Daily Maverick

We, the people, must grasp the nettle of the Zondo Report

- Mark Heywood

Civil society is crucial to accountabi­lity and good governance. It’s more agile and interacts with the parts of society that most politician­s only pay attention to at election time. Despite this, many senior politician­s and public servants continue to regard and portray civil society as a nuisance at best and an enemy at worst. This has to change if we are going to succeed with state reconstruc­tion.

In Part One of his report on State Capture, Acting Chief Justice Raymond Zondo makes a number of comments about the importance of civil society as a partner of government in combating corruption.

Citing the UN Convention Against Corruption, which calls on signatory states (including South Africa) to “promote the active participat­ion of individual­s and groups outside the public sector, such as civil society, non-government­al and community-based organisati­ons”, Zondo complains that current laws outlawing corruption and procuremen­t “...make no attempt to engage with civil society organisati­ons in order to present a united front against corruption. An imaginativ­e and open-hearted effort to recruit the stakeholde­rs of civil society into the fight against corruption is entirely lacking.” Therefore, he says, “The constructi­ve involvemen­t of civil society is both a necessary and a legal requiremen­t in the fight against corruption, and that is a function which must be addressed.”

We wholeheart­edly agree.

Without the work of media and civil society organisati­ons such as Open Secrets, Corruption Watch, OUTA and the Ahmed Kathrada Foundation, without movements such as Save South Africa, which mobilised South Africans in 2017, without some of the trade unions, it is unlikely that many of the revelation­s about State Capture would have been unearthed – or acted upon.

As mentioned, civil society is crucial to accountabi­lity and good governance. But most politician­s treat it with contempt.

Zondo’s recommenda­tions focus on corruption and procuremen­t. But their relevance is much broader. Civil society has a vital role to play in governance and accountabi­lity in all spheres of

service delivery and socioecono­mic rights

ANC leaders and ministers like Gwede Mantashe – whose scurrilous attempts to stigmatise organisati­ons fighting Shell’s seismic survey of the Wild Coast was noted even by the courts – lead the way, but they are not alone. We might also mention the likes of Dr Aaron Motsoaledi, Angie Motshekga and, of course, successive ministers of finance.

Within many parts of government there is a defensiven­ess, suspicion and fear of evidence and new ideas. This mostly inhibits meaningful collaborat­ion.

On its side, civil society needs to adopt a different approach. Its independen­ce and freedom of expression and right to protest are vital. But while we may and should monitor, expose and criticise the actions of people in government, it is essential to remember that the State is not the enemy. The State belongs to all of us; government is meant to act for all of us. It is an instrument the Constituti­on has constructe­d and tasked to advance the interests of the poor, as in Chapter Two, Bill of Rights.

Zondo’s recommenda­tions focus on corruption and procuremen­t. But their relevance is much broader. Civil society has a vital role to play in governance and accountabi­lity in all spheres of service delivery and socioecono­mic rights. It is as crucial as the media, if not more so: because a great deal of what is reported in the media depends on news and issues uncovered by those who work not in ivory towers but at the coalface of poverty and inequality and who witness the real costs of corruption and misgoverna­nce.

In addition, unless civil society takes up issues reported in the media they often fall by the wayside. However, as Maverick Citizen is revealing in our series of investigat­ions on food justice and private sector collusion in Covid-19 corruption, there is an equally important role to be played in monitoring and badgering the private business sector, particular­ly those that seek profit from a weak and incapable state, or avoid taxes.

Later this year, when the Zondo Commission report is complete, we will know a great deal about what went wrong in the democratic era, and who should be held responsibl­e.

President Cyril Ramaphosa will be given a set of multidimen­sional prescripti­ons on what needs to be done to fix it. But without civil society as both a watchdog and partner, working together on policies and programmes, there is a danger the legislatur­e and executive, supported by business, will pick and choose only to implement those recommenda­tions that suit them.

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