Daily Maverick

Exercising your rights cannot infringe on the rights of others

- Zukiswa Pikoli Zukiswa Pikoli is a journalist at Maverick Citizen.

Political parties are adept at the game of theatrics and grandstand­ing, and on the odd occasion may do actual good for the people they claim to represent and for whom they claim to advocate.

The EFF is particular­ly good at this, as it capitalise­s on emotive issues that plague most of the country, such as blackouts, ongoing racial fires and searing unemployme­nt. And, of course, this week it decided to test its support by staging a national shutdown. The shutdown purported to be about protesting against rolling blackouts, but also demanded that President Cyril Ramaphosa vacate his office as president.

Now, the EFF is known to be quite radical and forceful in its assertions and initially used quite intimidati­ng language in trying to marshal support. However, when law enforcemen­t responded, stating that no intimidati­on and vandalism would be tolerated, it quickly toned down its message.

However, what is important to note here, particular­ly in the spirit of commemorat­ing our hardfought human rights, which are etched in the blood of the 69 people who died at the Sharpevill­e massacre in 1960, is that exercising your rights cannot infringe on the rights of others.

In other words, although it is indeed the EFF’s right to protest, as guaranteed in the Constituti­on, it is also the right of others not to be intimidate­d into participat­ing.

It is also worth noting that the DA’s attempt to deny the EFF its right to protest is in itself undemocrat­ic, unlawful and unconstitu­tional, and shows that it does not have a full appreciati­on of how important the right to protest is in a country where people were slaughtere­d by an apartheid government for daring to demand their human rights.

The timing and success of the shutdown has been much debated, as cynics say that the EFF chose a day on which most people had taken leave anyway and would not have gone to work or been out in the streets.

Some also debated the legitimacy of the protest if it was mainly made up from a leadership perspectiv­e of EFF members, the nefarious Carl Niehaus and former chairperso­n of the Standing Committee on Public Accounts, Themba Godi. Where were the masses they claimed to be fighting for, to not only to show their support of the action but also to make their dissatisfa­ction known?

It seemed more a game of grandstand­ing while ignoring the reality that mainly poor people stood to lose from this action, because if they didn’t go to work they wouldn’t get paid. Hawkers, who often bear the violent brunt of protests, lost out on their income on the day, as they stayed off the streets for fear of being mowed down by the protesters.

You see, what South Africans showed the EFF, and hopefully other political parties also took note, is that being poor and downtrodde­n does not mean you cannot tell when you are being used for political power plays.

If your purported cause and concern for people’s rights do not match your actions, you will quickly be discovered. If you are tonedeaf in your messaging and cannot understand that the economic situation in the country hits the working class and poor the hardest because they have no cushioning that will cover them should they not get paid for a day, get fired for absenteeis­m or lose out on income, then you will be exposed.

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