Weekend Argus (Saturday Edition)

Zuma’s detractors are not necessaril­y all racists

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THERE is a scenario that often plays itself out in South Africa. A black person who is unable to argue against another person, probably white, decides to use the race card as his or her defence.

There is another scenario that plays itself out around election times, not only in South Africa, but throughout the world. Politician­s, in their desire to increase their support base, revert to group identity in an attempt to turn their supporters against others who might be perceived to be different.

I was thinking about these two scenarios this week, in which we saw some significan­t shifts in power relations in South Africa and the re-emergence of what we termed “people’s power” in the 1980s when we were trying to bring apartheid to its knees.

Last Friday’s countrywid­e protests against President Jacob Zuma were dwarfed by the march in Tshwane on Wednesday organised by opposition parties, with especially the EFF supporters, in their customary red uniforms, coming out in their thousands.

Zuma’s camp – because that is what the government has effectivel­y become in many ways – tried to counter the damage of the biggest protests seen in our democracy by using the memorial for Chris Hani, the SACP leader who was killed 24 years ago, and a 75th birthday party in Soweto on Wednesday, where Zuma could speak comfortabl­y, without having to fear being interrupte­d by rowdy protesters.

But his supporters saw nothing wrong with doing some disruption of their own last Sunday when members of the ANC Youth League turned a memorial for the late ANC stalwart Ahmed Kathrada in Durban into a rowdy affair, where speakers who appeared to be critical of the president were drowned out. This, despite a court ordering the youth league not to be disruptive.

But when your principal, the president, continuous­ly ignores court orders and makes spurious remarks about the judiciary, that almost gives the ANC Youth League and Zuma’s other supporters the right to ignore the law, or even worse, break it at will.

It is clear to me, as a concerned South African, that the president and his supporters in the ANC have chosen to go down the path of dividing South Africans. Why else would they blame everything on “white-monopoly capital” and “white racists”? It is irresponsi­ble for the president to try to create a situation where all white people are perceived as racist.

The president’s men and women seem to have calculated that, if they consolidat­e their base of ANC supporters in KwaZuluNat­al, this would be enough to carry them through the ANC’s elective conference. But winning at the ANC’s elective conference in December does not mean the ANC will win the general election in 2019.

If the protests of the past week are anything to go by, the ANC should be very afraid of losing their majority in the national government and some provinces come 2019. I don’t know if the ANC is ready to be in opposition so soon after our supposed liberation.

In a situation like this, the ANC would do well to ask what went wrong, and why, and not to strengthen the walls of their bunkers but rather engage with society on ways of getting out of the mess in which we find ourselves.

How did we go from a very strong and credit-worthy economy to junk status? (Yes, I know it is only two out of three ratings agencies, but this is already serious enough.)

How did we get to a point that where as president Nelson Mandela used to love interactin­g with the public, especially children and often impromptu, now Parliament has to be barricaded because the president is in the House?

One of the most telling things about the president’s expensive birthday celebratio­ns in the middle of Soweto – at Kliptown where the Freedom Charter was adopted in 1955 – was the presence of his security detail on and below the stage. It is clear he feels that he needs protection even when surrounded by people who sing his praises.

I am a stupidly loyal person at the best of times and I have constantly given President Zuma the benefit of the doubt, hoping that eventually he will do the right thing. It is clear he has no intention of doing this.

The sad thing is that he is dragging the ANC, once Africa’s proudest liberation movement, down with him.

It is sad there are such serious divisions in our society at the moment, but there is also hope.

Hope lies in the fact that the citizens of South Africa – and not only whites – are increasing­ly deciding they hold their future in their own hands.

Democracy means much more than just voting every couple of years. Democracy means engaging with all the issues in society, and playing an active part in seeking their resolution.

The president needs to listen to and try to understand the anger of the people. If he did, he would probably understand the reasons for him to step down.

I really and sincerely want to support our president, but cannot do so at the moment. If that makes me a racist, then so be it.

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