Sunday Tribune

Welcoming our new president

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DEAR President Nkosazana Dlamini-zuma,

I wanted to be the first to congratula­te you on your election to the highest office in the land.

Please do not panic or consult a sangoma. I am not back from the future. Yes, I am fully aware that the election is only in 2019, but there is no reason to think that you won’t be our next president and my name will go down in history as the first person to congratula­te you.

If, for some bizarre reason you don’t win, I shall withdraw my congratula­tions and deny ever having written to you. I would also prefer it if you did not attempt to contact me.

However, this unfortunat­e situation is unlikely to arise since you are blessed with the magical name of Zuma.

Marrying Jacob was the smartest thing you ever did. Well, second smartest. The smartest thing you ever did was divorce him. Had you not shed those shackles of matrimony, your sparkling charisma would have dulled as you became lost in the common herd.

A woman of your intellect and individual­ity demands to be the wife and not simply a wife among many.

I see your slave name is Clarice. How unusual. The only other Clarice I have ever come across is Clarice Starling, the FBI agent who unfortunat­ely got eaten by wellknown Baltimore psychiatri­st, Dr Hannibal Lecter.

Today, of course, this piece of American history ranks as a nostalgic triviality compared to the hideous atrocity committed in their last general election.

Some people, members of the ANC Women’s League mainly, say that South Africa is now ready for its first female president.

This is nonsense. The country has been ready since 1883 at least. While Paul Kruger could speak Afrikaans, basic English and several African languages – much like your ex-husband – he married Maria du Plessis, a feisty young girl who could just as easily have become president.

Maria was 14 at the time, but she would have grown into the role between baking, embroideri­ng and breeding. Our history is awash with missed opportunit­ies.

Speaking of which, I’d like to also congratula­te you on your tenure as chairperso­n of the African Union Commission.

I’m sure a lot of African government­s were nervous that you would work tirelessly to end their profitable civil wars and nudge them out of their least developed country status, costing them enormous amounts of money in foreign funding. You never failed them, comrade. Well done.

I was very impressed with the welcome the government afforded you when you returned from your sabbatical in Addis Ababa.

Even when you were just popping out to Woolies, you had armed security and a three-car blue-light escort. At first I thought this was a courtesy being extended to all unemployed people, but it turned out to be just you.

That’s okay. It shows the government cares about one of its jobless citizens at least. A friend of mine said the ANC was psychologi­cally grooming the electorate to vote for you. I called him an unreconstr­ucted cynic, confiscate­d his beer and chased him from my home.

The electorate cannot be

Incredible happenings, indeed. Perhaps when you are president, you can rename the township. I’m sure the locals would appreciate it.

A couple of days later you were in Ixopo talking to more poor people. Was this campaignin­g?

“This is not a campaign,” shouted Zamo Nxumalo, chairperso­n of the ANC’S Harry Gwala region. “It’s part of the programmes of the ANC, so her visibility should not be seen as campaignin­g.”

Mluleki Ndobe, mayor of the Harry Gwala district, was also desperate to quell rumours of campaignin­g. “Nkosazana Dlaminizum­a is a humble and accessible leader of all the sectors of society either rich or poor, educated or uneducated.”

I hope you have had this man arrested. How dare he go around calling you humble? I think it’s clear to everyone but the clinically insane that the meek aren’t going to inherit the Earth any time soon. We want someone who will loudly and proudly continue the Zuma tradition of turning South Africa into the continent’s greatest excess story.

We want more of everything, even if it is power cuts, unemployme­nt, crime, ignorance and water-borne diseases. Not that we’ll have much water by the time you take your seat in the Ovaltine Office, but still.

So it’s a two-horse race, hey? Your only other female competitio­n is the Speaker of Parliament, Baleka Mbete, who isn’t much competitio­n at all considerin­g that she can’t recognise anyone.

If we didn’t have Squirrel Ramaphosa as deputy president, you’d have a clear run at the title.

The last thing this country needs is a smart, eloquent, hardworkin­g, independen­tly wealthy, globally respected businessma­n with a law degree on his wall and the Olof Palme prize on his bookshelf.

He also regularly gets begging letters from the chairman of Standard Bank and Please Call Me messages from the likes of that Patrice Motsepe bloke.

And he clings to old-fashioned beliefs that corruption is somehow wrong. What a loser.

Thing is, comrade, South Africans tend to vote for losers. I’m talking about Jacob, here. I should point out that I only consider him a loser because he lost you.

What the hell happened to you guys? I know one of the subsequent wives allegedly tried to poison him, but that doesn’t mean he’s not easy to live with.

Was it the singing and dancing? I know I’d want to murder him if I had to hear Mshini Wam warbling from the shower every morning for 16 years.

Come to think of it, you were probably put off theatrical performanc­es of any kind in 1995 after it was found that, as minister of health, you had lied to Parliament about where the R14 million had come from to fund the musical Sarafina II.

Big deal. When it comes to musicals, everyone lies. But imagine a scandal involving a paltry R14m. It’s almost cute.

I liked you when you were foreign minister. You didn’t do or say anything while Mad Bob Mugabe taught those white farmers and, as it turned out, his economy, a lesson never to be forgotten.

You called it “quiet diplomacy” and you were very good at it. I look forward to your “quiet presidency”.

This seems to run in the family because no matter what happens, your ex-husband resolutely refuses to appear on television to reassure, or even threaten, the nation. Always let the lawyers do the talking.

Hey! Maybe you and Jake get together again after the election. You get Nkandla and he doesn’t get charged. The Guptas know how to throw a damn fine wedding party and Dubai would be perfect for the honeymoon. Blue skies, warm water, friendly banks. What’s not to love?

Good luck with the not campaignin­g. You’ll have my support when it comes to not voting.

 ??  ?? President-in-waiting Nkosazana Dlamini Zuma, backed by he who is counting on her to hang onto the family jewels, crown, etc.
President-in-waiting Nkosazana Dlamini Zuma, backed by he who is counting on her to hang onto the family jewels, crown, etc.
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