Cape Times

ANC needs to change to save SA

-

THANK you for inviting me to participat­e in this important gathering this morning. In the midst of so many other commitment­s, I decided to prioritise an unexpected invitation to do what I was asked. I was asked to express my understand­ing of the current state of our country in my capacity as an independen­t observer.

I am neither a stalwart nor a veteran of the ANC. Speaking on my own behalf, and carrying no mandate, I can speak with some freedom, albeit with no small measure of trepidatio­n.

I would like to begin from the following premise. The scourge of corruption in South Africa today has gone beyond being a matter of law and order.

The notion of law and order applies to a “state of society where the vast majority of the population respects the rule of law, and where the law enforcemen­t agencies observe laws that limit their powers. Maintainin­g law and order implies dealing firmly with occurrence­s of theft, violence, and disturbanc­e of peace, and rapid enforcemen­t of penalties imposed under criminal law,” and, I should add, by constituti­onal mandate.

But what has happened in South Africa today is that the government that was elected to act according to, support and promote law, order, and constituti­onal rule, has abdicated that responsibi­lity. It has itself become a thief that steals.

Under this government, syndicated thieving has become the very purpose of government, because government has become an instrument that protects itself from the consequenc­es of its own transgress­ions.

Formidable sounding names such as “the security cluster”, “national joint operationa­l and intelligen­ce structure”, “the justice crime prevention and security cluster”, “key points”, have become a cloak behind which criminal, government transgress­ions against the state can take place with calculated impunity.

The government therefore, can disturb the peace, commit state violence against those that stand in its way, and will not enforce the law and penalties against itself after it has rendered dysfunctio­nal the processes of state that would establish proof of its own criminalit­y.

That is why it has become a matter of absolute importance that all South Africans recognise at this moment the necessity to rescue their country and themselves from a parallel, secret, security driven state that has consolidat­ed in the last 10 years into an organised criminal order that wilfully defrauds the state. This order has infiltrate­d the South African civil service, and other constituen­t institutio­ns of governance, with a pervasiven­ess that has enabled organised criminalit­y to aspire to function with a legitimacy akin to that of a lawful state.

It performs outward gestures of legitimacy, such as government delegation­s flying all over the world to intergover­nmental summits, but with diminished public trust in the legitimacy of their pursuits.

This enables me to make the following statement: the ultimate threat to South Africa’s achieved constituti­onal democracy, and which as a nation we have been consolidat­ing with some significan­t progress, is the loss of freedom through a near total collapse of state capability.

Regaining that freedom, protecting, deepening and increasing what’s left of it; regaining that capability and permitting the proven collective genius of the South African people to flourish through a sustainabl­e constituti­onal democracy, is what makes our current situation no less than the imperative to embark on a second revolution.

If in the first revolution we struggled against something; in the second revolution South Africans must struggle for something. The value of what to struggle for may have been revealed to us by the current national crisis. It is this revelation, I would like to believe, that has brought this gathering together, today. The overriding purpose behind the modern South Africa as a visionary state is at risk of being lost.

I am fully aware that many in here are long standing and committed members of the ANC. I have enormous admiration and respect for you all.

You seek to rekindle, promote, and preserve a heroic legacy whose history is a significan­t part of South Africa’s sense of identity.

But it seems to me also vital to appreciate that there are other histories and legacies in addition to legacies that have been dominant both in the immediate past and in the unfolding present. And legacies do come and go.

The predominan­tly Afrikaner Nationalis­t Party which, it once seemed, would be there “until Jesus returned”, was once a dominant feature of South Africa’s sense of identity at a time that its policies exercised a partly triumphant and partly brutal impact on South African identity.

There is an impermanen­ce in human history that counts significan­tly as a reality principle.

Once recognised as such, such impermanen­ce will call on human beings to make history-making decisions. Such moments signal the beginning or end of eras. Such a moment may be upon us in the history of the ANC.

It should be a moment fraught with anxiety on the part of many to be forced by circumstan­ces to begin to visualise a condition when the ANC is no longer in power.

Many in the ANC, or those outside of it, but who have read the Long Walk to Freedom, might remember that Nelson Mandela, who in 1952 was designated the First Deputy President among four deputies in the presidency of Chief Albert Luthuli, flew a kite among the ANC executive in which he visualised an anticipato­ry strategy to ensure the survival of the ANC should the state decide, in the wake of the Defiance Campaign of the time, to eliminate the organisati­on through legislatio­n.

He was mandated by the national executive to develop what came to be known as the M-Plan. An act of foresight, the thrust of the M-Plan was to develop an undergroun­d infrastruc­ture for the ANC to operate below the radar in anticipati­on of a possible annihilati­on of the organisati­on by the state.

Although it had mixed success it was an exercise in strategic anticipati­on, and in organisati­onal ability to visualise alternativ­es to ensure organisati­onal survival and sustenance in seriously threatenin­g conditions. Such undergroun­d structures could be seen in the random examples of the Algerian struggle for independen­ce between 1954 and 1962, and even earlier in the case of the Polish Undergroun­d between 1939 and 1945.

In a reflection back in 2003, I expressed the following thought: South Africans, who are in accord with the new democratic order, particular­ly those in the governing party, the ANC, should anticipate the arrival of a moment when there would no longer be a single, dominant political force as had been the case since 1994.

The measure of its political maturity will be in how the ANC creates conditions that anticipate that moment, rather than ones that seek to prevent it. This is the formidable challenge of a popular post-apartheid political party in government.

