAYCO and Media Review Network members[permanent dead link]
  10. ^ A TalkZimbabwe copy of "Cost of freedom vs cost of submission"[permanent dead link]
Preceded by
President of PAYCO
2005��2007
Succeeded by
Mmbara Hulisani Kevin
Preceded by
Secretary-General of PAYCO
2003–2005
Succeeded by
Mmbara Hulisani Kevin
Retrieved from ""