Business Day

Mbeki is short on facts

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Former president Thabo Mbeki, recently emerged from his silent retirement to support the ANC’s 2024 election campaign, refers to a “counterrev­olution” in SA.

He claims it occurred after his political demise at Polokwane in 2007, when his nemesis, Jacob Zuma, won the leadership of the ANC and the presidency itself from 2009 to 2018.

A victorious revolution should usually precede counterrev­olution. However, there has been no revolution in SA. It is true that some communisti­cally inclined theorists in the ANC used the notion of a national democratic revolution during and even after the struggle years.

This notion was overtaken by the negotiatio­n of a national accord more than 30 years ago. The process brought the liberation struggle to an end. Protracted peaceful negotiatio­ns led to the replacemen­t of the parliament­ary sovereignt­y of the apartheid era with the acclaimed constituti­onal democracy of the new dispensati­on.

There was no revolution­ary overthrow, no victory march on the Union Buildings, no vanquished foes; just a peacefully negotiated and binding settlement followed by a joyous “free at last” celebratio­n at Johannesbu­rg’s Carlton Hotel. Mbeki was there.

All politician­s in SA affirm or swear fealty to the constituti­on. A transforme­d, but not revolution­ary, new dispensati­on for all in SA is what the constituti­on, our supreme law, requires. It makes no reference to any revolution and eschews the hegemony revolution­aries seek, preferring the rule of law and the doctrine of the separation of powers. Revolution­ary conduct is inconsiste­nt with the constituti­on and invalid.

State capture in and after the Zuma years is not a counterrev­olution, it is a form of the crime called corruption and, like any other crime, should be punished in the courts and at the polls.

The long overdue exacting of legal and political accountabi­lity achieves this felicitous outcome.

The late Prof Kader Asmal, a member of Mbeki’s cabinet, on whose kitchen table in Dublin a draft of the bill of rights was prepared, called on the ANC to abandon the national democratic revolution after the new constituti­onal order dawned.

Instead of listening to him, ANC politician­s have descended into organised criminal syndicates that alternatel­y pay lip service to the rule of law or contrary lip service to the national democratic revolution, while looting SA’s coffers and assets. Their crimes are slowly underminin­g and will, left unchecked, eventually destroy all prospects of peace, progress and prosperity for all.

Voters should send them packing.

Paul Hoffman Accountabi­lity Now

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