12 Friday April 12, 2013 THOUGHT OF THE DAY A people that values its privileges above its principles soon loses both Former US president Dwight Eisenhower EDITORIAL COMMENT Opportunity lost to support change B Y saying at a commemoration for Chris Hani that we cannot stop blaming apartheid for what is happening in our country today, President Jacob Zuma has effectively negated the tough call to action to civil servants that Trevor Manuel made at a government management forum last week. The president clearly has not taken cognisance of the fact that Manuel struck a chord with the majority of South Africans when he insisted civil servants should be held accountable for service delivery and if they continued on the same trajectory of incompetence, the negative effects of apartheid would never be reversed. Manuel said: “We cannot continue to blame apartheid for our failings as a state. We cannot plead ignorance or inexperience. For almost two decades, the public has been patient in the face of mediocre services. The time for change, for a ruthless focus on implementation has come.” These words gave us hope that our senior political leaders were serious about getting the job done and the tide of arrogance and excuses for failure to serve the people would turn. But in a single speech, the president dampened that glimmer of hope by setting himself in opposition to Manuel. The president’s spin doctors were quick to deny any difference of opinion between Manuel and Zuma. “Stating that the apartheid legacy and impact still exist and will linger on for a long time does not mean that the president is saying that public servants should use it to excuse laziness and incompetence,” the government PR experts said. This translation and explanation of Zuma’s comments, which he should have stated himself, came too late, long after the horse had bolted. The damage had been done. The president has destroyed whatever goodwill came out of Manuel’s call. More is the pity as we can all agree that the vast disparity between black poverty and white wealth was created by apartheid. The president stated the obvious and made no effort to support Manuel by reinforcing what government is, and should be, doing now to end that legacy. That requires strong leadership and a will to deal with incompetent civil servants and politicians. Mr President, by harking on the past, without acknowledging the shortcomings of the present and providing us with the required vision and strong leadership to take us into a better future, you have, sadly, missed a nation-building opportunity. Opinion & analysis FROM THE SCRIPTURES Praise be to the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ! In his great mercy he has given us new birth into a living hope through the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead, and into an inheritance that can never perish, spoil or fade. This inheritance is kept in heaven for you 1 Peter 1:3, 4 – New International Version SA not yet non-racial society I RECENTLY returned from my second trip to South Africa in two years. Although I was once again struck by the enormous array of challenges confronting the nation, I was also taken by the possibilities for change. I had been active in the anti-apartheid movement in the US for many years and, for that reason, I have felt a particular affinity to South Africa for some time. Yet, despite reading extensively on the history and political economy of the country, my understanding of the complex issues facing South Africa was limited. Though I am reluctant to admit it, I had been under the impression that the release of Nelson Mandela followed by the election of 1994, which brought the ANC to power, had set in motion a major transformation in the country. I realise now I was naive about the pace at which change would come. To my surprise and disappointment, I have come to understand that despite the change in political leadership, relatively little has changed for the majority of people, especially those who are poor, black and/or coloured. In my visits to the townships in Cape Town and Port Elizabeth, I have learnt that many people still live under desperate conditions. I have also learnt that large numbers of white people continue to enjoy lives of luxury in all-white enclaves. On both visits I met many white people who complained bitterly about the threat of crime, about corruption and ineptitude in government (they were not the only ones to express these complaints) and who were worried about the future of their country. I also met many white people who said they would never consider living anywhere else. The contrast was striking and disturbing. On several occasions I thought to myself that those who defended apartheid most ardently must now be thinking that if they had known their lives would be this good after the system ended, they would have ended apartheid long ago, and bypassed the ostracism and isolation they endured. Just writing these words forces me to acknowledge that it seems like a cynical perspective and I am generally not a cynical person. However, I am also a pragmatist and I am unwilling to deny what I have seen. However, these disturbing realities have also been offset by other more hopeful observations. During my second visit to NMMU I had the opportunity to share my reflections on the situation in South Africa with students and staff through a series of lectures and presentations on the role of education in South Africa today. These interactions gave me an opportunity to see what South AfriPedro ca was becoming and left me enNoguera couraged. I was struck by the diversity of the student population, the friendships that seemed to exist among students and staff of different backgrounds, and the openness with which they spoke about the challenges facing the country. In each interaction, I shared my observations about how surprised I was to see how little had changed since the end of apartheid. No one I met challenged my observations about the gross inequities and the potential dangers that were simmering, though some did assert that certain aspects of the country had become considerably worse, particularly with respect to the prevalence of violent crime. I also had a chance to visit schools in the townships of Port Elizabeth and Uitenhage. In Langa I came away inspired by the efforts of teachers and community volunteers who were working with limited resources. I was struck by their dedication and their willingness to challenge the public officials who appeared indifferent to the needs of their schools and allowed their