Thursday 4 December 2014

ANC becomes signatory to the Geneva Convention of 1949 and Protocol 1 of 1977


ANC President Oliver Tambo                    Source: http://ancarchives.org.za
ANC President Oliver Tambo Source: http://ancarchives.org.za
Date: 28 November, 1980
At a ceremony at the headquarters of the International Committee of the Red Cross in Geneva, the African National Congress (ANC)President, Oliver Tambo, declared the organisation a signatory to the Geneva Convention of 1949 and Protocol 1 of 1977 on the humanitarian conduct of war. Claws 1 of this protocol says; “The civilian population and individual civilians shall enjoy general protection against dangers arising from military operations. To give effect to this protection, the following rules, which are additional to other applicable rules of international law, shall be observed in all circumstances.” The Geneva Convention was the body of international law that was aimed at regulating the conduct of armed conflict and to limit its effects.
References

Friday 4 April 2014

NEWS ANALYSIS: Zuma breaks ranks in Nkandla response

Paul Vecchiatto profile


BY PAUL VECCHIATTO, 04 APRIL 2014, 06:45
President Jacob Zuma. Picture: GCIS
President Jacob Zuma. Picture: GCIS
PRESIDENT Jacob Zuma’s response to the public protector’s report on the security upgrades at his private Nkandla home is breathtaking in the sense that he effectively breaks ranks with the official line of his Cabinet and his party, the African National Congress (ANC).
In his letter to National Assembly Speaker Max Sisulu tabled in Parliament on Thursday, Mr Zuma stated he was waiting for an interim report from the Special Investigation Unit (SIU) before making a decision on what to do next.
Mr Zuma said the security cluster of ministers had produced their report, the public protector had made her findings and now he just needed the SIU report.
The second-last paragraph of the letter says: "There are stark differences both in respect of the findings as well as the remedial action proposed by the two reports ( security cluster’s and public protector’s). This much is clear from the reports as well as the very public pronouncements made by the respective parties.
"In my experience in government I have not encountered such an anomaly ."
What makes the letter so astonishing is that Mr Zuma explicitly contradicts the statement by the Cabinet that the public protector’s and security cluster minister’s reports had come to essentially the same conclusion.
In the ANC’s March 20 statement in reaction to the public protector’s report it said both the security cluster and the public protector report found serious irregularities in the implementation of the project. Further, that the reports came to the determination that those who failed in the conduct of their duties should face the appropriate consequences, be they government officials, ministers or former ministers.
It went on to say that the corrective measures suggested were similar. "Many of them are in advanced stages of implementation and we commend the speed with which government has moved to curb the identified abuses," the Cabinet’s March statement said. "It is our information that some criminal cases have already been referred... to the law enforcement agencies.
"As asserted before, it is our view that the state must pursue all those who accessed state funds fraudulently."
The ANC, for its part, said areas of disagreement between the two reports was what should be done with costs of the relocation of the kraal, the chicken run, the visitors centre, the swimming pool and the so-called amphitheatre. The party recommended that the government resolve the issue.
"If agreement cannot be reached within a short space of time, competent institutions of state must review the reports and make a determination," the ANC said. "This highlights the dangers of two state institutions investigating the same matter ."
But now Mr Zuma has decided that the SIU report would be the final arbitrator on what should be done. Critics have already pointed out that the SIU does not have the same status and gravitas as the public protector’s office.
The public protector is a constitutionally mandated institution with the primary role of ensuring that the state operates within the spirit of the law through transparency and accountability.
In other words, the public protector’s investigation is about how the decisions were made that allowed spending on Nkandla to skyrocket to R215m with a final cost estimated to be R246m.
The SIU operates only on presidential proclamation, meaning that its terms of reference can be broadened or narrowed as the head of state decides. Its terms of reference are essentially who bought what, for how much and if they were overcharged.
Mr Zuma has now put the SIU in an almost impossible situation. If it absolves him and the Cabinet of wrongdoing by blaming lower-ranking officials, it will seem to be doing his bidding. If it finds that the fault lay with Mr Zuma and his cabinet, then it could be political suicide for the unit and its head Vas Soni.
Finally, if Mr Zuma is playing for touch by postponing or neutralising any kind of political fallout ahead of the May 7 general election, then surely his decision to wait for the SIU is just as much of a gamble as were the debate in Parliament to happen just ahead of the polls.
"The Nkandla issue in the hands of the opposition is pretty much a blunt instrument," a source said. "However, in the hands of a faction of the ANC it can very much be a sharp dagger."
ANC secretary-general Gwede Mantashe, the source said, had ruled out any change to the party’s presidential candidate ahead of the election. "Mr Mantashe has just said Mr Zuma will remain the candidate.
"His statement was just that, he did not say that Mr Zuma was an asset. Rather, it was a realisation that changing the candidate just ahead of the polls would be political suicide."
The source said Mr Zuma would be more vulnerable to any ANC faction that might decide he is a liability after the election.

