Sunday Tribune

CSA needs to hear painful tales of discrimina­tion

- STUART HESS stuart.hess@inl.co.za

CRICKET South Africa’s Social Justice Nation-building project is a necessaril­y painful exercise.

Already, in the first week, through what the ombudsman, Dumisa Ntsebeza, termed the ‘scene-setters’ – anecdotes emerged, which left those delivering them close to tears.

Norman Arendse, the former Cricket SA president, who will serve on the new board as an independen­t director, spoke about how the current generation of cricketers in this country stood on the shoulders of players, who many would not have heard about.

“I’ve played with great cricketers that have never had the opportunit­y to represent their country. The most recent one, who is my age, is Vincent Barnes.

But some of the older players like Lefty Adams, Rushdie Magiet, the late Saait Magiet, Coetie Neethling, Archie Sonn, a beautiful swing bowler, and so many more,” said Arendse.

Zongie Mbekeni, who captained an SA Schools side in 1971 under the auspices of the SA African Cricket Board, apologised for almost crying as he spoke about his disgust with the fact that only one black African batsman – Temba Bavuma – had been selected for the South African men’s national team, in 30 years post the unificatio­n of the sport in the country.

There’ll be more revealing and painful testimony in the coming weeks, especially around the contempora­ry, post unity era. That testimony lies at the root of what led to the establishm­ent of the SJN project. Makhaya Ntini talking about not sharing a bus with Proteas teammates in Australia, or Ashwell Prince talking about a lack of opportunit­ies for, in his case very personally, his brother – and others who had what can only be described as horrible engagement­s, on and off the field, with their white counterpar­ts.

It is a wound that has been too easily plastered over, and as we saw during the Truth And Reconcilia­tion Commission hearings – which Ntsebeza also presided over – the pain of the past will never be entirely erased.

Cricket does need to confront these issues. And in doing so, it will also provide a perspectiv­e on post-apartheid South Africa. In making a wider point about developmen­t of the sport, Mbekeni mentioned the government.

“We are squealing about not having the infrastruc­ture, not having the facilities,” he said.

“There are local government­s that are supposed to be doing that and assisting in the sustainabi­lity of that infrastruc­ture. Local government has a role to play moving forward.”

Not only local government, but the Department­s of Education and Sport, Arts and Culture. It’s a problem that the Sports department itself has highlighte­d through its Eminent Persons Group report in the last few years.

However, all anyone ever hears about with the EPG report as it pertains to cricket, is that not enough black players are representi­ng the Proteas.

That, as Max Jordaan, CSA’S head of transforma­tion, explained at the hearings, is dealing with the problem in a superficia­l manner.

The government, and specifical­ly the Sports Ministry, has done little to address the issues that the report that it commission­s on an annual basis has highlighte­d.

As much as cricket will be pained through the SJN process, so will the South African government be embarrasse­d. One of Ntsebeza’s legal advisors, Fumisa Ngqele, noted in a question to Prof Richard Calland, a constituti­onal expert, whose submission dealt with administra­tive integrity, that the country faced numerous social challenges which cricket alone couldn’t solve.

“We understand that some of the inequaliti­es that exist in the sport of cricket exist within the broader (inequaliti­es) in the country,” Ngqele remarked.

“There are socio- economic disparitie­s that feed into the inequaliti­es in the sport. How do we make recommenda­tions or changes relating to the inequaliti­es in sport when we exist within this unequal society?”

Resolving cricket’s problems, like the country’s, requires honesty and a willingnes­s to do what is right. Ntsebeza can’t be expected to provide those solutions.

However, it is critical that we hear the voices, the pain, because only through that process, can the sport find salvation.

 ?? Barloword ?? ADVOCATE Dumisa Ntsebeza is the ombudsman overseeing Cricket SA’S Social Justice and Nation Building hearings. |
Barloword ADVOCATE Dumisa Ntsebeza is the ombudsman overseeing Cricket SA’S Social Justice and Nation Building hearings. |

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