The Star Early Edition

NO APPETITE FOR ANC’S CORRUPT FEEDING FRENZY

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WHEN President Cyril Ramaphosa announced last week that schools would once again close, the overwhelmi­ng public response was not to his government’s move to halt the spread of Covid-19 but his vow that law enforcemen­t would go after those who had looted emergency funds.

We all collective­ly rolled our eyes, and many groaned “really?”

His announceme­nt came in the same week that his spokespers­on’s husband was in line to receive a R125 million contract to supply the Gauteng Health Department with personal protective equipment.

While the money was never paid the stench of impropriet­y was overwhelmi­ng, considerin­g the close relationsh­ip Ramaphosa’s spokespers­on Khusela Diko has with Gauteng Health MEC Bandile Masuku and his wife.

Diko and Masuku are members of the ANC’s provincial executive.

Considerin­g that Ramaphosa came into power promising a “New Dawn” after years of profligacy by his predecesso­r, the scandal surroundin­g someone so close to him must be very painful.

While Ramaphosa has, of recent times, carefully cultivated the image of a saint, the same can’t be said for his comrades in the ANC.

As former minister of water and environmen­tal affairs Nomvula Mokonyane testified last week, in a roundabout way, that the spoils of lucrative tenders found their way into the coffers of the ANC. She was defending herself at the Zondo Commission of Inquiry into State Capture.

Mokonyane’s evidence was eye-opening because it showed the extent to which the lines between the state and the ANC have become blurred. It was expected that beneficiar­ies of government tenders had to support the ruling party.

Tenderpren­eurs aren’t paying to support the ANC because of their moral conviction­s; it’s a quid pro quo relationsh­ip that ends once the ANC loses power. Consider the party’s desperatio­n to collapse governing coalitions in Johannesbu­rg, Tshwane and Nelson Mandela Bay.

Ramaphosa might lead the ANC but as we have seen with the feeding frenzy which accompanie­d the dishing out of Covid-19 contracts, there’s little that he can do about the insatiable appetite for corruption which will ultimately lead to the demise of his party.

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