Publication: Mail and Guardian
Issued:
Date: 2009-01-16
Reporter:
Publication |
Mail and Guardian
|
Date |
2009-01-16
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Web Link
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www.mg.co.za
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The new political year inaugurated by Supreme Court of Appeal (SCA) Judge Louis
Harms on Monday has made one thing clear:
Jacob Zuma must decline to be the ANC’s presidential candidate in the
forthcoming election *1. Any other political solution to
his legal problems would continue the erosion of constitutional foundations,
which both he and his party did so much work to lay.
It has become heretical to say so in the wake of the Chris Nicholson judgement
and the sacking of Thabo Mbeki but the
ruling party needs to find another person to carry its torch at the polls and in
government.
A Zuma presidency, with or without a criminal trial, would
hurt South Africa at just
about every level: social, economic, political and institutional. And his
candidacy would hurt the party. While further legal proceedings against him may
inflame the
already-committed base, they will further
alienate the doubters and
hand the DA and Congress of the People fresh
ammunition *2.
That these concerns are beginning to be aired anew among members of the ANC’s
national executive committee is encouraging. There is some comfort to be drawn
from the fact that the party did not greet Zuma’s defeat at the SCA with a fresh
attack on the judiciary. The ruling party’s restraint is a sign that it realises
how seriously its attacks on the courts last year backfired. It is, sadly, not a
sign of any fundamental change in intent.
Zuma’s supporters are now planning a less frontal attack, which will
subvert democratic institutions from within
rather than besieging them from without. As we report this week the ANC
president’s team will attempt to persuade prosecuting authorities to drop their
case against him in the interests of averting serious national instability. This
is a gambit it has been trying for some time and it effectively
amounts to the threat of a coup *2.
It is a threat couched as a warning and if it fails, as it surely must, the
suggestion is that the National Director of Public Prosecutions (NDPP) can be
replaced. Acting NDPP Mokotedi Mpshe is
proving unexpectedly resolute, which is no doubt why there
is such urgency about finalising the sacking of Vusi Pikoli, who, Harms said,
had been obliged in the face of the evidence to bring charges against Zuma.
Parliament’s presiding officers are making much of their efforts to consider
whether they will confirm President Kgalema Motlanthe’s
craven decision to dismiss
Pikoli, establishing a joint committee of the National Assembly and National
Council of Provinces, before taking its recommendations to a vote. That process,
shoe-horned into the dying days of the parliamentary term, however, is already
descending into bitter farce.
That the ANC could choose Oupa Monareng, a man convicted of bribing police
officers in 1996 when he was caught driving an allegedly stolen car, to be
co-chair of a committee that will evaluate the fitness for office of a man
recognised by his peers as 2008
international prosecutor of the year, is a stark
illustration of the topsy-turvy political
morality of the battle to save Zuma *4.
Decisions taken at Polokwane mean the ANC cannot choose another presidential
candidate unless Zuma relinquishes his claim. If he and his party really have
the interests of the people *5
rich and poor at heart that is what he must do, before it is too late.
With acknowledgements to Mail and Guardian.
*1 The is the
simplest and only logical solution to the country's dilemma.
It has the least overall aggregate implications to everyone.
*2 The only upside - not specifically to the DA and COPE,
but to the opposition in general.
This is not because I am that anti party in power, but that party should not
have a 75% majority that its childish Youth League chairboy is now talking
about.
Even 70% or 67% or 66% or even 60% is not healthy for a multi-plural democracy
and a widely heterogeneous society.
*3 Deserving of criminal charges of sedition.
*4 The morality of the battle to save Zuma is as malodorous
as the den of the Tasmanian Devil.
Worse than merde de la merde.
*5 The reality is that he has the interests of the
bumiputerian people at heart.
For they will succour him, his six wives and 27 children through the days of
their lives.
Many of them bumiputerians are already rich, many more want to get rich.
One is in jail for another while yet. Yet in strictly financial terms he is
still rich and will come out of jail rich.