ANC owes it to itself and SA to halt its abuse of power


BY MAVUSO MSIMANG, APRIL 03 2014, 05:45
President Jacob Zuma's residence in Nkandla. Picture: SOWETAN/SUNDAY WORLD
President Jacob Zuma's residence in Nkandla. Picture: SOWETAN/SUNDAY WORLD
THE Nkandla fiasco that has been unfolding over the past three years recalls a famous moment in history. During the Battle of Copenhagen in 1801, Admiral Horatio Nelson, famous for his extraordinary exploits during the Battle of Trafalgar, received a signal from a wary Admiral Sir Hyde Parker, who was in overall command of the British forces. Parker gave the never-say-die Nelson the order to withdraw his forces. Upon receipt of this instruction, Nelson lifted his telescope, put it firmly to the eye that had been blinded earlier in his Royal Navy career, and said: "I really don’t see the signal." And so, we are told, was born the idiom "turning a blind eye", which describes the act of ignoring undesirable information.
Apropos Nkandla, African National Congress (ANC) secretary-general Gwede Mantashe correctly takes issue with the ministers on whose watch the debacle occurred. He then grabs his telescope and plants it to what must be his blind eye. Predictably, he sees nothing in the report that suggests the president should be held accountable for a development that added such blindingly obvious value to his real estate.
The release of the report has demonstrated that there are many blind eyes on the faces of our leaders. Many have chosen to see only what they wish to see. The ANC Women’s League, for its part, sees no difference between the public protector’s report on Nkandla and that prepared by the interministerial task team. Obeying ancient instincts, the ministers agree with the women’s league and, furthermore, are incensed at the conduct of their underlings.
On top of blindness there is arrogance. Last Thursday, Tim Modise asked ANC parliamentary chief whip Stone Sizani when Parliament would be meeting to discuss the Nkandla report. I listened in stunned silence as the chief whip subjected Power FM listeners to a contemptuous exercise in verbal gymnastics. He admitted that he had yet to read Thuli Madonsela’s report, yet felt no compunction in claiming that she had flouted the very act that established her office.
The reaction of the listeners who called in ranged from frustration to disbelief to downright anger. Some made plaintive, petitionary pleas for a rational discussion; others remonstrated with the chief whip; others implored him not to treat them like toddlers. Modise pressed the point: was the ANC concerned with issues raised in the report? Sizani blustered and droned on, unwilling to provide a straightforward response. Mercifully, the time for my meeting had come and I left the car, shaking my head in disbelief.
It wasn’t meant to be like this.
Those who still respect citizens’ views ought to listen to the raging debates by ordinary folks that are taking place every day. In churches, sermons critiquing the phenomenon of corruption grow louder with each passing week. In bars, the language in describing politicians grows more crude every weekend. In all languages, in rural areas and big cities, South Africans are not impressed.
Those who listen closely will not accuse these people of being traitors. Instead, they will recognise that there is a crisis within the ANC. The organisation that fought for and won liberation is now floundering. The current crisis speaks of the emergence of a "new ANC cadre" untutored in the values and traditions of the 100-year-old organisation. It speaks, especially, of a leadership with a capacity and tolerance for the inclusion of self-seekers.
There have been attempts to ignore the discontent across various levels of society, but it is becoming difficult to sustain the pose of the ostrich that buries its head in the sand, hoping that the problem will disappear.
How can one ignore the voice of Marion Sparg, a tried and tested former Umkhonto weSizwe guerrilla fighter, a dyed-in-the-wool ANC member with impeccable credentials? She must have agonised for days, if not months, on end before formulating and putting forward her daring request for the president to resign. In the difficult days, she served Jacob Zuma with distinguished loyalty. She cannot be dismissed as a misguided publicity seeker.
How can one ignore Pallo Jordan, who, writing in his Business Day column last week, observed that the president could not "evade moral responsibility for what happened in Nkandla"? Like Dr Jordan, I too once had an electric fence put around the perimeter of my property when I worked for a state-owned company. A security assessment having been duly done, enthusiastic officials instructed that I needed the fence. (I presided over a number of large tenders and they believed it would be best to be cautious.) They assured me that I would not need to pay a cent. The auditors understood the matter somewhat differently and threw the book at me, so I made arrangements to pay for it. I didn’t ask for the fence, but I benefited from it. It continues to secure my comfort today, long after I vacated that office.
In a healthy society, wrongdoers accept the consequences of their actions. In our society, those who dare express themselves in ways that might contradict the official position are subjected to whispering campaigns and vicious, personalised attacks for daring to speak out.
Trevor Manuel and Zola Skweyiya, Marion Sparg and Pallo Jordan: these voices will not go away. These people were among those who fought for and drafted our beloved constitution. This is the same constitution that created the office of the public protector. Why would they create something that they were not willing to defend?
Call me an old sentimentalist, but I believe the ANC leadership challenge is daunting, yet not insurmountable. The ship can still be turned around, but this will not happen overnight. I find encouragement in the commitment and loyalty of some of the young leaders who live up to the challenge of the times.
I belong to the Liliesleaf Farm branch of the ANC, which won the Sol Plaatje award for most active and best organised branch in the country. Having positioned the branch as the "epicentre of dialogue and debate" in the past two years, the leadership has invited prominent national figures, including Mantashe, Tokyo Sexwale, Tito Mboweni, Thabo Mbeki and Frank Chikane, to lead discussions on current issues of national importance.
Last year, Sanral CEO Nazir Ali was invited to explain the e-toll funding strategy. At the end of his session we asked him to come back another day — better prepared.
The events surrounding the public protector’s report on Nkandla are an acute embarrassment. They are a negation of good governance, a betrayal of the people’s trust and confidence in the leadership at both party and government levels.
We in the ANC owe it to the people of South Africa to repudiate corruption. We owe it to ourselves as a movement to put a stop to the cancer that causes power to be abused. The first step in the long journey towards repairing the ANC will be treating the public protector and her many reports with the respect they so richly deserve.
• Msimang is the CEO of the Oliver and Adelaide Tambo Foundation, a member of the Liliesleaf Farm branch of the ANC, a member of the MK Veterans League and former director-general of the Department of Home Affairs.

