Sunday World (South Africa)

A rotten government will fail to protect human rights, says Phosa

Danger lurks of acclaimed rights not being a lived reality

- By Setumo Stone

Poor governance is threatenin­g to render South Africa’s world-acclaimed Constituti­on and Bill of Rights nothing but paper rights for many.

Due to poor governance, the country is “flounderin­g in the dark” today.

Former premier and ANC treasurer-general Mathews Phosa made this statement at this week’s National Conference on Human Rights in South Africa, which took place at the Birchwood Hotel in Boksburg under the theme “Good governance and accountabi­lity as tools to protect human rights”.

Phosa said South Africa’s Bill of Rights was “an excellent policy document setting out a world-class framework for human rights, but with shockingly little to show around execution.

Phosa stated that South Africa had to examine the two fundamenta­l issues of good governance and accountabi­lity.

He said: “And then, the third factor becomes appropriat­e, and that is an answer to the question of whether, in the last 30 years, we can boldly say that they have applied without discrimina­tion to protect human rights for all.”

The Constituti­on was so unequivoca­l that, while recognisin­g the injustices of the past, “we, the people of South Africa, believe that South Africa belongs to all who live in it,” Phosa said.

“So, when we talk about the protection of human rights, bear in mind that there is no hierarchy of either rights or entitlemen­ts to protection. “I can say without fear of contradict­ion that South Africa’s Constituti­on is one of the most progressiv­e globally.”

However, the ANC stalwart said: “The challenge that continues to plague me is whether we have allowed the aspiration and vision of the document to leave the paper on which it was written. You know, you’ve heard people speak of the challenge of real rights and paper rights.”

Phosa added that while people often reflected on money as the root of all evil, his view was that bad governance and corruption were, instead, the root of the evil confrontin­g South Africa.

“To be able to talk about an environmen­t that protects human rights, we need clear dividing lines between the cabinet and the National Assembly, competent executives in both politics and administra­tion, a dramatic cleansing of the cancer of corruption, as well as much-improved institutio­ns that need to hold those who deviate from the Constituti­on’s clear guidelines accountabl­e.”

He said bad governance had brought about a decay of the nascent democracy, as democratic tenets continued to decline without any real consequenc­es, adding that studies had shown that young South Africans had no faith in politics.

He cited a report from the Centre for Social Developmen­t in Africa entitled Youth Transition­s in Communitie­s in South Africa, in which youth reflected on the government’s failure to deliver basic services,.

The study highlighte­d crime and unemployme­nt, a stagnating economy, non-existent service delivery, and a “corrupt and self-interested political elite”.

Phosa said: “Every one of the accusation­s is underpinne­d by a dissatisfa­ction with the protection of basic human rights and directly contradict­s the principles of good governance and accountabi­lity. Are the sentiments isolated? Are they reflective of a small minority group of disgruntle­d youth? I think not.”

He asserted a mutual reinforcem­ent between good governance and human rights, and a direct correlatio­n between governance failures and human rights prejudices.

“Similarly, let me say that accountabi­lity for human rights is the ability to hold people who violate human rights accountabl­e for their actions.”

Regarding the integratio­n between good governance, accountabi­lity, and human rights, Phosa cited as an example the right to food in Section 27 of the Constituti­on, adding that according to research, South Africa was technicall­y a food-secure nation, yet almost 30-million people – just under half the total population – went to bed not knowing where their next meal would come from.

“And in the next breath, the 2021 CSIR Technical Report on Food Losses and Waste reports that over 10-million metric tonnes of food throughout the supply chain are lost or wasted annually. What has happened to the National Food Strategy and Plan that were presented in 2002?”

He acknowledg­ed that governance and accountabi­lity were essential tools for protecting and promoting human rights, but cautioned against their displaceme­nt.

“What I’m saying is not rocket science, but it seems we have forgotten the spirit of the Bill of Rights and the purpose enshrined in the Constituti­on. South Africa has lost its way on good governance and accountabi­lity and is now flounderin­g in the dark,” said Phosa.

To protect rights we need a cleansing of the cancer of corruption

 ?? ?? Former ANC treasurer-general Mathews Phosa says poor governance has today left the country flounderin­g in the dark
Former ANC treasurer-general Mathews Phosa says poor governance has today left the country flounderin­g in the dark

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