Mail & Guardian

SA is not so bright at home

2024 will be another 12 months of Sputla giveth and Sputla taketh away

- Paddy Harper

It also has to start with someone. Cyril Ramaphosa’s administra­tion has deployed some of South Africa’s finest legal minds to argue the case prosecutin­g Israel over its refusal not to commit genocide against the residents of Gaza.

Israel has, in turn, accused South Africa of “blood libel” and has appointed Jeffrey Epstein’s lawyer to argue on its behalf, a response that appears to sum up its case, long before it is delivered.

Cyril the Upholstere­r might be leading the way when it comes to matters internatio­nal, but when it comes to those of an electrical nature, team Ramaphosa is, sadly, a little less effective.

It didn’t take long for the electricit­y minister Kgosientsh­o Ramokgopa to remind us that the jolly season is over — and that we’re living in Mzansi — by reinstatin­g load-shedding after 18 delicious days of nonstop electricit­y.

The smoke from the New Year’s Eve fireworks had hardly cleared over ward 33 when the electricit­y minister gave us the not-so-good news on behalf of Eskom that we were returning to stage two and stage three with immediate effect.

One minute, there’s wall-to-wall electricit­y, working streetligh­ts and coffee every morning, the next, we’re back to charging inverters, phones and standby lamps the moment the lights come on again.

It’s not the start to the year any of us had been hoping for, but an inevitable one, given that nothing had changed — from a power-generation perspectiv­e — since before the holiday season began.

It might be a new year, but for the citizens of our fair Republic, 2024 will be another 12 months of Sputla giveth and Sputla taketh away.

Having an uninterrup­ted supply of power over the festive season was in itself something of a holiday — a welcome break from having to live life according to the Eskom load-shedding schedule.

All that electricit­y made Mzansi feel like a normal country and almost made up for being too broke to go on an actual holiday.

I don’t appear to have been alone in that. Our former president Jacob Gedleyihle­kisa Zuma didn’t get much of a break either, what with the launch of his new party umkhonto wesizwe on 16 December and his hitting of the campaign trail immediatel­y thereafter.

No Dezemberin­g in Dubai for the former head of state.

ubaba spent the festive season trying to ruin Ramaphosa’s holidays — a green-shirted ghost of Christmas — and presidents — past, haunting the incumbent — and the rest of us — long after we thought he had been laid to rest, politicall­y speaking.

The ANC has decided to blue-tick Zuma and press on regardless, leaving him and his followers to live their lives outside the party, something they should have done back in 2007.

ubaba’s announceme­nt that he had jacked the name of the party’s disbanded military wing and was using it to campaign against the ANC, while staying in the party, might have sounded weird, but wasn’t really that much of a surprise.

Zuma has been two-timing the ANC since his days as economic developmen­t MEC in the kingdom in the 1990s, so starting a new party while remaining in the ANC is the logical conclusion of every political move he has made since then.

Israel has appointed Jeffrey Epstein’s lawyer to argue on its behalf, a response that appears to sum up its case, long before it is delivered

 ?? Photo: Waldo Swiegers/getty Images ?? R-amok-gopa: Workers in a café use a gas lamp during load-shedding. The smoke from the fireworks had barely cleared when the minister announced blackouts were back.
Photo: Waldo Swiegers/getty Images R-amok-gopa: Workers in a café use a gas lamp during load-shedding. The smoke from the fireworks had barely cleared when the minister announced blackouts were back.
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