Sunday Times

The Zuma stain

As South Africa wakes from the Zuma nightmare, there are hard lessons to be taken to heart

- MUKONI RATSHITANG­A

Nearly 10 years after the September 2008 recall of then-president Thabo Mbeki, the ANC has recalled another sitting president. History will record these events — Mbeki’s 2008 recall and that of Jacob Zuma this week — as a continuum in a chapter of fluctuatin­g pluses and minuses in the national liberation movement’s fitful contention with corruption as one of the centrifuga­l forces that have shaped much of post-colonial Africa.

However one looks at it, Zuma has been recalled for the same reason for which Mbeki dismissed him from the position of deputy president of the republic in June 2005: his alleged involvemen­t in corruption.

In a cruel twist of irony, it was to shield Zuma from prosecutio­n for his alleged involvemen­t in corruption that the ANC jettisoned Mbeki in 2008; more specifical­ly, to pave the way for the then national director of public prosecutio­ns, Mokotedi Mpshe, to quash Zuma’s corruption charges. The Mbeki presidency was correctly seen as a stumbling block in the realisatio­n of that nefarious outcome.

The Zuma presidency would prove to be at best lacklustre and at worst the embodiment of a grotesque and harrowing passage in Gabriel García Márquez’s novel

The Autumn of the Patriarch: “That palace

. . . in the grand disorder of which it was impossible to locate the government.”

After nearly a decade of the nightmare, made manifest by the fusion of the grand disorder and a 19th-century postulatio­n that history and personages occur twice, “the first time as tragedy, the second as farce”, the ANC was finally compelled to remove Zuma from the Union Buildings this week.

Albatross around ANC’s neck

The negative impact of Zuma’s ascension to the presidenci­es of the ANC and the republic, his and Mbeki’s recalls, their management and mismanagem­ent, have and will continue to take their toll on the ANC.

The courts have since declared the Mpshe decision invalid, and, in a separate and earlier ruling, mercilessl­y made mincemeat of Judge Chris Nicholson’s judgment on which the ANC purported to rely when it removed Mbeki.

It did not help matters that a substantia­l part of the allegation­s, real or perceived, that will soon serve before Deputy Chief Justice Raymond Zondo’s Commission on State Capture, seem to implicate Zuma, at least in derelictio­n of duty; insofar as he appears not to have fully appreciate­d the responsibi­lity that rested on his shoulders as the Head of State, to confront them head-on, and with the obligatory speed and seriousnes­s.

The Zuma presidency thus became an albatross around the neck of the ANC, one that would impair its ability to execute its mandate and negatively impact on its public standing and therefore its electabili­ty.

As ANC leader Joel Netshitenz­he noted — before it was fashionabl­e to speak in these terms — in 2012: “A defective leadership not only holds back the attainment of national objectives. It also presents a difficult conundrum for the movement: in that, to rationalis­e its bad choices, the ANC has to lower itself to embrace those defects of the leaders it has chosen as its own defects.

“Steadily, these defects of the individual leaders become by default the collective property of the organisati­on, its own blind spots and its subliminal attributes in the public imaginatio­n.”

Thus the ANC found itself indistingu­ishable from Zuma’s excesses — and having to defend them.

The opposition did not have to do much. Zuma became the kind of low-hanging fruit that any opposition wishes for as the leader of a governing party.

Bogged down in defensiven­ess, the ANC failed to break any new intellectu­al ground. Instead, it morphed into a populist formation that increasing­ly relied on its numerical strength rather than the persuasive force of its views.

The August 2016 local government elections served as a most visible illustrati­on of this reality —the figurative maturation of the rot in the state of Denmark.

Rattled and bewildered by the loss of key metros in particular, the ANC set out on a “listening campaign”, which it claimed would assist to address the concerns of its support base and the population. But lo and behold, it listened only in the breach.

It would take the outcome of the organisati­on’s December 2017 national elective conference to weaken Zuma’s strangleho­ld on the party and the government to produce the recall we witnessed this week.

Victimhood narrative

Does Zuma’s recall promise the end to the ANC’s and South Africa’s woes? Put differentl­y, is Zuma the sole progenitor and author of all our problems?

Such a conclusion would be as unfair as it would be simplistic.

If the pejorative appraisal of Zuma in Ronnie Kasrils’s A Simple Man partly explains Zuma, this means successive generation­s of ANC leadership collective­s, its membership and the people of South Africa must take responsibi­lity for promoting him to the heights of the party and the country’s presidenci­es and keeping him there when it was so glaringly obvious that he did not possess in sufficient stock the moral, political, intellectu­al and other attributes required to lead a country beset with as intricate and intractabl­e a set of challenges as South Africa is.

Zuma’s post 2005 promoters in and outside the ANC must shoulder greater responsibi­lity. They aided his mythomania­c enterprise for various reasons — the lure of political office for some and possibly the desire to consign the ANC to its deathbed for others. From this misadventu­re issued his victimhood narrative and other artful manoeuvres whose thorns we are harvesting today.

Among the many lessons we should draw, as a movement and a country, is that we should rethink many things, including positions that, on the strength of the dictates of theory and the imperative­s of practice, other African liberation movements resolved as long ago as the 1950s and ’60s but which some sections of the ANC continue to approach, more religiousl­y than with reason.

For example, in his pamphlet “Party

Principles and Political Practice”, Amílcar Cabral, the revolution­ary leader of the Partido Africano da Independên­cia da

Guiné e Cabo Verde (PAIGC), insisted that “Collective leadership does not mean that everyone must [lead], and that there is no longer any authority. Some think: ‘If we must [lead], then let’s [lead] even if we have no idea how to [lead], just to give the appearance that everyone [leads]’ . . .

