Inquiry commissions biggest waste of red tape
Govt uses this strategy as a way of avoiding serious issues, writes
of Hoopstad
Nonzaba Nonzaba
It is again a historic and catastrophic consequence of how the state keeps on holding back the legitimate free education dream of our fallen heroes. It is vivid enough that the reversed period of examinations, degradation of students and police brutality that the students intensively endured went down the drain.
The ANC has attested to the point that even if you drag its little demons (the South African Students’ Congress) into the negotiations process, the party will never compromise its base principle of postponing or even neglecting the citizens’ needs.
The most regressive solution – which is totally progressive to the ANC – that has ever been forged since the inception of a democratic South Africa, is a commission of inquiry.
This structure is designed never to make progress.
Proof of this strategy can be seen with the Marikana Commission of Inquiry, which hasn’t reached a solid resolution in respect of the miners who were brutally murdered.
This tactic was also employed in the Nkandla matter.
The #FeesMustFallReloaded is a symbolic display of how the poor are being avoided.
Students who suggested the best way to subvert this arrogant and Gupta-indoctrinated leadership was through the barrel of a gun were labelled morons.
But it is only now that everyone realises that was the only rational resolution.