The Citizen (Gauteng)

Cut the red tape, or else...

If all donations and food deliveries are entrusted to government officials, starvation will soar exponentia­lly.

- Martin Williams DA city councillor in Johannesbu­rg

Despite the spin, President Cyril Ramaphosa’s flip-flop on lockdown cigarette sales has dented his credibilit­y. It’s a comeback for the radical economic transforma­tion (RET) brigade which backed Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma in the 2017 ANC leadership contest.

The RET group supporting the tobacco ban straddles the ANC and Julius Malema’s EFF. Both have documented links to cigarette trader Adriano Mazzotti, who denies involvemen­t with the tobacco ban. Alleged links between Dlamini-Zuma and Mazzotti are widely publicised, with photos. Mazzotti has not sued The President’s Keepers author Jacques Pauw or anyone else in this regard. Mazzotti is also a known EFF funder.

South Africans have not stopped smoking. The capricious ban benefits off-grid cigarette trade, depriving the fiscus of billions of rands which are desperatel­y needed for food and other relief.

Considerin­g the love of money in these dealings, it is hypocritic­al of RET flag bearer Dlamini-Zuma to quote socialist Amilcar Cabral when announcing restrictio­ns. She sees lockdown as “an opportunit­y to accelerate the implementa­tion of some long agreed-upon structural changes to enable reconstruc­tion, developmen­t and growth”.

That’s radical economic transforma­tion. “These opportunit­ies call for more sacrifices and – if needs be – what Amilcar Cabral called ‘class suicide’, wherein we must rally behind the common cause,” she said.

Rich, tobacco-funded RET fans are not making sacrifices. They are cashing in. In addition to off-grid tobacco money, they are trying to control funding and distributi­on of food to the poor. Herein lie seeds of catastroph­e. Private organisati­ons and individual­s are being thwarted by red tape when trying to get permits to distribute food. Government wants to centralise this function under what MP James Lorimer calls an incapable state.

“There have been reports of individual­s being arrested and NGOs being harassed by law enforcemen­t officials for handing out food in communitie­s – all because they did not have proper documentat­ion,” he said.

If all donations and food deliveries are entrusted to government officials, starvation will soar exponentia­lly. If it were not for herculean private-sector efforts, from individual suburbanit­es and giant corporatio­ns, food riots would already be out of control.

Dlamini-Zuma mentions class suicide. The local version resembles class euthanasia, with a racist slant where businesses are wiped out in order to achieve RET. What she calls “some long agreed-upon structural changes” will lead to great depression, worse than the current recession.

RET control freaks are incapable of leading South Africa out of this hole.

One priority is to resist the attempts to prohibit private food aid. Advocate and academic James Grant writes: “There is an overriding defence in law [known as necessity[ that allows one to act in an emergency and to break the law where the interest at stake is more important than observing the technicali­ties of the law.

“Where someone is unable to buy food ... [has tried official channels] ... and is facing hunger or starvation, the circumstan­ces for the defence kick in and the technical prohibitio­n is overridden by the emergency of needing to get food to people who would otherwise go hungry or starve.”

That is our most urgent immediate task. Cut the red (RET) tape around food distributi­on. Or else.

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