Business Day

ANC must get moving

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If the ANC wishes to avoid reaching its “expiry date” within the next election cycle, it will have to address a few issues urgently and pro-actively.

The economic hardship that will flow from the recent looting and destructio­n ought to be addressed now by the introducti­on of the muchtalked-about basic income grant.

Former Goldman Sachs Sub-Saharan Africa chair Colin Coleman has offered detailed advice on how to achieve this without undue strain to the nation’s finances.

An SA Special Risks Insurance Associatio­n-financed rebuild of razed infrastruc­ture should be organised in a way that provides jobs and training for the unemployed youth, not opportunit­ies for collusion à la World Cup stadium contracts. Government-guaranteed loans to help put destroyed small businesses back on their feet would help too.

The conversion of the ANC into a modern democratic party able to run a capable state involves the jettisonin­g of the national democratic revolution, its reliance on cadre deployment and its thoroughly outmoded ideology that strives for hegemony in society — that comprehens­ive control of all the levers of power that is deeply and darkly at odds with multiparty democracy under the rule of law of the kind contemplat­ed in SA’s constituti­on.

Most urgently, ongoing grand corruption with impunity needs to be identified and addressed as the underlying motivation of those now making outlandish, lawless and destructiv­e demands on behalf of Jacob Zuma. An end to their impunity is only possible if the binding court findings in the Glenister litigation are acted on by government.

An institutio­n properly equipped to end the impunity of state capture, grand corruption and kleptocrat­s in SA must be establishe­d.

Recovering the loot of state capture, hitherto elusive, would help.

Paul Hoffman, SC Director, Accountabi­lity Now

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