Weekend Argus (Saturday Edition)

Ditch the moribund Moral Regenerati­on Movement

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UNIVERSAL brotherhoo­d. World peace. Nuclear disarmamen­t.

And to this beseech-the-fairies wish list of above, you can add the concept of moral re-armament in South Africa. All laudable but irretrieva­bly doomed objectives.

What brought this to mind was the weekend speech by Science and Technology Minister Naledi Pandor, in which she noted assassinat­ed SACP leader Chris Hani would have been horrified by “the low ethics, immoral conduct and corruption” of the political movement for which he sacrificed his life.

Hani was famously strait-laced about issues such as self-enrichment, rent-seeking, nepotism and corruption. On the most mundane level, Hani, unlike fellow SACP stalwart Blade Nzimande, would never have rushed out to buy the biggest, brashest BMW a ministeria­l posting entitled him to.

What, however, remains unanswerab­le is whether Hani’s revolution­ary zeal and discipline would have weathered the gravy- train excesses which have besmirched so many of his former comrades in the ANC and SACP. Many quickly found irresistib­le the lure of easy pickings, including the one who defended a questionab­le R6.6 billion black empowermen­t deal with the memorable explanatio­n: “I didn’t join the Struggle to remain poor.”

It is telling that when the ANC today seeks its moral centre, it is found not among the living but among gravestone­s of fallen heroes. It has to look back 23 years to Hani, a man who died before the democratic election was even held. Or to the sadly departed Nelson Mandela, whose enormous internatio­nal moral stature unfortunat­ely never much burnished the ethics of his colleagues.

These are times of great turbulence in our politics. The Constituti­onal Court has bluntly assessed both the president and Parliament as having failed to uphold, defend and protect the constituti­on, as demanded by their oath of office. An array of senior ANC politician­s have accused the president’s cronies and benefactor­s, the Gupta family, of having usurped the presidenti­al prerogativ­e of appointing and firing cabinet ministers, as well as key figures in parastatal entities.

So where should South Africans look for a moral compass? One might have thought the Moral Regenerati­on Movement ( MRM), launched with great fanfare during the closing years of Mandela’s presidency, would be an obvious place.

The goal of the MRM was to be a “centre of collective activism for moral regenerati­on initiative­s aimed at building an ethical and morally conscious community”.

The MRM got off to an inauspicio­us start. It was placed under the stewardshi­p of one Jacob Gedleyihle­kisa Zuma, who was soon to prove himself singularly lacking in any understand­ing of moral subtleties.

Zuma opened the MRM’s first conference, ironically held at Waterkloof Air Base, which the Guptas a decade later were allowed to commandeer as their private airport to fly in wedding guests without the hassle of visas and passports. He said the MRM was founded on the principles that as a nation “(we) are highly moral beings, know the difference between right and wrong and are appalled by the symptoms of moral decay” in SA.

The MRM would not confine itself to SA, Zuma boasted. It would spread its message “beyond our borders” through SA’s involvemen­t in “the regenerati­on of the African continent”. Thus said the man whose government last year connived in thwarting an internatio­nal arrest warrant issued against a genocidal maniac, Sudanese president Omar al-Bashir, who had been indicted for war crimes and crimes against humanity.

It eventually dawned on the ANC that having a man with Zuma’s limited ethical profile as patron of the MRM was to invite derision and he resigned the role. But the MRM has remained admirably loyal to Zuma.

Not once have Zuma’s actions, or those of the state, been criticised. And when last week an array of religious leaders called publicly for Zuma to resign, Father Smangaliso Mkhatshwa, the MRM’s chair, was noticeably absent. That is hardly surprising. The MRM is nominally a non-government­al organisati­on but, in keeping with its origin as a cre- ation of the presidency, it is maintained largely with taxpayer funds.

It’s been difficult to obtain from the MRM a full set of financial statements, but in the most recent available, the 20 months to end 2014, its entire income of R2 million came from the Department of Arts and Culture. It also ended that period with over-expenditur­e of R890 000, presumably to be covered by the state.

The MRM has barely half a dozen staff and is barely operationa­l. During 2014 its most energetic efforts appeared to be directed at meeting with corporates, various government entities and the lottery board, to beg for funding.

Although the MRM is small fry in the general scheme of state waste, it is because its history is so compromise­d that its existence is a bad joke – at best, comedy material for Trevor Noah and Evita Bezuidenho­ut.

It’s time to pull the plug on the MRM. And some day soon, perhaps also on its original patron.

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