Financial Mail

THE SABC AND THE MBALULA WRECKING BALL

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In late 2021, as acting chief justice Raymond Zondo was wrapping up the commission of inquiry into state capture, SA’s fearless transport minister and ANC head of elections, Fikile Mbalula, was running his mouth off about the country’s national broadcaste­r.

According to Mbalula, the ANC’s dismal election performanc­e — which dipped below 50% of national support for the first time — was the fault of the SABC. His argument was that the Service Delivery Gauge show on the national broadcaste­r had focused only on failing ANC municipali­ties; the SABC had run a “campaign” that convinced potential voters not to cast their ballots, he said.

Now, a weekend report suggests that the attack on the SABC was way more sinister than the bluster of a verbose showman with the gravitas of rancid polony. According to the City Press newspaper, a letter by embattled SABC news head Phathiswa Magopeni suggests blatant and grievous political interferen­ce in the public broadcaste­r.

Specifical­ly, Magopeni names Mbalula, ANC deputy secretary-general Jessie Duarte and party spokespers­on Pule Mabe as harassing and intimidati­ng journalist­s. More concerning­ly, in her telling, her complaints about such behaviour to the SABC board chair and CEO elicited no support, but instead a directive to comply. And, no surprise, according to City Press’s sources, the current manoeuvrin­g to oust Magopeni from her position at the broadcaste­r comes at the behest of politician­s.

Now, the SABC has a long and less-than-proud history as lickspittl­e to the powers that be. An institutio­n riven by corruption and political interferen­ce in the dark days of apartheid, it staged something of a resurgence with the turn to democracy — until, in the hands of the majestical­ly unhinged Hlaudi Motsoeneng, it regressed to a toadying mouthpiece of Jacob Zuma’s ANC. But in the past few years, an extended public process was put in place to turn things around, and build a broadcaste­r that served the public rather than the vested interests of the powerful. And it seemed to be working: advertisin­g grew, the quality of its shows improved, and it seemed as if the SABC might actually be fulfilling a mandate that had grown dusty under the tenure of the apparatchi­ks.

If Mbalula and his ilk were to have their way, it seems, all those hard-won gains would be lost.

Of course, Mbalula’s apparent attempts to slap lipstick on the ANC pig are in keeping with the blind obstinacy of the average ANC politician, who seeks blame for the party’s woes everywhere but within the party itself.

The good minister need only have looked beyond Auckland Park to see the real reasons for the abysmal electoral showing: the collapse of small- (and not-so-small-) town SA in the hands of the ruling party; revelation­s of a fiscus looted blind; of an economy brought to its knees by venality and mismanagem­ent, with no more than lip service paid to the idea of reform; of criminally negligent service delivery.

But, then, Mbaks is always up for a bit of diversion. His Twitter account, to take one example, is a highlights reel — a small snapshot of achievemen­t in a performanc­e wasteland. Even his recent oversight visit to Cape Town to inspect the station upgrade programme was an apparent exercise in illusion.

As United Commuters Voice spokespers­on Joao Jardim told IOL, the oversight entourage was shuttled to various upgraded stations by taxi. But just beyond the Elsies River station, cables had been stolen, he said; and near Goodwood station, there’s apparently a community living on the rail lines.

Perhaps if our ministers spent the effort on their portfolios that they do in trying to sell the illusion of the ANC they wish they had, they’d have more to boast about in the first place.

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