Monday 31 March 2014

Motlanthe urges govt to take 'responsibility' for Nkandla

29 MAR 2014 06:40 PHILLIP DE WET

Deputy President Kgalema Motlanthe has urged the government to implement Public Protector Thuli Madonsela's recommendations in her Nkandla report.




"It has been investigated by the inter-ministerial task team, as well as the public protector and what I was saying is ... there are reports, there are recommendations, and those reports must be acted upon," said Motlanthe.

"There's no 'if not'. That's the right thing to do. They must be acted upon. What needs to be done has to be done. Those who must take responsibility, have got to take responsibility."

He was speaking to the SABC while electioneering in Cape Town.

The ANC's national executive committee is meeting in Cape Town this weekend and Madonsela's report on security upgrades at President Jacob Zuma's private homestead is expected to be discussed.

Madonsela has, in line with the Executive Members' Ethics Act, given Zuma two weeks to respond to her report on refurbishments at his private Nkandla homestead in KwaZulu-Natal.

The 400-page report titled Secure in Comfort found that the president should pay back a portion of the R246-million in state funds that was spent at Nkandla but did not go towards improving security measures.

It was released on March 19 and in response the Democratic Alliance (DA) has asked National Assembly Speaker Max Sisulu to recall Parliament from its pre-election recess and set up an ad hoc committee to consider impeaching the president.

The ANC has since announced that it would take court action against the DA for saying in an SMS to voters that Zuma had stolen money.

The ANC said the bulk SMS "falsely accused the president of having stolen public money to build his private residence in Nkandla".

ANC chief whip Stone Sizani in Parliament this week criticised Madonsela, saying she overstepped her mark when she released the report to the media before she released it to Parliament. 

Dealing with the fallout
The Nkandla saga is more than four years old but it was only in 2013 that the ANC visibly took control of managing the scandal, making "requests" of government ministers that were quickly acted on.

Since then, the party appears to have developed a master plan for dealing with Nkandla fallout, a plan refined before the release of public protector Thuli Madonsela's report, and only tweaked slightly since.

Officially, the party has condemned "mischievous and downright false assertions", with which it will seek to undermine Madonsela or ignore her findings. But its actions point to a unified, long-term approach that was previously lacking.

Although not without its pitfalls, the plan has already proved to be far more successful than the sometimes farcical and often unco-ordinated attempts by the ministers of public works, police and state security to contain the Nkandla scandal during 2011 and 2012.

Notable features of the plan include asking ministers to:
  • Avoid bringing Nkandla before Parliament, where political parties, and the Democratic Alliance in particular, can use parliamentary privilege to get mileage out of the scandal;
  • Separate the party and the state concerning the details, but not in the broader picture;
  • Embrace and extend the Madonsela report – then supplant it; and
  • Prepare scapegoats if it becomes necessary.

If Zuma is to comply with the recommendations made by Madonsela in her Secure in Comfort report, he will have to "report to the National Assembly on his comments and actions" before the week is out.

That seems unlikely to happen.

Madonsela's office has no power to enforce recommendations and a failure by Zuma to report to Parliament can trigger action only from that body itself.

In Parliament, the ANC has in turn argued that Madonsela, not Zuma, should approach the institution.

"She [Madonsela] must table the report in Parliament," said ANC chief whip Stone Sizani on Wednesday, giving no indication that the ANC would hold Zuma to any deadline.

Avoidance
ANC national leaders, too, have avoided saying that the matter should come before Parliament.

"All competent institutions" should examine Nkandla, said ANC secretary general Gwede Mantashe shortly after the Madonsela report was released.

Asked whether that included Parliament, he responded: "When we say all, we mean all."

