Weekend Argus (Saturday Edition)

Jordaan’s doing the right thing over rape claims

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I HAVE sympathy for Danny Jordaan over the rape furore in which he is entangled. Also for Harvey Weinstein, enveloped in an even wider-ranging sexual scandal.

Not because I believe them to be innocent. I mean, just looking at them, anyone surely can see that they are scumbags and abusers?

Look at the heavy jowls and the hooded eyes. Look at the arrogant mien that says, “I am a master of the universe. I take what I wish.”

Just kidding. Of course, in this modern age, we know better than to judge people by their looks. We know better than to lynch because of skin hue, to ridicule because of gender, to snub because of body shape.

Despite their looks and manners, my verdict on Jordaan and Weinstein is arrived at rationally.

However, accurate my assessment might be that they well have done something wrong, I am not entirely sure what that “something” is.

Not even the ersatz confidence that I acquired reporting on scores of criminal cases suffices when it comes to judging these two men.

It might have been rape. It might have been sexual assault. It might simply have been acute and inappropri­ate randiness.

On the other hand, it might not have been any of those. That is why it matters when their careers and lives are destroyed by a baying mob on social media.

A mob that is so influentia­l that through the fear it engenders among those it seeks to pressure, it can compel the withdrawal of awards and trigger the bankruptcy of companies.

It is a mob so influentia­l that it can induce normally level-headed editors to write sneeringly and foolishly, as Business Day did this week about Jordaan: “His refusal to publicly engage and instead to say he will see his accuser in court makes it clear that Jordaan either misunderst­ands the nature of rape or that he is pretending to.

Rape is seldom an offence that is proven in court.

“Even if innocent, (Jordaan) could have taken the chance to have a dialogue about that evening in the Port Elizabeth hotel. Instead he added insult to injury by offering nonsensica­l and inane arguments for his behaviour.”

I find it truly terrifying that a newspaper of Business Day’s stature seriously suggests that Danny Jordaan should “publicly engage” with his accuser, “even if innocent”. Why?

Why should Jordaan choose to fight a battle in the court of public opinion, instead of a court of law?

A battle where allegation­s substitute for evidence and where there is no impartial scrutiny or interrogat­ion of the claims made against one?

A battle, which in a superheate­d, emotional atmosphere, he is bound to lose.

After all, when the editor of a staid publicatio­n like Business Day has already dismissed your very first words on the situation as “nonsensica­l and inane”, there can be little hope that social media activists with an axe to grind are going to understand or empathise with the accused’s side of the story.

Business Day is further wrong to assert “rape is seldom an offence that is proven in court”.

Despite the evidentiar­y challenges, it is often proven in court and our jails are full of convicted rapists.

There is also the option of civil litigation, if criminal charges cannot be brought.

It is true, however, that for a number of reasons most sexual offences do not even make it through the court doors.

Not the least of those stumbling blocks is, as Business Day correctly points out, “rape can bring shame and stigma upon even the most confident of women, deepening the silence”.

But the solution is not crowd justice, presided over by media houses that have a moneymakin­g stake in the orchestrat­ion of “justice”.

This week an eNCA reporter single-handedly cut the legs off the #BlackMonda­y protests against farm killings by tweeting pictures of right-wing farmers brandishin­g the old SA flag.

The debate moved instantly from the grievances of a group of people – like them or loathe them – who have a 4.5 times greater chance of being murdered, to a debate, seized upon at cabinet minister level, about the political ingratitud­e of whites.

The problem is, the pictures were fake, dating back a decade. eNCA withdrew the tweet but by then the horse had bolted.

So Jordaan is doing exactly the right thing in seeking refuge in the courts. That is the very reason why the judicial process exists.

And for all its limitation­s, it sure beats facing 140-character partisans deployed in assassinat­ion mode on Twitter, with the commercial media cheering from the sidelines and refereeing from the umpire’s chair.

● Follow WSM on Twitter @ TheJaundic­edEye

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