The Citizen (KZN)

Ramaphosa ‘the worst in terms of concrete results’

- Brian Sokutu

President Cyril Ramaphosa’s State of the Nation Address (Sona) embodied how little progress hasten made during his tenure in office, with experts pointing to its lack of substance, how short it had fallen in addressing youth unemployme­nt and how he had overlooked the contributi­on made by tourism to the economy.

The Black Sash said he had failed to fix the country’s many challenges.

During what opposition parties maintained marked his last speech at the helm of government ahead of this year’s national and provincial polls, Ramaphosa said the past 30 years of ANC governance had:

Cast off the tyranny of apartheid and built a democratic state, based on the will of the people;

Establishe­d strong institutio­ns to protect the fundamenta­l freedoms and human rights of all people;

Transforme­d the lives of millions of South Africans, providing the necessitie­s of life, opportunit­ies, which never existed before;

Enabled a diverse economy, whose minerals, agricultur­al products and manufactur­ed goods reached every corner of the world, creating jobs; and

Returned to the community of nations, extending a hand of peace and friendship to all countries and all peoples.

In the forefront of interactin­g with people at the coalface of poverty and hardship, Black Sash was unimpresse­d, saying Ramaphosa “affirmed that yet another year has passed with little progress being made on the numerous plans he outlines in his yearly Sona”.

Citing a failure to implement the Zondo commission recommenda­tions, addressing unemployme­nt, extending a right to social assistance, not prioritisi­ng the welfare of the poor and devaluing the child support grant, Black Sash said it had endorsed an open letter to Ramaphosa from civil society partners.

The letter highlighte­d “the discrepanc­ies between commitment­s made in previous Sona events and the actual allocation of resources by National Treasury”.

Unilateral budget cuts to mitigate fiscal consolidat­ion went “against the priority of the government to advance socioecono­mic rights, economic growth and previous government achievemen­ts”.

“Failure to make any tangible progress in fixing South Africa’s many challenges is having a devastatin­g impact on the lives of the poor and marginalis­ed,” it said.

“During every year that the government fails to deliver on its promises, [it] contribute­s towards a disaster of poverty and despair, which is being seen increasing­ly in many communitie­s.

“These communitie­s fight daily to survive, often failing, going to bed hungry, only to rise in the morning to face yet another day of hunger and uncertaint­y,” said Black Sash.

Independen­t political analyst Sandile Swana said while Jacob Zuma had been “a bad president”, Ramaphosa was “the worst in terms of concrete results”.

“According to the Harvard University study of SA’s 30 years of democracy, the situation got worse during the Ramaphosa tenure. Under his watch, we have seen a failed party, running a failed state.”

Concerned about tourism not having featured in Sona, Federated Hospitalit­y Associatio­n of Southern Africa chair Rosemary Anderson said: “This oversight of tourism’s immense potential for job creation and economic growth is baffling.

“The president spoke fervently about business needing to create more jobs.

“Yet his administra­tion continues implementi­ng obstacles that actively hinder the tourism and hospitalit­y industry’s ability to meet this goal.”

Nkosinathi Mahlangu, youth employment portfolio head at Momentum Metropolit­an, said Ramaphosa “fell short on youth employment”.

“There were not many tangibles. There were vague references to employment opportunit­ies [and there’s] a big difference between job opportunit­ies and actual jobs.”

 ?? Picture: AFP ?? Chinese tourists take photos near a statue of Nelson Mandela in front of the Union Buildings in Pretoria yesterday. Democratic SA’s first president famously said: ‘As long as many of our people still live in utter poverty, as long as children still live under plastic covers, as long as many of our people are still without jobs, no South African should rest and wallow in the joy of freedom.’ Many political, economic and social commentato­rs wonder how he would feel today.
Picture: AFP Chinese tourists take photos near a statue of Nelson Mandela in front of the Union Buildings in Pretoria yesterday. Democratic SA’s first president famously said: ‘As long as many of our people still live in utter poverty, as long as children still live under plastic covers, as long as many of our people are still without jobs, no South African should rest and wallow in the joy of freedom.’ Many political, economic and social commentato­rs wonder how he would feel today.

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