The Citizen (KZN)

JZ’s BEE defence is no laughing matter

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South Africa is a country where it is not only difficult to tell truth from fiction but, when it comes to politician­s, it is sometimes near impossible to distinguis­h between reality and satire. Former president Jacob Zuma has done it again as the principal exponent of the straight-faced line which at first seems like a bad joke but is, in reality, anything but.

Now he claims – according to reports yesterday about his defence strategy in his upcoming corruption trial – that he took backhander­s from people like Schabir Shaik in the furtheranc­e of the cause of black economic empowermen­t (BEE).

The reports claim his lawyers are preparing his argument that his involvemen­t with Shaik and, through him, foreign defence companies, was in pursuance of ANC BEE policy.

That argument, we would suggest, is in the same mould as the one he used in his rape trial, when he said he showered after sex with an HIV-positive woman (the daughter of an old friend, by the way) because he believed that would lessen the chances of him catching the infection.

However, Zuma’s strategy would be a joke if it was not such a serious threat, both politicall­y and socially, to the future of the country.

His stance implies that any malfeasanc­e can be excused as long as the beneficiar­ies are black. And, in the process, it devalues the whole concept of BEE because he appears to confirm the policy is a way for a minority to enrich themselves and for business to buy influence with the government.

If that is his explanatio­n, then one can see clearly why the state capture project happened so quickly and so broadly ... and why it was accompanie­d by a racebased propaganda campaign funded by the Guptas.

BEE is desperatel­y needed in this country – but it must not be hijacked by a greedy clique.

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