Weekend Argus (Saturday Edition)

On brink of being brought to book

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HO-HUM. Another week, another book about Accused Number One, this time one from the leader of the Patriotic Alliance, Gayton McKenzie.

Typical of this thriving niche in local publishing, McKenzie’s publicists have wasted no time in informing the world of the book’s importance.

We are told it “is set to blow the lid on assassinat­ion attempts on President Jacob Zuma’s life and how Western forces have been pulling strings within the ANC for many years”.

What’s more, Kill Zuma: By Any Means Necessary is “set to ruffle a lot of feathers when it’s released next week”.

As McKenzie himself put it, “From the poisoning attempts involving (Zuma’s wife) MaNtuli to another attempt at Luthuli House during a meeting of the ANC’s top six. There was near-fatal tampering to the presidenti­al jet.

“One of the president’s most trusted bodyguards was operating on strict instructio­ns to murder the old man.

It’s all in the book, with the reasons why destroying Zuma has been so important to his enemies.”

This being the silly season, we look forward to its release. It will make a change from all that dreary news from the ruling party’s leadership battle. Here at the Mahogany Ridge we enjoy a bit of fantasy as much as the next man. And it is good McKenzie has, for a change, written about someone other than himself.

A former convict, McKenzie has used his crime experience­s and metamorpho­sis to top-notch business guy as the basis for his apparently popular motivation­al talks. This, in turn, begat a string of best-sellers, like The Choice: The Gayton McKenzie Story, A Hustler’s Bible and its sequel,

A Hustler’s Bible: The New Testament.

It’s true, like many readers, we had not heard of these titles until recently. Perhaps we spend too much time at the Ridge and just don’t get out enough.

But McKenzie has insisted his new work is a controvers­ial game-changer.

Already, he said, one chain store has been ordered not to stock the book. ANC members have asked him not to publish it as they fear it could “cripple the liberation movement”.

“People don’t know what to make of this book,” he said.

Which is certainly true, as it has yet to be published. However, we’ve had a look at its horrific cover. It would appear one of the attempted assassinat­ions involved an extremely blunt object. Zuma is depicted with blood pouring down his skull.

Either that, or someone has poured treacle over his head in an attempt to disguise the president as a pudding.

It is no secret Zuma has no shortage of enemies and has even claimed that, as a result of his commitment to radical economic transforma­tion, there had been plots to kill him.

“I was poisoned and almost died,” he once claimed, “just because

South Africa joined Brics under my leadership. They said I was going to destroy the country.”

Well, “they” weren’t all that wrong, were they? But no matter. Zuma’s real enemies, of course, are not these shadowy “assassins”, but the courts.

It is difficult thinking of him as Santa Claus but the Pretoria High Court’s Judge Dunstan Mlambo raised some spirits on Wednesday with his ruling Zuma personally pay the costs of his failed attempt to stop the release of former public protector Thuli Madonsela’s State of Capture report.

It’s not an inconsider­able amount. Opposition leader Mmusi Maimane reckons it’s more than R6 million. His party, the DA, meanwhile filed perjury charges against Zuma following Judge Mlambo’s damning judgment.

Then, on Thursday, the Helen Suzman Foundation and Sygnia chief executive Magda Wierzycka filed papers in the Pretoria High Court, as they take on the Zuptocracy. They want the court to set aside “unlawful‚ improper and/or corrupt exercises of public power” and to recover the proceeds gleaned from state capture.

The 74 respondent­s include

Zuma, his son Duduzane, the Gupta brothers, Eskom, Trillian, Mineral Resources Minister Mosebenzi Zwane‚ former Eskom boss Brian Molefe and suspended Eskom chief financial officer Anoj Singh.

Wierzycka later posted on Twitter, “The time has come to stop being passive observers as our beautiful country is being plundered by those who put their financial self-interests ahead of those of SA. The time has come for everyone to say enough is enough. The time has come to hold people to account.”

Granted, it’s a wee bit jingoistic. But she’s right. Time is indeed running out for Zuma.

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