The Citizen (Gauteng)

Courage to confront bully

- William Saunderson-Meyer

Malema, with complete assurance, holds the centre stage. When SA looks into its heart of darkness, it is Malema that we see.

EFF leader Julius Malema views himself as today’s political kingmaker and a likely future leader of SA. These are not delusions. Malema has defined the ANC’s policy agenda on land expropriat­ion and on free tertiary tuition. Malema has tied the DA into coalition knots, loosening the rope merely to hang them out to dry.

He may be a misogynist­ic, racist, rabble-rouser but he is also the single person most responsibl­e for the ousting of Jacob Zuma. He is deluded, destructiv­e, and dangerous, but may also hold in his hands the future of Cyril Ramaphosa, and his “new dawn”.

Malema, with complete assurance, holds the centre stage. When SA looks into its heart of darkness, it is Malema that we see.

Despite the massive progress made since 1994, SA remains divided by race, ethnicity and class, confounded by impossible expectatio­ns and a lack of simple solutions. But as in a flounderin­g 1930s Germany, we have one voice, Malema, who has a confident answer.

Even by his own toxic standards, Malema is becoming ever more vitriolic.

Eighteen months ago, Malema declared: “We are not calling for the slaughteri­ng of white people, at least for now.” In the past week, speaking of the ousting of Nelson Mandela Bay Mayor Athol Trollip: “We going for your white man … we are going to cut the throat”.

As with other fascists, Malema is not picky when it comes to ethnic targeting. Also last week, he stated: “Chinese are like Indians. They think they’re close to whiteness. When they practice racism they even become worse than whites.”

That Malema can get away with such behaviour is because of a number of factors. It has been facilitate­d by a naïve media, by cowardly government institutio­ns, by ineffectua­l law enforcemen­t, and by gullible politician­s who place personal ambitions ahead of national interest.

It is, however, futile to lay the blame for Malema’s thinly veiled threats and incitement at the door of the media and to expect journalist­s to deprive Malema of the oxygen of publicity. Ours is a predominan­tly lowbrow media, motivated less by truth and balance than by “trending” sensationa­list entertainm­ent.

Rather, the solution lies in the law. As with the citizen activism that thwarted state capture, sidelined Zuma, turned the Guptas into fugitives and brought Bell Pottinger, KPMG and McKinsey’s to their knees, it lies in civil society doing what the state lacks the capacity and/or resolve to do.

The Human Rights Commission (HRC) has proved to be scarily remorseles­s at taking on racist estate agents mouthing off about crowded beaches. Taking on racist politician­s threatenin­g genocide? Not so much. Sustained citizen pressure and court applicatio­ns, though, can force the HRC to do its job.

Parliament has a code of conduct that requires MPs to behave within the bounds of the SA constituti­on. The committee that is supposed to enforce compliance has been until now a toothless tiger, but again, if there were sufficient pressure, this could change.

It is clear from the Zupta saga that the law enforcemen­t agencies act against the transgress­ions of the politicall­y connected only when it suits the ANC. But prosecutio­ns can and have been forced by bringing imaginativ­e court applicatio­ns, or by dint of private prosecutio­ns.

Unchecked, Malema’s race politics will destroy SA’s future. There are democratic mechanisms that can be used to prevent this, but South Africans will have to find the courage to confront the bully.

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