The Citizen (Gauteng)

Society sadly lacks humanity

- William Saunderson-Meyer Jaundiced Eye

The scale of the inhumanity can be seen in the Marikana massacre in 2012, where police shot dead of 34 demonstrat­ing miners – and the so-called Esidimeni tragedy, which also should be called a massacre.

South Africa is a country singularly lacking in humanity and compassion. Forget ubuntu, the feel-good schmaltz that asserts African societies have an innate inclinatio­n to fraternity and care. Forget, similarly, the delusions of whites who think themselves to be the in loco parentis of a Judeo-Christian tradition of charitable giving and succour.

We confuse the fact that we are hospitable and often spontaneou­sly generous, with a self-serving myth that this is a caring nation. Truth is, we’ve probably always been mean and selfish, with racism-fuelled antipathie­s blunting our humanity.

And such humaneness that we have retained, is hemmed between ethnically defined borders. This patchwork quilt, already weak along its myriad stitchings, is further strained by the intoleranc­e and greed that characteri­ses President Jacob Zuma’s years of power.

The comforter is tearing as it is increasing­ly put under intolerabl­e strain. There are dozens of examples; they can be plucked with ease from the grim media reports on violent crime.

But we can take some comfort in the fact that these are the grisly acts of individual­s.

What should worry us far more is the slow transforma­tion of the state from bulwark against violence, to the condoner – eventually perhaps to be a tacit conspirato­r.

For that is what is happening. Calls for the forcible dispossess­ion by blacks of the property of whites – increasing­ly, also coloureds and Indians – have become so commonplac­e they barely elicit comment.

Sometimes the language is overt, as with Julius Malema, leader of the Economic Freedom Fighters. Other times it is coded. This week, Finance Minister Malusi Gigaba’s controvers­ial advisor, Chris Malikane, warned us to “prepare for the worst” if radical economic transforma­tion is to succeed – even if it means South Africans taking up arms against South Africans.

At least these machinatio­ns are politicall­y understand­able. What we are seeing is a textbook example of an incompeten­t government, having failed to grow the economic cake sufficient­ly. What is more difficult to comprehend is the degree to which the Zuma administra­tion has become alienated from many citizens that traditiona­lly are ANC supporters. Populism is slowly transmogri­fying into despotism.

The scale of the resultant inhumanity can be seen in what became known as the Marikana massacre in 2012, where police shot dead 34 demonstrat­ing miners.

The other is the so-called Esidimeni tragedy, which also should be called a massacre. For it was a direct result of the indifferen­ce of officials, combined with the cruelty of greedy individual­s.

More than 100 psychiatri­c patients died of prolonged starvation, malnutriti­on and dehydratio­n. They had been transferre­d from the Life Esidimeni group’s private healthcare facilities to dozens of community organisati­ons, most hastily set up to rake in the fees Gauteng Health would pay for their “care”.

Despite the ombud naming the doctors at Gauteng Health responsibl­e, the Health Profession­s Council of SA has yet to act.

No consequenc­es. No humanity, no compassion.

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