The ANC's bid to avoid Nkandla being raised in Parliament, despite the party's dominance, appears to be rooted in fears of parliamentary privilege. If Zuma was to appear before the National Assembly, the opposition could, in theory, and with good use of protocol, insult, denigrate and jeer the president, while risking nothing more than expulsion.

Ministers said all the security work at Nkandla was necessary. (Gallo)

Expulsion cannot outlast Parliament's term, which technically has already ended because of the elections in May. MPs cannot be held liable for defamation or legally pursued for what is said in the chamber.

Keeping the ANC itself separate from the workings of the executive government is also an apparent, if not necessarily formal, objective of the master plan.

Threat of revolt
Although hardline supporters of Zuma hold the reins of national party structures, some regions have long threatened revolt; Gauteng in particular has been of concern to top officials, and cases of Zuma being booed have done nothing to reassure them of the loyalty of the region's ordinary members.

The party's approach to placating those who wonder why the ANC is so intent on protecting Zuma has been as simple: separate the president from the party, and the party from the government it controls.

The message, which has been officially disclaimed, is that any undue benefit Zuma may have derived from the Nkandla project, and any action or inaction by Zuma himself, was either in his personal capacity or as president of the country. So, if any action is to be taken against him, it should not be disciplinary action by the party.

Likewise, although current and former Cabinet ministers have been found directly culpable by the Madonsela report and implicated by the government's own Nkandla report, that should be dealt with at a government level, while the ANC is seen to be pushing for institutional reform and not having to deal with individual missteps.

Consequently, one official ANC statement reads: "The manifesto of the ANC commits our government to intensify the fight against corruption in both the public and private sectors through measures to restrict public servants from doing business and holding public officials individually liable for losses arising from corrupt actions."

Finesse required
The position requires a great deal of finesse: it must suggest that the ANC is not in day-to-day charge of the state during an election campaign (in which it is claiming credit for the achievements of the state), while also taking responsibility for the broader workings of the state.

The aim of separating the party and the state is to paint the failure of the ANC to call Zuma to account, or to institute any internal action against its top leaders, as a noble effort to stand aside and let state processes play out.

ANC chief whip Stone Sizani says Thuli Madonsela must present her report to Parliament. (Gallo)

Another part of the overall strategy is to exploit the Madonsela report, rather than trying to discredit it and running the risk of being seen as opposed to the much-admired office of the public protector.

Since November 2013, the government's Nkandla report, compiled at the behest of Public Works Minister Thulas Nxesi, has been set up as a counterweight to the public protector's findings.

Despite the stark differences in the reports, the ANC, in various forums, and the government have both portrayed the Madonsela report as bolstering the government's own.

Corrective action in progress
The ANC has also claimed that the recommendations made by Madonsela have been overtaken, because, on the basis of the government report, corrective action is already being taken.

The next step, not yet implemented, is to have the differences between the reports adjudicated by "competent institutions of state", in the words of the ANC.

But there is an ongoing debate about whether the courts would be a "safe" venue for adjudication if it comes to that.

In what may be preparation for a last-ditch effort, the ANC is also clearly preparing Nkandla scapegoats, individuals who can be dealt with harshly and with public consequences if pre-election public sentiment should demand it.

Police commissioner Riah Phiyega, to date untouched by the Marikana massacre, appears to be first on the list, but it remains unclear (and undecided) whether an apology from her would be considered sufficient.

Other potential victims present varying degrees of inherent danger but at least five – the potential scapegoats – have been left exposed.

But the party has previously shied away from sacrificing those found in serious breach of their duties by the public protector, and even those who have served jail time for dishonesty.

For example, former communications minister Dina Pule is almost certainly assured a seat in the next Parliament, despite Madonsela's adverse findings concerning her.
The potential scapegoats

There are many individuals who could be sacrificed on the altar of public outrage if the ANC finds it is not weathering the Nkandla storm as well as it might have hoped.

Although the party's selection of scapegoats often seems random to outsiders, these are the most likely candidates – higher than the level of mere pawns, but lower in the political food chain than security-cluster ministers.

Riah Phiyega, police commissioner
Although the ANC has expressed no official displeasure with ministers who misled the public on Nkandla, it is angry that Phiyega presented the Nkandla swimming pool as a "fire pool", and has called for action against her.

Minenhle Makhanya, Nkandla architect
With R16.5-million in Nkandla fees pocketed, and identified by the public protector as closely correlated with escalating costs, Makhanya is certainly in the crosshairs. But the uncomfortably small distance between him and Zuma may be cause for hesitation.

Geoff Doidge, former minister of public works
The beauty of Doidge as a scapegoat is that he genuinely was directly involved in Nkandla, and was ultimately responsible for much of the money spent on it. The political beauty, though, is that Doidge in effect already in exile as ambassador to Sri Lanka.

Thandeka Nene of Bonelena and Pamla Mfeka of Moneymine
The companies were the recipients of the bulk of the money spent on Nkandla, and a government finding has already all but accused the two of them of price-gouging.

