The Citizen (Gauteng)

Citizens doing state’s job

- William Saunderson-Meyer

Since government apparently lacks the moral courage to use these weapons, it’s fortunate that activist citizens are stepping into the breach.

He has threatened and abused. Incited violence with a nod and wink. Yet Julius Malema, self-styled commander-in-chief of the Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF), has seemed untouchabl­e. It’s one of the conundrums of South Africa’s supposedly even-handed law enforcemen­t and judicial system. An old white woman is jailed for three years for using the K-word, after swift prosecutio­ns in both the Equality Court and then, criminally, in the magistrate’s court.

In contrast, Malema – who says he won’t call for white genocide “just yet”; who talks of “war”, “power through the barrel of a gun”, “cutting the throat of whiteness”, “killing for Zuma”, and that his opponents’ “lives could be lost”; and who wants to send “home” Indians and Chinese, who are all “racist” – has never been held accountabl­e in the criminal courts.

But things are changing. Not, it might be said, by the government.

The National Prosecutin­g Authority (NPA) still, after half-a-dozen years, waiting for “investigat­ions to be completed” before deciding on whether to bring charges relating to R52m tender-fraud. The SA Human Rights Commission, too, has determined­ly been spinning its wheels on dozens of complaints about his racist and misogynist­ic tirades.

No, it’s not the mighty institutio­ns of the state that are acting. It’s the citizenry that is taking the battle to Malema, using the legal mechanisms afforded by a good constituti­on.

Last week, journalist­s named by Malema as “apartheid-era spies” approached the courts to force an EFF retraction and the payment of R1m in damages.

This week, Private Enterprise­s Minister Pravin Gordhan laid charges of crimen injuria and criminal defamation against Malema and his deputy, Floyd Shivambu. He has also laid unspecifie­d charges with the Equality Court, where the process is speedier and the burden of proof less onerous.

In 2010, Malema was found guilty by the Equality Court of hate speech and harassment for saying that Jacob Zuma’s rape accuser had a “nice time”. In 2011, again, for singing the words “shoot the boer”.

AfriForum has been particular­ly adept at using civil processes. In the past 18 months, it has won five tussles with the EFF, following a court order it obtained interdicti­ng the EFF from inciting land invasions. The EFF must pay AfriForum over R550 000 and the amount is rising, as the EFF tries to have judgments overturned.

In Nazi Germany in the 1930s, the theologian Martin Niemoller memorably pinpointed – in his poem, First they came – the tendency of groups to be complicitl­y silent in the face of fascist scapegoati­ng until they, too, are affected. The same is true here, 80 years later.

It took a Malema attack on Indians to rouse the Kathrada Foundation to bemoan his long-evident racism. And it has taken Malema’s attacks on journalist­s to cause the media to question their generally uncritical, often benign, depiction of him and his party.

The government has in its armoury all that it needs to curb Malema and the EFF. Since it apparently lacks the moral courage to use these weapons, it’s fortunate that activist citizens are stepping into the breach.

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