The Independent on Saturday

The most baffling conundrum of 2016

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THE good ship South Africa rode out 2016 in port. Her master, Jacob Zuma, distracted by the bailiffs pounding at his cabin door, simply failed to embark on the challengin­g journey that was scheduled.

One can understand his dilemma. Given the furious storms he encountere­d while tethered at berth, it must have seemed the height of folly to venture into the wild seas beyond the safety of the harbour mouth.

The ANC is not concerned. It appears to have decided that party unity, not actually going somewhere, is of paramount concern. Zuma will be allowed to remain unchalleng­ed at the helm at least until the leadership conference in December 2017.

Zuma, meanwhile, is focusing on the only thing that matters to him – self-preservati­on. Consequent­ly nothing much else gets done. Legislatio­n is piling up, unsigned by him and therefore unimplemen­ted.

One of the most important is the Financial Intelligen­ce Centre Amendment Bill, which makes South Africa compliant with internatio­nal efforts to combat money laundering and terrorism financing. This languished in his in-tray for five months before he sent it back to Parliament, citing concerns over its “constituti­onality”.

It is touching that the president, who has been declared by the Constituti­onal Court to have violated his oath of office, is now suddenly concerned about the bill’s “impermissi­bly overbroad” provisions for the invasion of the “inner sanctum” of people’s privacy.

However, the timing means the bill will not be passed before the February deadline of the global regulatory body, threatenin­g the internatio­nal operations of the hitherto highly regarded South African financial system.

These kinds of negative effects flowing from Zuma’s political paralysis are everywhere apparent. In fact as Zuma, over the past year, has drawn more into himself it is such failures to act – rather than the moves he actually has made – that give the better clue to the rotting state of his presidency.

Take the SABC, which has been an unending circus with an illegally appointed chief operating officer who faked his matric certificat­e as the principal clown. The man has destroyed its journalist­ic credibilit­y, bullied its staff and improperly awarded himself millions in bonuses. In addition, he sold its archives to a rival broadcaste­r for a song, kicking loose yet another multi-million bonus.

And the minister of communicat­ions, the utterly useless Faith Muthambi, has presided over this mess and, on the face of the evidence before the parliament­ary inquiry, colluded in it. But she still has her job and appears in no danger of losing it.

This week she absolved herself of all blame, cheekily taking refuge in the doctrine of shared blame. “The governance failure of SABC should be a collective responsibi­lity… I inherited a dysfunctio­nal board… The board failing to exercise its fiduciary duty, that’s not my competence… that’s why we are here (at the inquiry).”

There is also the memorable incident of Mineral Resources Minister Mosebenzi Zwane, who issued a statement falsely claiming the cabinet had agreed to an inquiry into the major banks’ decision to break ties with the Gupta family, Zuma’s controvers­ial cronies. In any other country, to lie on this scale would incur an instant dismissal, but not in Zuma’s world, where Zwane escaped with an unspecifie­d “reprimand”.

Of course, it is not surprising a president who is fighting for his political survival, with a substantia­l number of the national executive scheming his ousting, will do everything possible to placate those who might turn on him.

Less easy to explain is his failure to act against the foes outside the ANC who are trying to destroy him, specifical­ly EFF leader Julius Malema.

Earlier this year, Malema taunted the presidency with the outrageous claim that Zuma had packed R6bn in suitcases and flown to Dubai for the Guptas, “because when Zuma travels he doesn’t get searched by customs”.

This, unless true, is clearly defamatory of Zuma and the Guptas. In the past, both parties have been quick to seek redress in the courts. The presidency did issue a statement threatenin­g legal action over the “malicious allegation­s”. That was in April. Malema has not withdrawn his claim, nor apologised, but the most litigious president in our history still hasn’t served a writ.

Now why would that be? It’s the most baffling conundrum of 2016. Or not?

Jaundiced Eye will be back on January 14. Follow WSM on Twitter @TheJaundic­edEye

 ??  ?? Jaundiced eye William Saunderson-Meyer
Jaundiced eye William Saunderson-Meyer

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