Vejaynand Ramlakan, former surgeon general
Ramlakan was closely associated with the healthcare of former president Nelson Mandela, and the ANC still treads lightly when it comes to the military. On the other hand, Ramlakan is no longer serving in his post, and energetically defended health-related spending at Nkandla. He is reportedly already facing an internal investigation.
Possible mutiny over the bounty

A handful of individuals hold the power to change the course of the Nkandla story radically. It would require them to step well outside their historical ­comfort zones, but each has enough motive, just maybe, to make the leap, and leave the ANC strategy in tatters.

Thabo Mbeki
The Democratic Alliance shouts it from the rooftops, but within ANC ranks it is a quiet murmur. But there is an unmistakable nostalgia for the power-centralising days of the Mbeki administration. Taking a strong stand on the Nkandla scandal could help the former president to repair his legacy and, if he provided the direction, many would follow.

Cyril Ramaphosa
Patience, so the internal party wisdom goes, will result in ANC deputy president Ramaphosa becoming president in five years' time. But Zuma's deputy cannot be blind to the fact that he will inherit a party much weakened by another Zuma term, nor can he ignore the fate of Deputy President Kgalema Motlanthe, who had his faith rewarded with only the most abbreviated of terms in the top job. Going against the party line would earn Ramaphosa much long-term trouble, and the example made (including by himself as head of the ANC disciplinary committee) of Julius Malema is still fresh. But that risk is balanced against the consequences of inaction, and if those consequences continue to grow, Ramaphosa may find rebellion looking attractive.

Gwede Mantashe
The secretary general of the ANC wields enormous power in the party. To many an apparatchik, he embodies the party to a greater extent than does Zuma and the protective instinct he feels towards the ANC is powerful. If he made a plea for Zuma to be ousted for the good of the party, his nominal boss would have at least a fair fight on his hands.

Sheep turned vicious: Minenhle Makhanya, Geoff Doidge, et al
Architect Minenhle Makhanya knows where the bodies are buried. Even the public protector seems to believe that Makhanya took orders directly from Zuma. Former public works Minister Geoff Doidge, too, could link Zuma directly to spending decisions, and both may just be in possession of hard evidence. If they, or others in their position, find themselves led to the slaughter, they may not go down without a fight.
Some of the biggest mistakes of Nkandla

Before the ANC evidently took control of Nkandla strategy, there were what, with hindsight, serious mistakes in their handling of the Nkandla scandal. The most notable include:

Going for secrecy
Initially insisting that everything about Nkandla – the costs, the nature of the upgrades, the contractors involved, the legal authority used – must be kept secret backfired spectacularly. Instead of a single scandal it turned Nkandla into a multiyear striptease, renewing outrage with every new revelation. It also made several flip-flopping ministers into laughing stocks, and provided clear evidence that "because it might embarrass us" is reason enough for a top-secret classification.

Going for transparency
Secrecy was counterproductive, but transparency had its own problems. During the course of 2013 it became clear that South Africa would not accept the findings of the government's own investigation into Nkandla from the interministerial task team while the actual report was kept secret. But making the report public made it untenable to continue arguing that underlaying documents demanded through the Promotion of Access to Information Act had to remain secret. In releasing those documents to the M&G Centre for Investigative Journalism, the department of public works provided a treasure trove of official information that continues to undermine the official Nkandla narrative. The publication of those documents also made it impossible to continue to argue that the same documents were too secret to give to the public protector, removing one of the hurdles Thuli Madonsela faced in completing her work.

'Everyone is out to get us'
For years the government, the presidency, various ministers and the ANC have accused the media of manufacturing the Nkandla story, misinterpreting it, or otherwise doing wrong by the people of South Africa. Then Thuli Madonsela joined in, the ANC line still goes, timing her report to influence upcoming elections. Then there were the accusations of racism, and classism: the word "compound" betrayed racist sentiments, presidential spokesperson Mac Maharaj declared. Zuma told Parliament: "You believe that people like me cannot build a home." The sentiments were loyally echoed by loyal ANC members, but outside the party the claims of victimhood rang very hollow indeed.

Wishing the problem away
Attempts at starving the Nkandla story of new information failed as the department of public works sprang leaks. Attempts at playing for time and hoping the other side would walk away failed. The public protector persisted for two years, the media for four. Most spectacular, though, was the attempt to take Nkandla out of the spotlight through coercion. Publishing pictures of Nkandla may be illegal, State Security Minister Siyabonga Cwele said in November 2013, and media outlets should stop doing so. Every major daily newspaper in the country led with a picture of Nkandla the next day and the strange new policy was immediately abandoned. – Additional reporting by Sapa


It is the story that would define a presidency. Phillip de Wet pulls together four years of reporting about Nkandla into a compelling e-book, now available for $2.99 from Amazon.com and authorised Paperight outlets.

