The British Army's Secret Plan to Keep South Africa's Ruling Party in Power

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The British Army's Secret Plan to Keep South Africa's Ruling Party in Power

Also revealed: the army's links to a controversial mining company.

Police surround the bodies of striking miners after opening fire on a crowd at the Lonmin Platinum Mine near Rustenburg, South Africa, Thursday, August 16, 2012. A delegation from Britain's Royal College of Defence Studies visited the offices of Lonmin last year. Photo via Str / AP

Britain's Ministry of Defence has drawn up a secret report about how to keep South Africa's ruling party in power in the next election, VICE has discovered.

Freedom of Information requests reveal that last year, a group of military officers from Britain's Royal College of Defence Studies visited South Africa. Their assignment was to "assess the political threats to continuing ANC rule in South Africa." I sent a further FOI request, asking to see the contents of the report compiled during that trip. The request was denied. The report remains classified, with the ministry claiming that "the information contained in the report was provided in confidence and should it be released has the potential to adversely affect relations with the South African government."

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The ANC, or African National Congress, has ruled South Africa since the end of Apartheid. Once the party of Nelson Mandela and the national liberation struggle, its current leader Jacob Zuma is marred by corruption allegations and accused of running a repressive security apparatus against his political opponents.

Despite the concern surrounding the ANC's activities, the military officers were required to "devise a medium term strategy, with concrete deliverables, for the party to retain power at the next general election."

The ANC did not respond to our request for comment. The UK Ministry of Defence told VICE that this was "a purely academic exercise, strictly for internal college study purposes, designed to develop course members' skills in strategic analysis and their ability to understand others' perspectives."

The ministry claimed that "it had, and will have, no implication of partisanship in that tasking, and no implications for UK policy."

However, the officers took part in numerous activities outside of a normal military role, including meetings with a UK mining company. Campaigners are alarmed at British military interest in the political and economic affairs of a foreign power.

"It is outrageous if the UK Ministry of Defence is getting involved in planning how to ensure that one particular party retains power in South Africa," said campaigner Richard Solly, coordinator of the London Mining Network. "It is another example of the UK government's policy of supporting British mining companies and lobbying overseas governments for favors for those companies, even when there are huge concerns about their impacts on communities, the environment, and human rights."

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VICE obtained the itinerary for the South Africa visit, which revealed numerous business meetings. The military officers received a briefing at the Johannesburg Stock Exchange, and called in at HSBC for a working lunch about the "economic outlook for the region." The military delegation also attended an event at the offices of controversial British platinum mining company Lonmin in Johannesburg.

The topic of discussion at Lonmin was titled: "An Insider View on the Extractive Industry & Future Prospects." They spent an afternoon with senior staff from the company, including its head of marketing and vice president of refining.

Lonmin's operation in South Africa has hit the headlines because of workers staging strikes against poor conditions. It was during one strike in 2012 at the Lonmin site in Marikana, near Johannesburg, where police opened fire, killing 34 workers and injuring 78 more. The ANC and Lonmin have close connections, with one former company director at the time of the massacre, Cyril Ramaphosa, later becoming the ANC's deputy president and the right-hand man to President Jacob Zuma.

In the run up to the massacre, Ramaphosa emailed politicians and police urging them to take tougher action against the striking miners, who he said were "plainly dastardly criminals and must be characterized as such." Ramaphosa wanted the police "to act in a more pointed way." A subsequent inquiry cleared Ramaphosa of inciting the killing, although victims' families are trying to pursue him through the courts.

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"The Marikana massacre in 2012 and the recent murder of Bazooka Rhadebe are examples of British-linked mining projects in South Africa associated with appalling violence, including violence on the part of the state," Solly from the London Mining Network said. "The British government should put its efforts into supporting the workers and communities struggling to get justice from British-linked companies."

Despite international condemnation of South Africa's police for the Marikana massacre, the Ministry of Defence delegation was scheduled to visit a police station in Alexandra Township for a briefing from the South African Police Service. However, the ministry claims not to have any minutes or notes from the officers' meetings with the South African police and the mining company Lonmin. In response to a Freedom of Information request, it said, "No information is held on the organization of the Lonmin Office and Alexandra Police station elements of the visit program."

A shadow still hangs over South Africa's police, years after the Marikana massacre. A report last year claimed that South Africa's police were twice as likely to kill someone as the US police . Allegations of torture by police have also emerged.

The visit to South Africa was organized by the ministry's prestigious Royal College of Defence Studies (formerly the Imperial Defence College), which runs courses for officers "who have the potential to reach the highest ranks."

The itinerary included lectures from senior military figures and diplomats in addition to the business meetings. The 16-strong delegation also visited other African countries, with flights costings $144,000 and the accommodation bill for nights in top hotels surpassing $57,000.

The college says its mission is: "To prepare selected senior military officers and government officials as well as appropriate individuals from the private sector, from the United Kingdom, and elsewhere for senior leadership and management roles."

However, campaigners argue that the defense college's visit to South Africa smacks of neo-colonialism. "Britain's military involvement in South Africa's political and economic affairs spans centuries," said Adam Elliot Cooper from the Rhodes Must Fall campaign. "It is clear that Britain has as little interest in the sovereignty of the South African people today as they did when they first invaded the region centuries ago."

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