Its’ amazing how a politician’s words can come back to haunt him or her. Take this remark made by Zuma in September 2008, when Mbeki was ousted; “Once this level of confidence is weakened [by Mbeki], “the ANC has no alternative but to take action”. Well, the wheel has turned. Now it’s just a question of when the party will take action against Msholozi – the potential crowbar’s being tomorrow’s No Confidence parliamentary debate (highly unlikely), or the party’s next congress. Or anything in between. As eloquent as ever, former President Thabo Mbeki, rendered saintly by his successor’s spectacular leadership failures, used all the right headline-grabbing literary phrases in a speech this week. An ‘Age of Hope’ turning to an ‘Age of Despair,’ – even though he doesn’t think we’ve yet reached a ‘tipping point’. Time is rendering his last observation pretty accurate, with people asking just what it will take to breach the carefully constructed moat that Zuma has built around his castle. It’s ironic hearing the man whom Zuma, (after he won the ruthless party political leadership battle), called a ‘dead snake,’ now damning the self-absorbed and self-enriching direction taken by his now fatally compromised successor. And, if you watched the last municipal elections, ambitious politicians queued up to seek some “Mbeki shine,” even arguing among themselves as to who got the most glitter. Forget the man whose AIDS denialism allowed a virtual genocide to take place or the debate as to whether he ever violated an oath of office or the actual rule of law (Satirist Pieter Dirk Uys, still wants to get him before the International Criminal Tribunal on the genocide charge). Denialism it seems, doesn’t come close to dishonesty. – Chris Bateman
By Amanda Khoza
Durban – Former President, Thabo Mbeki, said on Tuesday while the country was in a general crisis, it had not reached tipping point.
“I have argued that our country is immersed in a general crisis. Fortunately we have not as yet arrived at the tipping point when the country becomes ungovernable, with disastrous consequences for black and white, rich and poor and young and old alike,” he said in a prepared speech.
The former head of state was expected to speak at the Sunday Times Top 100 Companies Awards in Johannesburg.
In his speech, Mbeki listed critical issues plaguing the country which included issues of corruption, the looting of state funds and the factional fighting in the ruling party.
Mbeki said the hard reality South Africa faced today “is that our country is trapped in a general and deepening political, economic and social crisis which has, for many, begun to turn what was an Age of Hope into an Age of Despair”.
Mbeki said the country needed honest answers on what needed to be done.
One of the honest answers that needed to be addressed was whether the political leadership mandated through democratic elections with the task of governing our country had lived up to its systemic responsibilities, he said.
The answers to some of the questions were “yes” and “no”.
“It is obvious that over the years, progressively since 1994, therefore including the years when we were in Government, some negative features have emerged in our governing party, the ANC, which the organisation itself has recognised, including disease of the abuse of political power for personal enrichment.”
Mbeki said the ANC could not avoid speaking against the scourge of endemic corruption, the looting of public resources through what it described as ‘tenderpreneurship’, and other forms of theft of public resources.
“The so-called state capture which speaks to the disease of direct control of people in responsible positions in the public sector by particular business interests and the drift of the ANC away from the ordinary working people and its historic task and raison d’etre, established over an entire century, of existing solely for the purpose to serve the interests of the people of our country.”
He said some members of the ANC had spoken up against the use of cash to buy members, as well as the abuse of supposedly independent State institutions to advance individual interests.
Lost respect
Mbeki said the negative tendencies had led to “the gradual loss of respect for and the erosion of the authority of the State and Government which are vitally important in terms of leading our nation a whole. This cannot but lead to social disorder and instability.”
He said South Africans shared common concerns, the low economic growth rates, high levels of unemployment and the high level of inequality.
“The reality is that if we do not do these things, and also fail to address the political challenges we face, the general crisis I have mentioned will get even deeper and more intractable,” he said.
He said any failure to successfully address political, economic and socio-economic “challenges cannot but result in a vicious circle which would lead to a further deepening of the general crisis and therefore a further entrenchment of social instability.”
“It may be that some might think that what I have said is somewhat alarmist. However my view is that we should err on the side of caution rather than take comfort in an attitude of complacency,” said Mbeki.
Mbeki also tackled the Nkandla Constitutional judgment which found that President Jacob Zuma violated the Constitution.
“If Parliament had done what I suggest, honestly and seriously, this would have made the strategic intervention we need to pull the country out of the unhappy political situation in which it is and put us on course to achieve the quality governance system we visualised when we adopted our Constitution 20 years ago,” Mbeki said. – News24
Source: http://www.news24.com/SouthAfrica/News/south-africa-has-not-reached-tipping-point-mbeki-20161108-2