The Herald (South Africa)

The outrageous is now normal

- JUSTICE MALALA

The greatest threat to our country is the fact that the extraordin­ary, the outrageous, the crooked, may end up being viewed as the norm.

Crime used to be top of the agenda in SA. It was the main issue of debate on talk radio, the main headline in daily newspapers, and the subject of special investigat­ions on television programmes.

It hasn’t gone away. Murders, rapes, robberies and hijackings are still the order of the day in large chunks of the country.

But these incidents are no longer in the headlines.

Crime has become normalised in our society.

Those who are killed, maimed and raped suffer alone.

What is horrific is now normalised.

Last week, we were reminded again about how good men and women in the ANC rationalis­ed outrageous behaviour by their leader and thus normalised incredibly abnormal actions.

Trevor Manuel and others heard in 2011 how Fikile Mbalula was told of his promotion to a full ministry by one of the Gupta brothers.

These ANC leaders knew this was wrong, yet they rationalis­ed this behaviour and normalised it.

Zuma was not censured. The extraordin­ary situation where an unelected family ran the state of SA through manipulati­on of the president, his family and his cronies was then normalised.

And so at home affairs the Guptas’ visa troubles were swiftly ironed out.

It was normal that, unlike the rest of us, they did not stand in a queue.

Two minions were dispatched to India to ensure the Guptas’ workers received preferenti­al treatment.

At Eskom, they were given breaks no one else got.

At the mineral resources ministry, a whole minister was appointed by Zuma to serve their interests even to the extent of negotiatin­g for them with Glencore. Having accepted that the Guptas run the country, we sat and watched as things we should never accept became normal SA practice.

The lights often go out because Eskom was cutting deals with the Guptas.

The outrage about loadsheddi­ng is gone. We are now abused and accepting of the abuse. It is now normal.

The fact that most of our policing is now done by private security companies is normal. Where are the police? They take statements at police stations.

The police have become recorders of crime for the insurance industry.

The water in Makhanda (formerly Grahamstow­n) is largely dirty and undrinkabl­e.

The municipali­ty has its priorities right. Instead of fixing the water problem, it changed the name of the town.

The absurd is normalised. We hear that Dudu Myeni was in possession of NPA dockets and showed them to executives at Bosasa.

That is extraordin­ary. That is shocking. Yet nothing happens to her.

She glides from opportunit­y to opportunit­y with no prospect of being held to account.

It is now the norm that there is one law for us ordinary human beings, and another law for the Dudu Myenis of this world.

What is to be done? The Zuma years took us to the abyss.

We saw what it’s like when rampant corruption and lawlessnes­s are allowed loose across the land.

The Zuma years showed us what the road to nowhere looks like.

The reason we pulled back is because key parts of civil society stood up and said no.

Community activists stood up against Zuma’s attempts at land grabs through, for example, the Traditiona­l Courts Bill.

The NGO sector exposed malfeasanc­e at the SABC and other state institutio­ns.

The media exposed the rot again and again. Business started speaking up against state capture.

These actors rebelled against allowing the truly abnormal to become part of the fabric of our society.

They refused to allow corruption, nepotism and criminalit­y to become the norm.

The problems our society faces have not gone away with Zuma’s departure.

The criminal networks of the past few years are active and want to take us back to the Zuma years.

The abnormalit­ies introduced by Zuma to our system are still in full swing.

And so civil society actors cannot afford to let their guard down or be complacent.

The only positive thing to come out of the Zuma years is that we were reminded of our activism and our voices.

Many ordinary South Africans used their voices to great effect.

Don’t stop now. Don’t let the outrageous become normal. Rage against the corrosion of our values and the stealing of our country.

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