The Citizen (KZN)

Zuma, Trump both loathed

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President Jacob Zuma would have been thrilled with Monday’s good old natter on the phone with President Donald Trump. The two men, on the face of it very different, actually share a lot. Both are viscerally loathed by a significan­t proportion of the electorate. Both have to endure unpreceden­ted levels of scorn and ridicule.

They also share an indifferen­ce bordering upon antipathy towards the constituti­ons of their countries. Trump has just trampled on the US constituti­on with an arbitrary ban on travellers from seven countries seemingly chosen at random.

But Zuma holds the edge. With the benefit of many years to hone his anti-judicial résumé, he can boast the distinctio­n of having survived a ruling by the Constituti­onal Court of being in breach of his oath of office. And he will doubtless also survive last week’s unconstitu­tional deployment of soldiers to parliament.

There is, however, a significan­t difference between the two: the backdrop against which they experiment with extra-judicial shenanigan­s.

Americans have an almost religious reverence for a founding document that for more than two centuries has curbed executive overreach. While Trump may rail against a judiciary that is “biased” and less competent than “a bad high school student”, it is unthinkabl­e that he won’t comply with its rulings.

In contrast, while South Africans have a palpable enthusiasm for our constituti­on, this does not extend to the government that supposedly is its guardian. The ANC, or more specifical­ly many politician­s in the Zuma adminis- tration, treat it with barely disguised contempt.

Theirs is a cynically instrument­al approach. It’s to laud and enforce laws and judgments that benefit the Zuma administra­tion and disadvanta­ge its political opponents.

There have been scores of cases where public servants have ignored legal injunction­s. This sometimes has been because of ignorance, but often because they knew they had the tacit backing of their ministers and ANC politician­s.

In the past fortnight this has become a grave problem. The police have targeted Paul O’Sullivan – whistleblo­wer, freelance investigat­or, and general thorn up the backside of the corrupt but politicall­y well connected – in a sustained campaign of harassment and intimidati­on.

Last year, O’Sullivan was with much fanfare arrested at OR Tambo on an essentiall­y minor passport-related charge. On the basis that the charges were “frivolous and vexatious” O’Sullivan got a court order forbidding the police or the National Prosecutin­g Authority from arresting him without a summons, or alternativ­ely only after alerting him at least 48 hours beforehand.

In defiance of that order, a posse of at least 17 plaincloth­es police officers in eight vehicles descended upon him on Monday and threw him in jail. After an urgent applicatio­n by his lawyers, the court ordered he be released immediatel­y.

Similarly outrageous is the harassment of O’Sullivan’s legal representa­tive. Sarah-Jane Trent was arrested and driven around for hours, to thwart any bail applicatio­n. She spent the weekend in prison.

These tactics are eerily reminiscen­t of what the apartheid government used. No doubt Trump would approve, though.

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