Nkandla: The racist compound

26 MAR 2014 07:14 PHILLIP DE WET

On Friday, the Mail & Guardian will publish "Nkandla: The Great Unravelling" as an e-book. In this excerpt: how an ordinary word was turned racist.



COMPOUND: (noun)
an open area enclosed by a fence, for example around a factory or large house or within a prison
(South African) area containing single-sex living quarters for migrant workers, especially miners.

It must have seemed a good idea at the time, in the heat of battle, as it were. "She's called the president's house a 'compound', a word used for hostels and migrant workers," said presidential spokesperson and firebrand Mac Maharaj during what amounted to a live debate with Democratic Alliance leader Helen Zille. "She'd never use that for a white person's home."

It was an absurdity he would come to regret.

Why Maharaj decided to go on air on Talk Radio 702 alongside Zille in early November 2012 is in and of itself an interesting question. In the years before, and in the time since, Maharaj, the presidency and the government as a whole had been largely unavailable for questions, never mind debate. Government departments refused to provide information, politicians dodged questions, and President Jacob Zuma ignored the issue altogether.

But by the last quarter of 2012, the strategy of ignoring the issue was wearing thin. It was time to fight back – not with facts and figures, but with emotion.

On November 5 2012, Maharaj took to the airwaves to decry Zille and her party as racist. Ten days later, Zuma expressed much the same sentiment (though far more obliquely) during a memorable question session in Parliament when the president spoke, in a tone alternating between outrage and disappointment, about how aggrieved he felt, and how he took exception to some of the questions being asked about Nkandla.

"People are speaking without knowing, saying I have spent so much of the government's money. I have never done so," railed Zuma. "It is unfair, but I do not want to use harsher words, because you believe that people like me cannot build a home."

It was a new spin on an old approach. Over the years various government departments, the ANC, and the presidency itself, had some success – mixed though it was – with the shoot-the-messenger approach: Nkandla was a creation of a tjatjarag (overeager) media.

Coverage of Nkandla was born into antagonism, three years before racism came into it directly, and the approach rarely wavered, although the details changed from instance to instance. The media were out to get Zuma, embarrass him, weaken the ANC, support the political opposition, were disrespectful of traditional values, urban-centric, lying, misrepresenting, misunderstanding, breaking various laws, and generally acting in a fashion unbecoming.

As evidence mounted, some of the specific accusations fell away, but the underlying theme continued in statements to Parliament, in media statements, and in speeches: on Nkandla, the media were being unfair.

Now, however, the media and the opposition were being racist, or – should one strain to interpret Zuma's words as not dealing with race – dismissive of a man from a rural backwater without much in the way of formal education.

In hindsight, it was an approach doomed to failure.

Three years into the story, Zuma's primary defence was still ignorance, and that was starting to look mighty disingenuous. In his parliamentary answer, Zuma again said he did not know how much various aspects of the Nkandla project had cost, that he simply did not know where the money had gone, just shy of three years after the first questions had been raised.

As an academic paper on the coverage of Nkandla would put it in early 2014, to maintain such ignorance "over the time span of the coverage is scarcely becoming but also unconvincing. Why, it must be asked, did [Zuma] not address his ignorance in order to make a public statement consistent with the responsibilities of his office?"

Bringing race into the mix would, in and of itself, also be neither becoming nor convincing. Adding race on top of ignorance just compounded the mistrust.

Timing and context aside, choosing "compound" as the exemplar of racist motivation was also ill-advised, as Maharaj would soon discover.

Had it remained just a passing comment, made off the cuff in a medium that is more transient than most, the "compound' debacle would not have been all that embarrassing to Maharaj and Zuma. Then the South African Broadcasting Corporation (SABC) came to the party.

"You are hereby notified that, with immediate effect, President Zuma's Nkandla home should be referred to as the President's, or Mr Zuma's, 'Nkandla residence', and not a 'compound' or 'homestead' or any other such term," read a memo issued to staff by SABC head of news Jimi Matthews, shortly after Maharaj decried the term, and leaked almost immediately. "Please also refrain from using imported terminology in reporting on the controversy surrounding the infrastructural developments around the residence, such as 'Nkandlagate', 'Zumaville' and such like."

On "Nkandlagate", Matthews had a point. In analysis and interpretive journalism it is great, and entirely justified shorthand, but for a news organisation that has old-school ideas about objectivity it could be troublesome. But on "compound" and "homestead", it looked as though the SABC was taking marching orders from the presidency, letting Maharaj police its language. With political influence invariably suspected, and over the years occasionally plainly observed at the SABC, the combination was unfortunate.

The SABC, like just about every news outfit that ever touched the issue, had used "compound" in many instances for many years before November 2012 to refer to Nkandla. So, a quick review of government documents showed, had the government itself. The department of rural development and land reform had not shied away from using the term when speaking about clusters of dwellings, the department of public works had happily referred to the "security compound" that forms part of Nkandla, the term had been used in Parliament to refer to Nkandla, as well as to high-end gated communities, and so on and so forth.

