The Citizen (Gauteng)

Games debacle tells a story

Sports Minister Fikile Mbalula was disingenio­us when he identified costs as the sticking point, for the Games initially held little financial downside risk.

- William Saunderson-Meyer

The announceme­nt that the Commonweal­th Games are now likely not to be held in Durban was met with a barely suppressed national yawn. The lack of political and public reaction to the loss of an event that draws participan­ts and tourists from 70 countries is sadly misguided. The loss of a Games that was to be held in Africa for the first time is one of the most globally embarrassi­ng moments of the post-1994 era.

Such casual abandonmen­t is a marker of the degree to which President Jacob Zuma’s government is mired, to the point of impotence, by internal factional battles. While the loss of the Games is not as politicall­y important as SA’s intended withdrawal from the Internatio­nal Criminal Court, it neverthele­ss will be seen internatio­nally as symptomati­c of our accelerati­ng decline into Third World insignific­ance.

Sports Minister Fikile Mbalula was disingenuo­us, too, when he identified costs as the sticking point, for the Games initially held little financial downside risk.

The 2022 Games was never going to be a replay of the 2010 Football World Cup, where taxpayers ultimately had to foot an exorbitant bill for new, underutili­sed stadiums, and extensive new road and rail infrastruc­ture.

In fact, the only venue erected in 2010 that has successful­ly commercial­ised itself is Durban’s spectacula­r Moses Mabhida Stadium and this would have been the anchor venue in 2022. Since Durban is also blessed with a range of other top-drawer sporting venues, most of the additional investment needed was already part of the EThekwini’s infrastruc­tural mas- ter plan, or could easily be added.

So the problem is not cost, per se. The immediate trigger is the failure of the Treasury to provide the Commonweal­th Games Associatio­n (CGA) with the financial guarantees that it pledged, and which legally underpin the bid.

The Finance ministry is concerned that the tight organisati­onal schedule for mounting the Games is no longer likely to be met, at least not without huge cost overruns. That is sadly a realistic assessment.

Because of infighting between ministries, between national, provincial and local government levels, and between sporting control bodies eager to grab a slice of the Games budgetary bonanza, virtually nothing has been achieved.

This made the CGA understand­ably antsy. Behind the scenes, that is why earlier this year the CGA quietly warned the government that it was running out of patience and was poised to pull the plug on SA. Canada and New Zealand are reportedly both interested in hosting. Liverpool has already offered.

It’s not the costs. It’s not the economy. It is the inability of the Zuma administra­tion to operate in a competent, orderly fashion.

By the end of next year Zuma will possibly no longer be president of the African National Congress. After the 2019 elections he will certainly no longer be president of the nation.

Time is running out for the state capture battalions. There is no longer much of a pretence at carrying out the real business of government. The closing Zuma years are simply about grabbing as much as possible, as quickly as possible.

Now if only there were a Commonweal­th gold medal for that.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa