Weekend Argus (Saturday Edition)

Government the foremost harbinger on quotas

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THE sport and recreation minister, Tokozile Xasa, is predictabl­y standing by her demand that TV rugby pundits Naas Botha and Nick Mallett be suspended for their allegedly racist behaviour towards fellow SuperSport panellist Ashwin Willemse.

While the three presenters have now been pulled off air – but not suspended – pending a review of the incident by a senior advocate, Vincent Maleka, overt racism apparently played no part in the events which led to Willemse’s dramatic walk off last Saturday.

This, at least, according to MultiChoic­e and SuperSport management following interviews earlier this week with all parties concerned. However, should the minister now change her mind it would indeed be a setback for the national obsession and, in the parlance of the present mania, not exactly helpful with the crucial conversati­on we must have going forward.

Like many, many South Africans, Xasa was quick to pronounce on the matter and, along with her compatriot­s, quite sure of what happened behind the scenes at the studio. In fact, judging by the tone of her statement, she may have known what was happening even before it happened.

“It is clear,” Xasa had said, “that Ashwin Willemse was referred to as a quota player by his fellow panellists, despite his many successes in the field of play. I call upon SuperSport to suspend the two panellists while they are busy with a full investigat­ion.

“The continued appearance of Mallett and Botha (on SuperSport) will be seen as an endorsemen­t of their alleged racist behaviour.”

And there has been no volte-face in the course of the week. “My statement still stands,” Xasa has said. Again, this is a good thing, for this is the part of her statement that we find telling: “If it was not for a barbaric nonsensica­l apartheid system that privileged (some white South Africans), we could not have implemente­d the quota system to normalise an otherwise abnormal system.”

In other words, if anyone had referred to Willemse as a quota player it was his own government. Nothing personal, you understand; his Springbok teammates were also deemed quota players.

This gets a bit Philosophy 101, but here’s how the thinking goes at the Mahogany Ridge: once a side fields one or more quota players – that is, players chosen on the basis of race rather than merit – then the entire team is a quota team. It follows therefore that in a quota team, all players, black or white and regardless of the basis of their selection, are quota players.

It is not surprising that Willemse, a prodigious­ly talented Springbok, should have been upset by all this. He is not alone.

In December, former England and British Lions centre Jeremy Guscott blamed quotas for the Springboks’ appalling form in recent years.Writing in The Rugby Paper, Guscott said: “In some ways I feel sorry for the South Africans, but going down the quota route was always a mistake. They have to get rid of quotas and pick people on ability.”

That’s not happening anytime soon. In April 2016, the small and shouty Fikile Mbalula, then the sports minister, announced “radical transforma­tion” quota targets for South Africa’s sporting codes – and the harsh penalties that would be imposed for non-compliance.

Federation­s stood to lose millions in government funding, and would be barred from bidding to host internatio­nal events, like the Rugby World Cup. As a result, both SA

Rugby and Cricket SA duly expressed confidence in meeting these targets.

In fact, in September that year

CSA announced that henceforth, the Proteas would be fielding an average minimum of 54% black cricketers and an average minimum of 18% black African cricketers over a season.

This did little to dispel visions among the cynical of selectors armed with slide rules and umpires beavering away with pencils in players’ hair during the drinks breaks.

This is not to decry affirmativ­e action but government, which has had a quarter-century to do something about it, has been rubbish in transformi­ng sport.

It make no sense that national sides should be threatened with a big stick, when in fact the country’s possible future sporting talent is squandered and frittered away for want of proper facilities and training in township schools. It is here that the government and sporting bodies have literally failed to level the playing fields.

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