If Maharaj had expected sympathy from the public, or self-censorship from the media, he must have been greatly disappointed. In comments online, letters to editors, in calls to radio stations and idle conversation far and wide, there was either outrage at what was seen as a cynical ploy to divert the Nkandla debate, at the SABC's pliant attitude, or just general mirth at such a ham-fisted bit of spin.

And a few months later, even the ANC started quietly reintroducing the phrase "Nkandla compound" in its daily roundup of news, as the communications strategy shifted from ignorance and victimhood to innocence – an approach that would not be without its bumps and false starts either.

This is an edited excerpt from Nkandla: The Great Unravelling, a Mail & Guardian long-form ­journalism project to be published as an e-book on Kindle and other major platforms on March 28.

IFAISA objects to Zuma's presidential candidacy

30 MAR 2014 19:01 LISA STEYN

The Institute for Accountability in Southern Africa has lodged an official objection to Jacob Zuma's candidacy for presidency in the May elections.



The Institute for Accountability in Southern Africa (IFAISA) lodged an official objection to President Jacob Zuma's candidacy for the presidency with the Independent Electoral Commission (IEC) on Sunday.

"We don't know of a precedent where the presidential candidate was objected to," the institute's director Paul Hoffman told the Mail & Guardian. "We are venturing into unchartered territory."

In an email addressed to the IEC , the institute objected to the ANC selecting Zuma as the party's number one candidate for the May 7 general elections. 

The grounds for the objection are set out in the open letter, which was sent to the secretary general of the ANC, Gwede Mantashe, on March 27 and called for the ruling party to "walk the walk" on anti-corruption and recall Zuma as the party's presidential candidate .

The institute said Zuma was unfit to be the country's leader based on the public protector's findings that he had unduly benefitted from work done at his private residence in Nkandla, KwaZulu-Natal. It said Zuma's appointment as president, given the current circumstances, is "indistinguishably irrational". 

"We would urge you and your colleagues on the national executive committee (NEC) of the ANC to reconsider the implications of persisting with JZ [Jacob Zuma] as your presidential candidate in the forthcoming elections and to give serious attention to recalling him as presidential candidate if he does not opt to voluntarily resign," the institute said in the letter. 

The IFAISA requested Mantashe to respond to the letter after the ANC's NEC meeting over the weekend. Speaking to reporters on the sidelines of the NEC meeting on Saturday in Cape Town, ANC spokesperson Jackson Mthembu said the findings of the Nkandla report would be on the agenda. 

ANC yet to respond
In lodging its objection with the IEC, the institute said: "This objection is lodged ex abundanti cautela [from excessive caution] as the ANC is still considering the attached letter and has not yet responded substantively to it."

ANC NEC member Lindiwe Zulu said she was not aware of the letter or the objection lodged with the IEC.

"When they sent it [the letter] on Thursday we were busy with the NEC meeting, we were all in Cape Town. There is nothing we can say about it until we hear from the person they have addressed it to. I can't respond to something we have not seen."

Zulu said she will likely see the letter on Monday morning during a briefing.

Hofmann said he was hoping the ANC would do the right thing. 

He said their objection is that Zuma is compromised and conflicted and cannot be a candidate for the presidency when there are a number of criminal charges laid against him.

The institute as well as the Democratic Alliance and the Economic Freedom Fighters laid criminal charges against following the report's release.

'Alive to possibility'
"Jacob Zuma is eligible to be on the list, our complaint is he shouldn't be number one on the list."

Technically speaking, Hoffman said, Zuma is eligible to be a member of Parliament because he has never been found guilty of any crime or sentences, nor is he insolvent or insane. 

The IEC's deadline to object to a candidate is Tuesday 1 April. The commission will rule on objections on Monday 7 April.

Hoffman said he was "alive to the possibility" that the matter may be something which can be dealt with after the elections. 

"It may be argued that the appropriate forum in which to object to the presidential candidacy of Jacob Zuma, as the ANC's number one candidate, is the electoral college presided over by the chief justice [or another judge designated by him], which is constitutionally convened at the first meeting of the newly elected National Assembly," He said. 

When the chief justice adjudicates on any objection, which is lodged in the forum over which he presides, he may wish to be informed as to whether an objection was lodged with the IEC in relation to the place given to Zuma on the ANC list of candidates. 

"This is that objection," Hoffman said.

The institute has requested the IEC for copies, should it rule on the objection. It has also asked for detailed reasons in the case a commissioner recuses himself or herself from the adjudication. 

IEC spokesperson Kate Bapela said she could only confirm on Monday as to whether the commission had indeed received the complaint. Bapela did not respond to further questions about whether other objections against Zuma's candidacy had been received.

Land bank sues ANC heavyweights

MAR 31, 2014 | SAPA

The state-owned Land Bank has brought a claim against several ANC heavyweights, high-ranking government officials and property mogul Roux Shabangu, The Sunday Independent reports.




This was in a bid to recoup an unauthorised R82 million loan it granted them for a bungled North West development.