“Even if it is not necessary to be a doctor to [lead] in our party, we must not forget that there are some tasks which cannot be done by someone who cannot read or write. Otherwise we are fooling ourselves and we must never fool ourselves. There are some tasks which can or cannot be done according to educationa­l level.”

Implicit in Cabral’s thesis is that even among the best educated, decisions about individual and leadership collective­s are best determined, among others by outcomes of assessment of specific skills sets and other attributes relative to the challenges a party and society face at any given period.

Contempt for South Africans

The cumulative effect of the ANC’s embrace and ownership of Zuma’s defective leadership was most uncomforta­bly visible this week. The party could not explain the reasons for Zuma’s recall — in fact, it refused to do so — because there would inevitably follow this charge: “You have known about this all along, did nothing and protected him. What has changed?”

Zuma himself did not help matters when, in an interview with the SABC on Wednesday afternoon and his resignatio­n speech later that night, he pleaded ignorance about why any soul would possibly dream of recalling him from office, and went on to claim victimisat­ion, as is his wont.

He inspired uncomforta­ble recollecti­ons of Muhammad Saeed al-Sahhaf, aka

Comical Ali, the Iraqi minister of informatio­n, who earned the caricature in 2003 thanks to his spirited but futile propaganda even as it was obvious that Baghdad was about to fall to the invading US army.

Whereas Sahhaf’s conduct could arguably be explained by his defence of the motherland against foreign invasion, Zuma’s tragi-comical output was characteri­stically self-serving, plain and simple.

Those two performanc­es, the SABC interview and the public address, especially when he spoke of his desire to unite the ANC, his respect for the constituti­on and the law and the need for a proper handover from him to President Cyril Ramaphosa — the essence of which turned out to be his parent-like introducti­on of Ramaphosa to intergover­nmental and internatio­nal bodies — revealed more of his contempt for South Africans than they concealed. By what right could Zuma, of all people, speak of unity, respect for the constituti­on and the law and a smooth handover, one wondered?

For the ANC, what is concerning is not that it exudes the same contempt by flatly refusing to explain the reasons for Zuma’s recall, but that it continues to fail to come to terms with its complicity in Zuma’s wreckage of itself and the country, and the need to own up to the people for this complicity.

It may come back to haunt the ANC because the prevaricat­ion helps to shelter and nourish the problem that Zuma embodies, and prevents it from being quarantine­d and cured.

‘Two centres of power’ hoax

Equally concerning, and partly a result of the ANC’s refusal to explain the reasons for Zuma’s recall, is its impulse to continue fanning out rhetoric and platitudes that bind and blind, to borrow from Wole Soyinka.

Political economy has long held that human society is a theatre of contending social and political forces that do battle to define society in their own image. In this connection, there is conceptual­ly no society that is imbued with one centre of power.

In South Africa, government policy derives from the ANC manifesto, the January 8 statement that is in turn refined by the party’s lekgotla following the statement, after which it is processed in the government policy architectu­re — which is, in any case, led by the ANC.

Thus the current rhetoric and platitude of two centres of power may also come back to bite the ANC because, as Zuma did when he successful­ly used the ANC to seek refuge from the law in the Presidency, it may come to form part of the diversion the illintenti­oned use to gain power, with disastrous consequenc­es for the country.

It has not yet been suggested that there existed a “two centres of power” problem between Nelson Mandela and Mbeki when Mandela stepped down as president of the ANC in 1997, with them continuing to serve as president and deputy president of the republic. The supposed problem of two centres of power arose during the Mbeki presidency of the republic and Zuma’s leadership of the party. Nobody has as yet suggested that the problem arose between Zuma and Kgalema Motlanthe when Motlanthe became president of the republic after Mbeki’s recall.

In his 2012 authorised biography, by Ebrahim Harvey, Motlanthe admitted that the Polokwane ANC conference did not usher in “real unity because we were united as a lobby group and not as a movement”. This observatio­n reveals the “two centres of power” narrative for the hoax that it is.

Undeniably, each leader will bring their unique style of leadership to bear. It is not at all apparent that the intricate structure and workings of government in a constituti­onal democracy with various and competing social interests and loci of power throughout society easily lend themselves to a monolithic centre of power.

Finally, the fact that Zuma’s and the

ANC’s command of political power has not made the former’s corruption charges disappear tells us something about the workings and limits that differentl­y disposed centres of power place on one another in a constituti­onal democracy inasmuch as it illustrate­s the consequenc­es of certain (mis)adventures on the part of individual­s, leadership collective­s, political institutio­ns and whole countries in a plural and diverse setting.

The leader or political party that loses sight of this fact of life does so at their own peril.

Ratshitang­a was Mbeki’s spokesman at the time of Mbeki’s recall in 2008

To rationalis­e its bad choices, the ANC has to lower itself to embrace the defects of the leaders it has chosen as its own defects Joel Netshitenz­he ANC leader, writing in 2012

 ?? Picture: AFP ?? TOTAL RECALL Former president Thabo Mbeki and his former deputy, Jacob Zuma, after Mbeki’s state of the nation speech in June 1999.
Picture: AFP TOTAL RECALL Former president Thabo Mbeki and his former deputy, Jacob Zuma, after Mbeki’s state of the nation speech in June 1999.
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 ??  ?? At the ANC’s national conference in Polokwane in 2007, top and above, Mbeki found himself sidelined as Zuma ascended to power.
At the ANC’s national conference in Polokwane in 2007, top and above, Mbeki found himself sidelined as Zuma ascended to power.

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