Sunday World (South Africa)

The truth should never be silenced

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On Wednesday, April 27, South Africans will celebrate Freedom Day, which marks the end of years of apartheid rule as well as the first democratic elections, which ushered in a range of freedoms that were denied to the majority of the citizens of this country by the apartheid rulers.

One of the democratic breakthrou­ghs brought about by the April 27 1994 elections was the final realisatio­n of a constituti­on and its accompanyi­ng Bill of Rights, which protects the rights of all in our country and affirms the democratic values of human dignity, equality and freedom.

Some of the rights the state is called on to respect, protect and promote include the right to freedom of expression and informatio­n as well as ideas for as long as these rights do not propagate war or incite violence and hatred.

In reflecting on these freedoms today, we have decided to highlight how important freedom of speech is to our democracy and how crucial it is to allow a festival of ideas to flourish if we are going to be true to protecting our enshrined fundamenta­l rights.

It, however, pains us to witness the blatant lack of tolerance to different views and the attack on free expression coming from our own MPS who, regrettabl­y, are expected to be the main custodians and protectors of our rights.

If anything, the conduct of the chairperso­n of the parliament­ary standing committee on public accounts (Scopa), Mkhuleko Hlengwa during a messy meeting with members of the Eskom board on Friday, bordered on overzealou­sness and intoleranc­e.

We find it hard to fathom what Hlengwa found offensive or disrespect­ful in Eskom board member Busisiwe Mavuso’s statement that Eskom’s problems are the consequenc­e of the ANC government, and, rightly so, the current board cannot be expected to shoulder the blame. What Mavuso told parliament is in the public domain as South Africans by now know the looting that crippled the power utility actually emanated from ANC ranks under Jacob Zuma’s rule.

Mavuso was rebuked for her opinion on the root cause of Eskom’s destructio­n and was asked to leave the meeting after being accused of “theatrics” by Hlengwa. This intoleranc­e of a different view came from a man who is expected to be leading independen­t oversight of Eskom. In fact, it was Hlengwa who engaged in theatrics and not Mavuso.

We would have expected him to find out if the board has indeed stuck to its mandate of cleaning up its governance issue at Eskom. Scopa must exercise oversight over Eskom and not try to play to the gallery by trying to adjudicate.

We must all accept that the Eskom board is dealing with the issues of past decisions and the accompanyi­ng corruption, which ultimately brought the country to where it is today.

That Mavuso was asked to leave the meeting is distastefu­l to the extreme. To suggest she is in contempt of parliament for simply stating her views amounts to muzzling her. Trying to silence a different opinion must never be allowed in a democratic South Africa.

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