The first casualties of the "plot"
After the presidential "plot", disbelief must accompany the president's statements on many subjects.
IN THE CELEBRATION of South Africa's
new Constitution it was seldom acknowledged that this essentially
liberal democratic document was born from an agreement between two
forces - the National Party and the ANC - whose history and practice
overlapped only in their resolute rejection of liberal democracy. This
could be overlooked because the NP, however belatedly and under duress,
had at last embraced democracy and the ANC had the excuse that its
underground and exile existence had hardly been conducive to democratic
practice. Those who suggested that the ANC's support of the Soviet
invasion of Czechoslovakia and its behaviour over the Quatro camp
atrocities betrayed more deep-seated anti-democratic tendencies were
not heard. With apartheid abolished, universal suffrage adopted and
civil liberties restored surely all parties agreed that they would be
bound by the rules of the new constitutional order?
The events of the past few months have shown that those original
reservations were well founded. The ANC has blocked the Heath unit -
the country's most effective corruption-hunter - from examining the
arms deal, has used the offices of the Public Protector, Prosecutor
General and Speaker for partisan purposes, and has acquiesced in Tony
Yengeni's flagrant defiance of the parliamentary ethics committee.
Taken together with the way former health minister Nkosazana
Dlamini-Zuma and justice minister Penuell Maduna have been protected
from facing the parliamentary consequences of, respectively, the
Sarafina II affair and a wholly unwarranted attack on the
Auditor-General, these acts amount to little less than the rejection of
the constitutional spirit of parliamentary democracy.
On top of that we have the revelation that President Thabo Mbeki has
not only been using the intelligence services to spy on political
rivals but, in addition, that he has maintained a quite separate ANC
intelligence organisation to spy on heaven knows whom. In the United
States these would be impeachable offences. Such abuses have inevitable
consequences for civil liberties. Ask yourself: if you were Cyril
Ramaphosa, Mathews Phosa or Tokyo Sexwale how confident would you feel
that your private mail and phone conversations were secure? Or that you
had not been placed under other forms of surveillance? And if such
leading citizens live under that shadow, where does that leave the rest
of us?
When the occasion suits him, Mbeki says that the ANC is a transparent,
democratic body that welcomes open competition for its posts. Nobody
believes him. Indeed, one would be foolish to do so. Over and over we
have seen the pressure used to prevent such open competition. When
whole provincial executives of the ANC no longer suit the leadership,
it simply dissolves them. Its disrespect for the elective principle
could hardly be more blatant. Local ANC delegates must now be scared of
openly punting their preferences ahead of provincial congresses - let
alone a national congress. Transparency is preached but fear reigns -
and is meant to. The ANC appears to be an authoritarian party
uncomfortably adrift in a liberal constitutional system, a situation
that ensures that an alert Opposition, and even a half-awake media, can
effortlessly score points off it. Thus despite its huge majority, the
government is forever on the defensive.
Speculation about splits in the tripartite alliance along ideological
lines misses the point. One of the saddest recent sights was that of
ANC MP Jeremy Cronin finding reasons why Yengeni should not immediately
account for his assets before the ethics committee. In effect Cronin is
running cover for the primitive accumulation tactics of a new
bourgeoisie, who will be far tougher nuts to crack than the old ones he
so enjoyed opposing. The real choice facing the ANC is whether to be an
open democratic party of a type appropriate to the country's new
political system or an elite party autocratically governed by a
self-designated vanguard. There is no doubt what its voters would
choose.
The first and greatest casualty of this situation has been the
credibility and standing of the president. Having come to power two
years ago on a crest of goodwill, he is now distrusted and ridiculed.
Nor does the harm he has inflicted on himself look reparable. It
already seems hard to imagine three more years of this, let alone eight
more years. Mbeki insists that he wishes to root out corruption, but
look at what has happened with Heath and Yengeni. Disbelief must now
accompany Mbeki's statements on many subjects, perhaps even on his
willingness to uphold the Constitution. For in the presidential "plot",
he has shown us all a glimpse of the cloven hoof. It will not be
forgotten.
