Weekend Argus (Saturday Edition)

Braai fire hopes now pinned on the judiciary

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DEMOCRATIC South Africa’s journey has for almost two dozen years been a roller-coaster ride. One that soared to dizzying heights, followed by stomach-churning plunges.

Never, however, have the spirits around the nation’s braai fires slumped as low as they are now.

Over the past year or so, it seems that South Africans have hit the nadir of disillusio­nment, frustratio­n and anger.

To be accurate, the Zuma years have been less of a roller-coaster ride than a steady downwards slide. And we are picking up speed, flashing past grim markers of decline – Marikana, Guptas, Eskom, SABC, and Esidimeni.

This week it was the SA Social Security Agency (Sassa) that marked a new low.

The Black Sash, joined by Freedom Under Law, applied for the Constituti­onal Court to exercise oversight over the payment of social grants.

Of course, it should not be necessary for the Constituti­onal Court to rule on what is blindingly obvious to everyone except President Jacob Zuma. Bathabile Dlamini’s performanc­e as Social Developmen­t minister has been one of “absolute incompeten­ce”, as Chief Justice Mogoeng Mogoeng phrased it, for a very long time.

Nor should it be necessary for the Constituti­onal Court to monitor the performanc­e of a minister and make administra­tive decisions on her behalf. Executive oversight is the responsibi­lity firstly of the president, Jacob Zuma.

It was the useless Dlamini who was being judicially lashed. But it is really the president, in abstentia, that the court is addressing.

Advocate Geoff Budlender‚ representi­ng Black Sash that brought the applicatio­n, cut to the nub: “The painful truth is the executive failed to meet obligation­s. And the painful truth is that Parliament has failed to exercise oversight.”

While the media has overflowed with outrage over the Sassa scandal, in truth there is little that is truly surprising about it. It differs from all the other milestones to disaster only in that the Constituti­onal Court applicatio­n imposed a scrutiny that otherwise would not have occurred.

Perhaps appropriat­ely for a man who likes to prance around in leopard skin and designer takkies, Zuma operates somewhat like a feudal king. He has surrounded himself with robber barons that, in exchange for their fealty, have licence to plunder to their own account.

Such a monarch had great power, but also operated under practical constraint­s.

In exchange for their loyalty, the one interventi­on readily tolerated from the king would have been to settle territoria­l disputes as to who could loot where.

The plight of the peasantry would have been largely immune to any interventi­on, regal or judicial.

To punish a pillaging lord for trampling excessivel­y on the common man would have been simply unthinkabl­e. To do so would have achieved nothing more than to encourage the barons to set aside their internecin­e squabbles and unite in order to install a more pliable king. So ideally, Zuma would not want to have to discipline ministers who behave badly.

That some of the Constituti­onal Court judges think Dlamini has failed in her duty of oversight is not news.

This was flagged two years ago when the judiciary took its first look at the existing grant payments contract.

Nor is there anything substantiv­ely new in the web of lies and obfuscatio­n that has been shown to shroud the process whereby tenders are awarded, and the terms on which private companies provide services to the state.

This is exactly how the forces of state capture have engineered the process to work, to maximum benefit of the tenderpren­eurial parasites.

In the 2006 Travelgate scandal Dlamini pleaded guilty to defrauding the government of a quarter of a million rand, for which she got a fine and a five-year suspended jail sentence.

After Zuma became president, Dlamini, who hails from his home province and is fiercely loyal was rehabilita­ted and appointed to head the Social Developmen­t ministry.

And as president of the ANC Women’s League she has been entrusted with the job of promoting the campaign of Nkosazana Dlamini Zuma, former wife of the president, to be the next president of SA.

The antics of the feudal aristocrac­y and their sovereign, of course, were not subject to judicial review.

If the Constituti­onal Court makes a punitive award of costs against Dlamini in her personal capacity Zuma will be in trouble.

He will have to ditch her, otherwise risk further disquiet in a parliament­ary ANC that is at last showing signs of shedding its instinctua­l deference towards the president.

Either course of action will weaken Zuma.

This should lift the spirits of we gatvol vassals clustered forlornly around the braai.

Follow WSM on Twitter @TheJaundic­edEye

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