The Star Early Edition

EDITOR’S NOTE

- JAPHET NCUBE japhet.ncube@inl.co.za

LIFE is indeed very short.

And unpredicta­ble, too.

The death at the weekend of one of the most hard-working ministers, Edna Molewa, came as a shock to many of us.

The last time I felt this sad about the loss of a politician was when Collins Chabane died in a car crash in 2015.

Molewa apparently fell ill while attending the Forum on China-Africa Co-operation in Beijing earlier this month, and never recovered.

She was 61.

I personally never met her, except for occasions when I attended government functions and we ran into each other, but I knew of her work because it spoke for her.

I know a couple of friends who worked with her over the years, and they tell the story of a woman who loved her job and was passionate about issues of the environmen­t and wildlife conservati­on.

Molewa was a regular contributo­r to The Star, writing on key environmen­tal issues. She was particular­ly interested in the protection of our rhinos, under threat from sophistica­ted poaching syndicates who sell their horns in China.

A former North West premier, and an MEC before that, Molewa shied away from the limelight and let her work do the talking.

She was a shining light in a cabinet full of dead wood.

No wonder condolence­s have come from far and wide following her untimely death, with, among others, President Cyril Ramaphosa and former president Thabo Mbeki paying tribute to her for her outstandin­g work. She served South Africa well.

This portfolio is usually reserved for dead wood and other beneficiar­ies of political patronage. Molewa made it “sexy” to speak about rhinos and other endangered species.

I hope that when Ramaphosa reshuffles his bloated cabinet, no dead wood is retired to this important portfolio. It would be an insult to Edna Molewa’s memory.

South Africa – and indeed the global environmen­tal sector – is poorer without her.

May her spirit rest in peace.

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