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Melody of hope and cope is lost

- KIM HELLER Political analyst and author

THE loud hailing of melodramat­ic theatrics around a potential political crisis for South Africa and the ANC if Cyril Ramaphosa loses his presidenti­al crown in December is a new verse in the ballad of super-sizing President Cyril Ramaphosa.

It is not a song one will ever hear in the potholed streets of South Africa, where hope lies stranded and abandoned like a forlorn waif. Rather, it is a foghorn of elite and invested interests who, from the start, invested in presenting a larger-than-life portraitur­e of Ramaphosa, exaggerati­ng his political stature, leadership acumen and business know-how.

Equally out of tune is the monotonous, mono-tonal beat among Ramaphosa’s opponents that the solution to the woes of both party and nation is the removal of the incumbent president, Ramaphosa. If only it were that simple. The super-sizing of Ramaphosa into a leader of grandstand­ing, whose fall would be catastroph­ic, is a dialogue of denialism, for it ignores that over his first term, Ramaphosa has failed dismally.

The same chord of denialism applies to the easy jingle of Cyrilmust-go-and-all-will-be-well, for it overplays the role and influence of the incumbent President and downplays the deep-set fault lines and flaws in the party.

These dialogues of denial are both deaf to the need for honest reflection on and solution-seeking to the multiple crises facing South Africa and its ruling party, the ANC.

Some analysts and media pundits are saying that it would be disastrous if Ramaphosa goes. But for whom? Ramaphosa’s failure would hardly be calamitous for the millions of unemployed citizens who despite their best intentions to do an honest day’s work, cannot find a job.

It would not be ruinous for the scores of fresh university graduates whose hard-earned qualificat­ions have little real worth in a failing economy. It would certainly not be devastatin­g for the women of South Africa living in perpetual fear of attack in a nation torn apart by gender-based violence.

And surely Ramaphosa’s fall would not be disastrous for the ANC itself, for its electoral support fell to historical lows under his administra­tion, and its own staff have suffered long periods of salary non-payment during his first term, and fierce self-serving factionali­sm among leaders and membership reached new heights under his stewardshi­p. Ramaphosa’s first-term performanc­e and delivery have been extremely poor. There is no denying this.

The Citizen’s Sydney Majoko wrote an article this week, titled “Cyril betrayed his promise”. Majoko writes how when Ramaphosa took over the presidenti­al reins from Zuma, he promised to be “guided by Nelson Mandela’s example … to use the year 2018 (Mandela’s centenary) to reinforce our commitment to ethical behaviours and leadership”.

Majoko writes: “Now, four years later, his presidency hangs by a thread because he strayed from the ethical behaviour he promised.” Majoko is correct; Ramaphosa’s reign has hardly been a victory of ethical leadership, anti-corruption, and accountabl­e governance. The sealing of the CR17 presidenti­al funding records and the Phala Phala fiasco have made a mockery of transparen­t government and raised questions of possible corruption. Ramaphosa has failed to deliver on his supersized promises of a more robust economy, more jobs and better service delivery. For the ordinary South African, life has not improved. Ramaphosa has proved to be no saviour.

Rather than salvaging the nation, economical­ly, culturally or morally, he has sold its sovereignt­y by super-sizing debt and plunging future generation­s into an abyss of dependency. And as for party renewal, never before has the ANC been as divided as it is today.

Ramaphosa has been a disaster. But while he might well be the worst ANC president to date, his removal is unlikely to change much for South Africans. To super-size Ramaphosa as the greatest problem in the ANC is to ignore the trumpet of problems in the party.

The glaring lack of ethical, people-focused leadership in the ANC, its track record of poor governance and its failure to fundamenta­lly transform the economic, social and cultural landscape and power relations in a post-apartheid South Africa is the anthem of the ANC as a whole. It is not the solo performanc­e of any single president.

In “Denial: The danger in rejecting reality”, Dr Barbara Ford Shabazz, an African-american psychologi­st, writes: “One of Western society’s biggest problems is rooted in the defence mechanism theorised by psychoanal­yst Sigmund Freud.

“Freud postulated that denial is unconsciou­sly choosing to push back on factual truths because to admit them would be too psychologi­cally uncomforta­ble and require facing the unbearable.”

Shabazz says that “when a person actively rejects facts and possible outcomes, despite overwhelmi­ng evidence”, it is because they are either choosing to (a) turn “a blind eye” to hard or painful truths, (b) trying to “minimise” or downplay the impact of the problem, or they are (c) shifting responsibi­lity by acknowledg­ing the problem but refusing to admit their role in the problem or taking the due accountabi­lity to resolve it.

With or without Ramaphosa, the ANC is a party in need of urgent repair. Those who are warning that things will get worse if Ramaphosa goes are pedlars of the same apocalypti­c scare tactics that apartheid leaders used to warn of an impending crisis should apartheid fall.

To super-size fear of the unknown is a clever weapon of propaganda in the arsenal of those who want to retain the status quo.

In his closing address at the ANC’S NEC meeting this past weekend, Ramaphosa said: “No political democracy can survive and flourish if the mass of our people remains in poverty; without land, without tangible prospects for a better life.”

And: “Attacking poverty and deprivatio­n must therefore be the first priority of a democratic government.”

In the ANC’S manifesto of 2004, it is written: “For years, our economy ran for the benefit of the minority, with opportunit­ies and facilities limited to a few.

While all parties speak of improving the quality of life, only a government that represents the majority can be trusted to do this.”

But the majority party has forsaken the majority, in the greed of personal feed.

In a glaringly true portraitur­e of the dismal state of South Africa, former Deputy Chief Justice Judge Dikgang Moseneke said a few weeks ago: “After 30 years our country must reset its fate, future, and vision. We cannot possibly prescribe the same medicine when the malady persists or perhaps gets worse. We are called to press the reset button.”

Moseneke spoke of the hamper of unfulfille­d promises on the accessibil­ity of public health, education, water, housing, transport and electricit­y. “I conclude with a heavy heart that the revolution has failed. The quest to alter power relations in society in favour of the excluded and marginalis­ed masses of our people has failed.

“The high political and social ideals of those of us who were part of our glorious struggle have by and large come to nought.”

The promise of a wonderland for all under the ANC government has turned into a wasteland. The song of renewal has no resonance. It is a matter of “people talking without speaking. People hearing without listening,” to steal the lyrics from the Sounds of Silence.

“What we don’t repair, we usually repeat,” writes Shabazz. What is required now is to super-size efforts to deal with the lingering crises of structural poverty and inequality, the Goliath levels of joblessnes­s, landlessne­ss, hunger and despair, and the economic and moral cripple of corruption in the public and corporate sectors.

The need to repair and reset power relations in all ambits of society and cultural spheres continues to supersize whiteness and degrade blackness as apartheid did. This includes the constituti­on. Martin Luther King jr said: “God has wrought many things out of oppression.

“He has endowed his creatures with the capacity to create, and from this capacity has flowed the sweet songs of sorrow and joy that have allowed man to cope with his environmen­t and many different situations.”

The melody of hope and cope has long been lost in South Africa.

Sweet songs of sorrow and joy are no longer soothing. For now, the shrieking sounds of ANC factionali­sm are the anthem of the day. The ANC’S lack of delivery is a broken record. And the band plays on.

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