Sunday Tribune

Nqakula traces the path to the rot and to redemption

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the political damage that has been caused to the movement over more than 20 years of freedom”) still stands. With candour that can only be unnerving for the movement, he responds: “I have an answer: we walked away when wrongdoing took root and its putrid smell permeated all our endeavours.

“We wanted to keep our hands and noses clean. We are to blame as much as the current leaders are.”

If the error lay in drifting away from the organisati­on’s founding principles and practices, that was possibly where the solution might be found. Drawing on Pixley ka Isaka Seme’s essay of 1906, “The Regenerati­on of Africa”, which sets “high morality and deepseated humanity” as the incipient ANC’S primary objectives, Nqakula writes: “When the founders establishe­d the ANC, they never thought it would one day degenerate to the level where it finds itself today – penetrated by members who are bent only on financial gain and ready to use crooked means to get their hands on it.”

Citing Zuma’s call at the ANC’S 105-year celebratio­n earlier this year – that: “We are clear that we are not calling for unity in defence of corruption or other negative tendencies…” – Nqakula observes: “Those tendencies, unfortunat­ely, have grown exponentia­lly in the ANC and Zuma and the other senior leaders have not intervened to put a stop to them.

“To weed out corruption and the other negative tendencies, a new commitment is needed among the leaders.”

History, he suggests, provides two options; the 1912 process of finding trusted leaders from across the provinces to restore the virtues and principles of the organisati­on, or the 1949 expedient of resolving internal divisions by bringing in a trusted outsider, in that earlier case, Dr James Moroka.

Nqakula laments, however, that in contrast to 1912, “political discussion­s at the (December) 2017 ANC conference will be dominated by the election of the new leadership core rather than the mission of a better life for all. Thousands of rand will change hands to buy votes. That, unfortunat­ely, is the level to which the ANC had degenerate­d – a far cry from the first conference in 1912.”

The consultati­ve conference­s of Morogoro (1969) and Kabwe (1985) reinforced the lessons of history the ANC ought to heed today.

Yet, the current leadership “has no appetite for such a consultati­ve process”.

If something were not done, however, disaster loomed.

“They have been immobilise­d by their own culpabilit­y for the wrongs that have become almost second nature at every level of leadership.”

Nqakula’s postscript concludes with a “personal plea” to Zuma to step down as president when his term as party leader ends in December to enable the new leader to become national president, and “show the entire population he or she is fit to continue as president after the 2019 elections”.

Such a leader should be able to lead not just the ANC, but the country, “towards ‘a new life, embracing the diverse phases of a higher, complex existence’, as Seme put it. That is what the ANC calls a better life for all of South Africa’s people – black and white”.

The ball, he writes, “is in Zuma’s court. His conscience should tell him what to do”.

In an interview this week, Nqakula spoke bluntly, asserting that “if the ANC goes back and does what it does best – interactin­g closely with the people, delivering services, engaging all South Africans, black and white, in growing jobs and building a better life for all – it stands a good chance of recouping its losses”.

But, “if all we do is try to manufactur­e lists on the basis of factionali­sm… we will be in trouble. If we do not do these things leading up to (the elections in) 2019, our situation will be very precarious.”

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