Daily Dispatch

Where’s the ANC’s commitment to fighting corruption?

There’s a glaring lack of accountabi­lity in run-up to party’s elective conference, writes Nkosikhulu­le Nyembezi

- Nkosikhulu­le Xhawulengw­eni Nyembezi is a policy analyst and human rights activist

Have you ever noticed that, at first glance, everything looks normal in all the best horror movies?

It is a classic scene of the South African spring season.

Look at the events leading to the ANC’s 55th national conference at Nasrec in Johannesbu­rg in December: candidates campaignin­g at branch meetings across the country, social media buzzing with slate tables emblazoned with candidates’ smiling faces, and other behind-the-scenes manoeuvrin­gs.

Even the predicted election outcome fits a template as familiar as blossoming plants.

Experts agree that most delegates will reelect party president Cyril Ramaphosa, even though he is likely to lead a sharply divided executive committee.

He will return because he is the incumbent leader — and incumbent leaders almost always secure re-election — and because times are uniquely tough for the party.

Perennial internal divisions, dysfunctio­nal structures and corruption scandals are all on the increase.

Couple that with the president’s entangleme­nt in the Phala Phala farm scandal and whose public approval ratings have often plumbed the depths.

All the elements are in place for the ANC to take an election beating in the 2024 national and provincial elections, losing ground even in communitie­s the party once counted as solidly its own.

But look more closely at the ANC leadership contenders and the profile of identifiab­le conference delegates, and you will see something else: muted voices that should be calling for accountabi­lity.

Because the conference decisions will decide more than just whether the Ramaphosa camp takes greater control of the party but will also materially affect the daily lives of ordinary people, we have reason to take notice.

They will also determine whether, and for how long, the party will remain a genuine force to be reckoned with in SA’s electoral politics.

It sounds hyperbolic, and that, too, is an ANC tradition.

Candidates always tell party members how important it is to get elected.

Many will have heard Ramaphosa’s warning that the party’s ability to retain power was in doubt.

He delivered the warning the same week his camp announced a leadership slate packed with his close allies in Luthuli House, excluding all other hopefuls.

They will have assumed that when he said in his weekly letter to the nation, “this moment of renewal is upon us,” it was so much campaign talk accompanyi­ng the submission to parliament of his 76-page implementa­tion plan for the State Capture Commission recommenda­tions.

But Ramaphosa was scarcely exaggerati­ng. Worryingly, many candidates for the national executive committee have joined Ramaphosa in his extensive evasion of accountabi­lity by refusing to provide clear answers to questions about his alleged involvemen­t in acts of corruption and mismanagem­ent of public funds.

Through their silence, they either cast doubt on or wholly reject the legitimacy of the national anti-corruption crusade.

It is comforting to pretend those who will vote as conference delegates are withholdin­g their demands for accountabi­lity solely to soothe Ramaphosa’s ego, to avoid further exposing him to ANC factions determined to undermine the party’s renewal programme.

Keeping Ramaphosa sweet is necessary for the ANC and influentia­l business circles.

He remains the dominant figure trusted to prevent the paralysed ANC from collapsing the state and the economy.

Ramaphosa sustains their hopes for prosperity beyond 2024.

But the ANC’s denialism of how impactful corruption is on its dwindling electoral support is not confined to the past; it applies to the future, too.

Several identifiab­le conference delegates have refused to publicly commit that they will act against individual­s implicated in corruption should they be elected in December.

Instead, they are hiding behind the chaotic step-aside rule that has become an arsenal for various factions to eliminate rival contenders for leadership positions.

Some might spin that as mere election eve bullishnes­s.

But democracy cannot function without a firm commitment to remove corrupt individual­s from the party and government leadership positions and support their prosecutio­n and conviction.

If all of this seems too abstract, consider the ANC’s new attitude to political violence, which has extended its tentacles to whistleblo­wers and traditiona­l leaders.

Once, it would have been a matter of bland consensus in provinces previously unaffected by political killings that no-one should ever secure a political objective by brute force and targeting whistle-blowers.

But only a handful of ANC leaders publicly uphold that fundamenta­l position at a time when our society has witnessed a spate of attacks over the past 24 months alone.

The rest refused to vote for the suspension from political office of implicated individual­s.

Their scarce condemnati­on of the alleged

As in all the most terrifying horror movies, the threat comes from inside the house. ‘Ukufa kuse mbizeni’ [The source of the problem is within us]

violations of the electoral code of conduct has usually been qualified and mealy-mouthed.

Ramaphosa’s reluctance to account and the ANC’s further shift away from accountabi­lity norms are no longer confined to one politician or a group of indifferen­t conference delegates, even if they embody it and accelerate it.

It is embedded in the ethos of the party now.

Reversing that trend is a daunting prospect considerin­g another apparent shift now taking an incredibly vivid form ahead of the conference.

It is the polarisati­on of informatio­n regarding national efforts to combat corruption, so South Africans now exist in two distinct spheres of knowledge, each barely touching the other.

This polarisati­on poses a danger to democracy.

Because without a collective, agreed-upon basis of facts, there can be no collective decision-making and no collaborat­ive exercise of power by the people — which is what democracy amounts to in our society.

Suppose we cannot first agree that the house is on fire because of corrupt individual­s.

In that case, we cannot begin to talk about putting out the flames by focusing on implementi­ng the commission’s recommenda­tions.

Whatever the conference’s outcome and the long days of preparing for meaningful contestati­on of independen­t candidates in the 2024 national and provincial elections that may follow, this is a moment of peril for SA.

Our fledgling democracy is losing the reflexes and habits that make democracy possible. And, as in all the most terrifying horror movies, the threat comes from inside the house. Ukufa kuse mbizeni (The source of the problem is within us).

 ?? Picture: THAPELO MOREBUDI ?? PRESSING THE FLESH: President Cyril Ramaphosa kisses a member of the community in Kimberley during the ANC’s Letsema campaign in the Northern Cape in October, where he celebrated the 82th birthday of Ouma Martha Louw in Donkerhoek, Galeshewe.
Picture: THAPELO MOREBUDI PRESSING THE FLESH: President Cyril Ramaphosa kisses a member of the community in Kimberley during the ANC’s Letsema campaign in the Northern Cape in October, where he celebrated the 82th birthday of Ouma Martha Louw in Donkerhoek, Galeshewe.

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