Mail & Guardian

Ramaphosa’s Mkhize misstep ‘an insult’to SA

Desperate to claw back the public’s trust, the president messed up on Zweli Mkhize and betrayed his own weak understand­ing of ethics and the meaning of leadership

- COMMENT Zama Ndlovu Zama Ndlovu is a columnist, communicat­or, and sometimes a student

In late March last year, at the beginning of the lockdown, President Cyril Ramaphosa stood in front of the nation and promised that his government would “marshal our every resource and our every energy to fight this pandemic”.

Given the unpreceden­ted health crisis, the large amounts of state resources that would need to be redirected quickly towards the most vulnerable in our society, and the country’s struggles with wholesale corruption, the president knew that he would need to assure the nation that he would “act very strongly against any attempts at corruption and profiteeri­ng from the crisis”.

Fast forward to Wednesday, 29 September. The very same president was asking journalist­s and the broader public to be “considerat­e” towards former health minister Zweli Mkhize, arguing that, “much as we want to be gung-ho and send people to the gallows, we do need to recognise some of the things they have done. Minister Mkhize has served the nation well. We were able to navigate our way around the pandemic because of his experience and having served also in other positions.”

The president said this right after the release of the damning Special Investigat­ing Unit (SIU) report on the Digital Vibes scandal which found that Mkhize had displayed “distinct lack of oversight”.

The SIU found a disturbing mix of political and bureaucrat­ic corruption at the highest level of the department of health. The report found that the political principal abused his powers, thus influencin­g the allocation of much-needed state resources for the benefit of his close associates and family.

Specifical­ly, the report found that the minister directly pushed for R150-million worth of communicat­ions work to be awarded to the company in a “highly” irregular manner. Moreover, the department of health further incurred fruitless and wasteful expenditur­e amounting to approximat­ely R80-million.

These were funds meant to be used for communicat­ions related to the National Health Insurance, and secondly, towards Covid-19 communicat­ions. Fruitless and wasteful expenditur­e means that the amount in question was spent “in vain”, and the amount was spent without deriving any value, or yielding positive outcomes.

Thus the president’s view — offered despite the report expressly indicating that the minister repay the money — was an insult to South Africans. Rightly, citizens are asking how the president can thank and then defend a member of cabinet who has aided in the defrauding of the state. Where are the very strong actions against any attempts at corruption and profiteeri­ng from the crisis?

Instead of an unequivoca­l condemnati­on of the actions of the minister, the president chose to offer up a balanced performanc­e assessment, betraying his own weak understand­ing of ethics and the meaning of leadership. By uttering those words on a public platform, the president failed in his responsibi­lity of leadership. And by barely reacting to this as the broader public, we are betraying the country through our own numbness.

Rent-seeking behaviour is pervasive in the ANC. There’s almost an acceptance of the patronage networks that it uses across spheres of government­s. The ANC might not be the only party that practices a version of cadre deployment, but through its long-standing position as the governing party, it has used its position to cement a patronage-based accountabi­lity model in society where political choices are determined by the distributi­on of patronage.

The president himself admitted recently that the Political Party Funding Act, which regulates public and private funding for political parties, has created challenges for the party’s fund-raising. It’s been an open secret in our society that tenders are typically awarded to those who make large donations, particular­ly during election season.

Clientelis­m is a typical feature of a postcoloni­al society, but what Mkhize practised borders on prebendali­sm, the use of a state and/or party position

to derive material benefit either for oneself or for close relations. It is illegal, it is predatory, and it typically thrives in authoritar­ian states.

That the minister felt he could do this and get away with it in a democratic country speaks volumes about just how confident he was that his actions would not result in any meaningful consequenc­es. It speaks to just how bad things are in the ANC, when simply doing one’s job buys you a licence to plunder.

It’s not so much that we should be surprised that the president holds this view. After all, it’s very much in line with his logic throughout the campaign trail. During the launch of the ANC’S manifesto in Pretoria, the president told the small crowd that they should vote because the city had continued to face severe service delivery issues. The president might as well have said: “We are no better or worse than the opposition. Vote for us”.

The president is a creature of the ANC, and being its president, the outrageous actions of its leaders cannot remain shocking. The president is only displaying the high levels of tolerance for unethical people that can only be expected from that political institutio­n.

There has been a growing argument, at least in the US, that “political junkies” are destroying democracy. The argument goes that the rise of digital media — mainstream and alternativ­e, whose success depends on emotive, divisive and unyielding content — has turned us into nations of outrageadd­icted consumers of politics.

Earlier media produced more critical forms of news and opinion, which required time and research. New media, driven by clicks, likes, shares and the pleasures of dopamine, needs bigger and more outrageous stories to survive as an inundated public sifts through vast amounts of unimportan­t informatio­n.

Over time it takes bigger and more damaging actions for citizens to feel angry.

When the president says something out loud that should have remained in the quiet of his mind, our tolerance for such a statement is considerab­ly high. Many of us even wonder what’s wrong with noting the former minister’s achievemen­ts.

If we are to protect and rebuild this democracy that was fought for with tears and blood, we cannot allow exhaustion from past outrage to dull our senses of what is right, what is

wrong, and what is unethical. Not only should we not allow the president to convince us that there is a scenario here where ethics and jobperform­ance can be considered as equals, we should shame him for lowering our public morals to that of the levels of his dying movement.

And as we head towards the local government elections in less than a month’s time, we must heed the warnings of a party in irreversib­le decline, and a president desperate to claw back the voting public’s lost trust while also dismissing the ANC’S missteps.

This is a party fighting to retain its power and influence, not one reemerging as a transforme­d version of its former self.

But we must also accept hard truths, that endemic corruption is hard to reverse. We must learn to vote for other parties, and we must accept that the troubles we have left to fester were not created overnight and will take years to reverse. The president and his unrepentan­t ANC rely on our unrealisti­c expectatio­ns of the party, and what it takes to rebuild a society again.

We cannot allow exhaustion from past outrage to dull our sense of what is right, what is wrong, and what is unethical

‘Trashing the planet and hiding the money isn’t a perversion of capitalism. It is capitalism’

 ?? Photo: Kopano Tlape ?? In a forgiving mood: President Cyril Ramaphosa’s (left) emphasis of the good former health minister Zweli Mkhize (right) has done betrays a level of tolerance for unethical behaviour that is endemic in the ANC.
Photo: Kopano Tlape In a forgiving mood: President Cyril Ramaphosa’s (left) emphasis of the good former health minister Zweli Mkhize (right) has done betrays a level of tolerance for unethical behaviour that is endemic in the ANC.
 ?? Photo: Guillem Sartorio/afp ?? Patronage-based accountabi­lity: The ANC has used its position as the governing party to cement a model where political choices are determined by the distributi­on of patronage, the author says.
Photo: Guillem Sartorio/afp Patronage-based accountabi­lity: The ANC has used its position as the governing party to cement a model where political choices are determined by the distributi­on of patronage, the author says.
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