The development was proposed as a huge tourism attraction in the Hartbeespoort area, with a hotel, conference centre, shopping centre and more than 400 sectional title units, the paper said.

But eight years after Westside Trading 570 signed the contract, the land was still vacant and had not been sold, the company was in liquidation, and the Land Bank was demanding its multi-million rand loan back with interest.

According to papers filed in the High Court in Pretoria, Westside Trading had failed to make payment of the R82m by the end of April 2009.

Summons was issued against the company and its nine directors, who stood surety and were co-principal debtors.

Shabangu, Gauteng legislature speaker Lindiwe Maseko, department of co-operative governance and traditional affairs chief operations officer Lydia Sebego, and former SABC board member Desmond Golding are among the nine shareholders in the company, the paper reported.

Golding sits on the ANC's economic transformation committee and Cosatu's panel of progressive economists.

Nkandla: What are the odds of Zuma ... ?

Andrew Donaldson
30 March 2014


Andrew Donaldson runs through the betting on how the President will respond to the PP's report


PRESIDENT Jacob Zuma has until Wednesday to officially respond to the damning allegations contained in Public Protector Thuli Madonsela's report on the security upgrades at his Nkandla home.

At the time of writing there was no indication what Zuma will be telling Parliament about the scandal that has been described by one veteran political commentator as being "more outrageous and despicable by far" than both Watergate and Muldergate. 

Which is a good thing as far as the more sporting of the Mahogany Ridge regulars are concerned; they've opened a book on what could happen in the coming week. 

There's even money, for example, that the Presidency, the Cabinet security cluster, and the ruling party will request and be granted more time to "process" the contents of Madonsela's comprehensive report. Like until after the elections.

Fancy your chances on Zuma apologising and begging forgiveness for having embarrassed the country with his shameless greed and amorality and announcing the terms in which he will repay the estimated R16.8-million he owes for the swimming pool, kraal and chicken run, and the non-security-related what-have-you? Odds have been pegged at 500 to one.

Another outside possibility is that MPs will gather on Tuesday and, instead of responding to Madonsela's findings, Zuma will remind the National Assembly that it is April Fool's Day and then sing about his mshini being a bit on the warm side. Odds here are 250 to one.

Chances are good, however, that elements of the construction sector who colluded with various corrupt mid-level civil servants will take the rap for the scandal. 

Odds here have shortened to five to two now that the SA Communist Party's Jeremy Cronin, muttering darkly about "rent-seeking" behaviour and "crony capitalism", has alluded to this sort of unscrupulous behaviour in a recent article for the SACP's Umsebenzi Online. 

It does beggar belief, though, that a naive government could be taken to the cleaners to the extent that a R27-million upgrade mushroomed into a R250-million publicity disaster. 

Madonsela has described this as an "unconscionable" over-run - yet no-one involved in the project bothered to ask any questions. 

Zuma did, though. He must have. But not those sort of questions. "The principal", as he was referred to in the report, received many updates from his architect on the extensive upgrades at his home. He paid several visits to the work site. He issued instructions about the changes he wanted.

And all the while he never once noticed the extravagance around him?

But, being the clever communist, Cronin didn't dwell too long on such matters and was soon expressing concern with what he termed the "problematic aspects [with Madonsela's] media-reliant stage-managing" of her report's release.

"Most interest in this report obviously has to do with whose particular homestead Nkandla happens to be," he wrote. "That's inevitable. Opposition political parties are seeking (why wouldn't they?) to personalise Nkandla in a narrowly reductive way for electoral purposes. Much media commentary has followed suit, producing a tabloid tale of hero and villain, David and Goliath."

You see? Those narrowly reductive ways? How clever of Cronin to understand that, at heart, politicians are base opportunists who take advantage of their opponents' misfortunes. 

As for grubby journalists? Well, here again is that rare insight. Consider how Cronin deftly picked up that hero/villain trope. It was, admittedly, a bit unsophisticated and one dimensional of us and yet another indictment of our shallow, middlebrow trade. So, our bad and we promise to do better next time.

But here's the thing: if it seems a bit David and Goliath-ish, that's because there really is a David and Goliath aspect to this mess. Honest. 

Consider the attacks on Madonsela. The ANC and its affiliates have gone out of their way to undermine trust in her office. The party's parliamentary caucus has accused her of failing in her legal mandate in a manner that bordered on political posturing. Elsewhere, ANC-aligned lawyers, prosecutors and trade unions intend launching a Durban High Court action to set aside Madonsela's report. 

Most objectors point to the fact that the Public Protector must report directly to Parliament and, as Cronin put it, "not particularly second hand, via a media exclusive preview lock-up, a media conference, and much prior leaking and tweeting."

But so what? The report is out, and has been for ten days now. Maybe the government and the ANC should just deal with its contents. But they won't. Shame, but they don't believe that they have, in their flawed leader, a bit of a liability on their hands.

This article first appeared in The Weekend Argus.