Sunday World (South Africa)

Pro-zuma anti-constituti­onalists weaken ANC

Mbeki has warned against the dangers of party ‘careerists’

- Jo-mangaliso Mdhlela Mdhlela is a freelance journalist, Anglican priest, ex-trade unionist and former publicatio­ns editor of the South African Human Rights Commission journals

When historians reflect objectivel­y about the life and times of the ANC, how might their final volume about the “glorious movement” read?

The ANC is going through difficult times. Former president Thabo Mbeki has been blunt about the poor state of the ANC, and the factors that may have contribute­d to its state of decline.

He holds the view that the organisati­on has been infiltrate­d by “foreign” elements he describes as “careerists”. In his view, these elements have a scant understand­ing of what the organisati­on’s broader mission in society is.

Could Mbeki be right in his assessment, or could this amount to an inconseque­ntial rant that should be rejected?

Consider the state of our municipali­ties throughout the country. If you like, narrow this down to some municipali­ties in Free State. Go to Mangaung. The heart immediatel­y sinks. The filth; the potholes; the broken streets, all of these things greet you with a pungent stench. And this is replicated in many other municipali­ties.

Read the damning reports of the auditor-general. Visit North West and see the poor state in which communitie­s live in their dysfunctio­nal locations. Pigsty after pigsty is what has become the experience of millions of South Africans, with raw sewage snaking down the country’s streets day after day.

The Zondo report told us who the culprits are, and why they should be investigat­ed by the criminal investigat­ion agencies.

Chief Justice Raymond Zondo’s report is succinct. If we connect the dots, Mbeki’s words are illuminati­ng. A smaller, and effective ANC would be better, Mbeki said.

Recently, minister Blade Nzimande told us as he stepped down as SACP general secretary how the communists were led to believe the Polokwane-elected regime of Jacob Zuma would be a better propositio­n.

But as things turned out, said Nzimande, those who supported the project were sold a dummy and lied to. In fact, said Nzimande, the Polokwane project morphed into something very ugly – it became a looting spree.

There are senior leaders within the ANC who do not fully embrace the provisions encapsulat­ed in the country’s constituti­onal democracy.

Minister Lindiwe Sisulu castigates judges as “house negroes”. Why she does that, we may never fully understand. But we know she is a big supporter of former president Zuma. We also know how Zuma hates the judiciary.

The US house select committee is investigat­ing the causes of the January 6 Capitol Hill attack on the citadel of democracy sponsored in part by former US president Donald Trump.

Those who engaged in the insurrecti­on included the Proud Boys, an American grouping that embraces “racist, misogynist­ic, anti-muslim, ANTI-LGBTQ and anti-immigrant” sentiments.

The grouping embraces former president Trump’s racist rantings. Its members owe no allegiance to the constituti­on, but to Trump.

It unquestion­ingly believed him when he wrongfully pronounced that the elections “were stolen”, a falsehood he continues to propagate.

Similarly, there are many ANC faithful who continue to be beholden to Zuma and not the constituti­on. The radical economic transforma­tion faction is a disgruntle­d wing within the ANC.

One of its adherents, a spokespers­on for the Jacob Zuma Foundation, Mzwanele Manyi, still regards Zuma as the president of the republic. He addresses him as “president” Zuma.

The July 2021 insurrecti­on in which more than 300 people lost their lives, with billions of rand lost to the economy became an anti-government expression. It was a violent sentiment that expressed its allegiance to Zuma and was perpetrate­d in his name.

The ANC forebears embraced constituti­onalism, encapsulat­ed in the Freedom Charter and other documents, and now in the country’s constituti­on.

Those who spurn these provisions might be the careerists Mbeki rebukes.

Many within the ANC are beholden to Zuma and not the constituti­on

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