The Citizen (Gauteng)

Makgoba sums up SA sentiment

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If anything encapsulat­ed the groundswel­l of feeling gathering like a dangerous tsunami across the country against President Jacob Zuma, it was a sermon delivered by Anglican Archbishop Thabo Makgoba. “This past week,” the leader of the Anglican Church in South Africa said during his Easter Vigil address, “the nightmare got worse as the full impact of the president’s recent actions unfolded.

“They have devastated our hopes for the kind of foreign investment which we desperatel­y need to grow our economy and create new jobs. Their impact on consumer confidence and trust is immeasurab­le. Tens of thousands of jobs are directly affected by just a 10% drop in consumer confidence.

“If we cannot turn the situation around, at end of the road we are now on, we face the prospect of employees fired; shops shuttering; malls closing; the poor unable to afford bread, paraffin, electricit­y and the cost of burials; possible hyperinfla­tion – it is as if we are entering the Zimbabwe moment.”

This is criticism of the highest order and redolent of the direct broadside his predecesso­r, Archbishop Desmond Tutu, used to regularly deliver against the iconoclast­ic, ironclad flanks of apartheid.

Makgoba was also clearly speaking out against Zuma when he said: “Like many, I feel that the dream of South Africa sometimes feels more like a nightmare, a prolonged Passiontid­e, so to speak.

“Personal interests, corruption, private gain, entitlemen­t, a vicious contempt for the poor and the common good, a culture of blatant lies and cronyism – and possibly worse – dominate our public landscape.” He also asked a telling question. “What are our obligation­s as citizens, all of us with equal rights and responsibi­lities under the constituti­on? You’ve heard me say this before: our destiny is not a matter of chance. It is a matter of choice. Your choice. My choice. Our choice.” Amen.

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