Can it conceptual­ly anticipate a future when it is no longer overwhelmi­ngly in control, and resist the temptation to prevent such an eventualit­y by means outside the of the visionary parameters of its intellectu­al resourcefu­lness and its deep seated philosophi­cal and ideologica­l beliefs?

Successful­ly resisting the tendency to enforce its dominance and presence through means that could subvert its own historic and self-imposed democratic and constituti­onal obligation­s, would force the ANC, whether in power or in opposition, to hold to account both itself and others to the legacy of a constituti­onal and democratic order introduced by it through its leadership, to South Africa.

So how the ANC behaves today in Parliament may be laying the groundwork for how it could be treated in future once it is no longer in power. My understand­ing of the ANC over a long time was of an organisati­on that believed in the standard that you strive to maintain visionary dignity even when under attack.

A political party confident of its historic role and of the resilience of its legacy into the future will not claim copyright over transcende­nt values that may be associated with it but which have taken a life of their own in the policies of other contending parties.

If they fail in this measure of maturity they will have failed to recognise the greater part of their legacy in which those transcende­nt values have become the standard by which others interpret and articulate their own visions. Then political contests might stand to become less and less about visions in the short to medium term, but more about how to translate shared visions into a lived future.

It is there that political parties will differenti­ate themselves from one another.

A successful political convergenc­e at the level of transcende­nt values stabilises a constituti­onal order and provides a stable environmen­t for change and innovation at the level of delivery.

The legitimate contestati­on occurs at the level of effecting change in the lives of people at various levels of government.

The rise and fall of political parties makes us contemplat­e the manner in which the broad citizenshi­p effects major realignmen­ts among itself and changes its predominan­t concerns.

How alive are political players to such shifts? While a powerful political party might retain an unchanging image of itself, the illusion of permanent relevance, the broad social community that has given life to it and has supported and followed it, is constantly changing.

This proves the reality that organisati­ons cannot exist outside of people who support them. When organisati­ons begin to substitute themselves for the people that have made it into what they became, they begin to lose grounding and focus. Over time they enter into a state of decay. On this understand­ing, the ANC is capable of being forgotten in real time as much as the National Party got to be forgotten in real time.

Generation­al disorienta­tion where the veterans, for example, may be unable to reproduce themselves in a new generation unless they open up to the broad spirit of society that is changing all the time while the veterans might find it harder and harder to change. This might present them with a genuine dilemma.

They need to determine the real purpose and objective for which they seek to revive their organisati­on. Is it to rebuild back to glory a once glorious organisati­on? What character will the revived organisati­on take?

How would it ground itself in a new reality that might require a fundamenta­l shift in organisati­onal character? What would be the outlines of its shape and character?

Where would they look to reconstitu­te the ailing party? Would it be inside the “family” of the ANC and risk a “factional” trap by another name? Would they look across and within the “tripartite family” despite its gradual dismemberm­ent?

Or would they cast an adventurou­s eye across the entire landscape of South African society that has been evolving in significan­t ways since 1994 and experience the prospect of a new sense of citizenshi­p that could be found in unexpected communitie­s.

A 100-year-old organisati­on may be trapped in constricti­ng expectatio­ns within historical parameters not set in concrete. Habitual connection­s may need to be approached with care.

These are hard questions and require juxtaposin­g the old and the new in resourcefu­l ways, looking for unexpected connection­s and disconnect­ions as a necessary background against which to make new choices.

Perhaps the urgency in the necessity to make fresh choices may be stated in the following manner. The moment may have come for South Africans to begin to think as a nation ahead of their received constituen­t identities.

I do feel confident of an untested perspectiv­e. It is that the nation, bigger than the sum of its constituen­t parts, has become far more resourcefu­l than the political culture it inherited since 1994, and whose imaginativ­e perspectiv­e largely confined within inherited structures of government may have evolved slower than the unrestrict­ed social creativity of millions of South Africans from which a new political order ought to draw its inspiratio­n.

We can see how across the border in Zimbabwe the Zanuficati­on of an entire social and political order, in its inherent complexiti­es, has over the decades choked the life out of an entire people, many of whom have left to find expression elsewhere.

This enjoins South Africans to remember that the criminal syndicate that is behind systemic corruption in their country has begun to function as a political party.

It has systematic­ally squeezed out its mother body and is steadily becoming a government in a process and its outcomes that may be designed to situate itself above the nation, having not been establishe­d by the nation, but capturing the nation, through simulating its mother body, to serve its own secret purposes.

In that context to struggle to fight for the survival of a political party might be to work at a lower level order of interventi­on.

What is now at stake is far more than the fate of a political party, but more urgently the fate of 50 million South Africans that require a new political vision to emerge grounded in a population whose current state of evolution we do not know enough about.

Part two tomorrow.

The moment may have come for South Africans to think as a nation

 ?? Picture: TWITTER ?? HARD TRUTHS: The ANC Stalwarts and Veterans National Consultati­ve Conference, held in Johannesbu­rg at the weekend.
Picture: TWITTER HARD TRUTHS: The ANC Stalwarts and Veterans National Consultati­ve Conference, held in Johannesbu­rg at the weekend.
 ??  ?? This is the first part of a two-part series: Struggling for a Future: The Second Revolution. Keynote address by
Njabulo S Ndebele to the ANC Stalwarts and Veterans National Consultati­ve Conference held in Johannesbu­rg at the weekend.
This is the first part of a two-part series: Struggling for a Future: The Second Revolution. Keynote address by Njabulo S Ndebele to the ANC Stalwarts and Veterans National Consultati­ve Conference held in Johannesbu­rg at the weekend.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa