On this day in 2012, the Marikana Massacre took place when South African police fired on striking workers, killing 34 and injuring 76 in the most lethal use of force by the state in half a century.

The shootings have been compared to the infamous Sharpeville Massacre in 1960, when police fired on a crowd of anti-Pass Law protesters, killing 69 people, including 10 children. The Marikana Massacre took place on the 25-year anniversary of a nationwide strike by over 300,000 South African workers.

On August 10th, miners had initiated a wildcat strike at a site owned by Lonmin in the Marikana area, close to Rustenburg, South Africa. Although ten people (mostly workers) had been killed before August 16th, it was on that day that an elite force from the South African Police Service fired into a crowd of strikers with rifles, killing 34 and injuring 76.

After surveying the aftermath of the violence, photojournalist Greg Marinovich concluded that "[it is clear] that heavily armed police hunted down and killed the miners in cold blood."

Following the massacre, a massive wave of strikes occurred across the South African mining sector - in early October, analysts estimated that approximately 75,000 miners were on strike from various gold and platinum mines and companies across South Africa, most of them doing so illegally.

A year after the Marikana Massacre, author Benjamin Fogel wrote "Perhaps the most important lesson of Marikana is that the state can gun down dozens of black workers with little or no backlash from 'civil society', the judicial system or from within the institutions that supposedly form the bedrock of democracy."

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  • AntiOutsideAktion [he/him]
    ·
    1 year ago

    Listen, I'm not going to start spouting off about critical support for the Baathist party or anything. But don't accuse me of diminishing anything. The poster specifically spoke of the chemical attack as a genocide. All I did was take the wikipedia number and compare their rhetoric and rationalizations us-foreign-policy with a number four orders of magnitude larger.

      • AntiOutsideAktion [he/him]
        ·
        edit-2
        1 year ago

        No, not at all. I probably should have done more due diligence educating myself on the context of those events. I've been thinking about it for the last ten minutes or so and I can talk myself into holding the principle that war crimes wedded to genocidal acts in the same campaign can be considered a part of that genocide. Just because I'm focusing on a single event, I'm not absolved of responsibility for how I represent events. Knowing how they fit into a larger picture isn't something that should ever be ignored.

        Thank you for doing me a service and checking me ancom-heart