teachers to go unpaid for months. When I asked one principal if he was not afraid of losing his job for speaking out, he explained that he would be in even more jeopardy with the community he served if he did not stand with them. I was disappointed by how little had changed since 1994, yet inspired by the efforts of so many I met who were taking action to create a new South Africa now and who refused to wait for the government to lead. There was a steadfast refusal among many progressive academics to acknowledge what I regarded as the obvious racial dimension of many of the problems facing the country. Repeatedly, I was told South Africa had indeed become a “non-racial democracy”, and that the racialised policies and discourse of the apartheid era had to be thoroughly repudiated. I was also told that though new ways of describing the challenges confronting the country had not yet come into being, the old way, which happened to be reflected in my way of thinking and speaking, was certainly a relic of the racist past. As I reflect on these lively discussions and debates about race that I participated in after returning to the US, I find myself more understanding of why such a determined stance in defence of non-racialism has been taken. Like the colleagues I met, I reject the notion of race as a biological concept, rooted in the belief that differences in phenotype are signifiers of inherent differences in intelligence and ability. I also reject the idea of using race as a means to mobilise people politically in a contest that pits one group against others. I have seen the consequences of both forms of racial reasoning and I recognise their inherent dangers. I also understand that the apartheid government used race as a means to divide and rule under the hegemony of white supremacy, and that there is a legitimate peril to be feared in allowing the construct of race to be utilised as an instrument of public policy again. Nonetheless, given the apparent lack of progress in addressing widening disparities that appear at least to some degree racial (of course class is central as well), I am troubled by where the rhetoric of non-racialism will lead when the reality of racial exclusion remains. In the US, we also have experience with at- tempting to move “beyond race” that I think is important for South Africans to learn from. There has been an unrelenting effort to bar public institutions from using race as a category. This challenge is being mounted largely by conservatives, many of whom never supported civil rights in the first place, who now argue that policy should be “colour blind”. As a result of their efforts there has been a steady decline in the enrolment of students from under-represented backgrounds (such as what we call racial minorities) at many major universities. Ignoring race has become a guise for ignoring racial inequality and racial disparities too. The US experience has also shown that when racial patterns are not monitored and recorded, abuses and infringements on rights cannot be addressed. I readily acknowledge that using racial categories presents those of us who want to achieve social progress with a classic catch 22: you’re damned if you use them and damned if you don’t. As a social scientist who has committed most of my professional career to studying societal patterns, I would suggest there are at least three questions that we must answer about race before we can safely reject its use: ý Does race continue to predict life outcomes? ý Does it still affect how we are treated in everyday life? ý Do stereotypes related to race continue to influence how we are seen by others or how we see ourselves? If the answer to these questions continues to be yes, then I suggest that rather than declaring South Africa a non-racial democracy this goal should be regarded as an aspiration the nation is working toward. To treat it as a goal that has been accomplished already simply because it appears in the constitution could result in a failure to recognise how much work remains to be done. Like other important values such as justice and peace, non-racialism is a goal that must be actively pursued in policy and practice, but it would be a mistake to believe that simply by changing our discourse we can declare victory. Pedro Noguera is Peter L Agnew professor of education at Steinhardt School of Culture, Education and Development and executive director of the Metropolitan Centre for Urban Education, New York University. TODAY IN HISTORY MAGDALENE BANGARWEE 1980: Barney Pityana (pictured) forms the Black Consciousness Movement of Azania (BCMA) in London. It uses the Azanian People Organisation (Azapo) as its voice. 1988: Alan Paton, author of Cry, the Beloved Country, dies at 85. 1988: Twenty-five people, including 14 jockeys, are killed in a plane crash outside Welkom. 1989: Anglican Church leaders call for the banning of South Africa from international air routes. Hero of the day You could have done what so many of us do every day – see someone in need, and carry on in the hope that someone else will help. But you didn’t. CONTACT US EDITOR HEATHER ROBERTSON robertsonh@timesmedia.co.za . . . . . . . . . . . DEPUTY EDITOR SAMANTHA SMITH ssmith@timesmedia.co.za . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . POLITICS AND BUSINESS EDITOR NWABISA MAKUNGA makungan@timesmedia.co.za . . . . . . . . . . . NIGHT EDITOR KATHY PATON patonk@timesmedia.co.za . . . . . . . . . . . . . . FEATURES/ ARTS EDITOR BRETT ADKINS badkins@timesmedia.co.za . . . . . . . . . . . . . SPORTS EDITOR ALVIN REEVES reevesa@timesmedia.co.za . . . . . . . . . . . . . LA FEMME EDITOR GILLIAN MCAINSH mcainshg@timesmedia.co.za . . . . . . . . . . . NEWS EDITOR ANGELA GILLHAM gillhama@timesmedia.co.za . . . . . . . . . . . . SUBSCRIPTIONS & DISTRIBUTION KENNETH MCWIRE subspe@timesmedia.co.za . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 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The Editor will, however, consider reasonable requests for the use by others of news reports but it will be a condition of such use that the source and the author of the report are clearly attributed. Complaints about the content of The Herald may be addressed to Susan Stead at e-mail heraldletters@timesmedia.co.za or to tel 041-504 7102. Complaints or unresolved disputes relating to the editorial content may be lodged with the Avusa public editor– e-mail publiceditor@timesmedia.co.za, fax 011-328 2587 – or the SA Press Ombudsman’s Office – PO Box 47221, Parklands, 2121, Johannesburg. Tel 011-484 3612/8, fax: 011-484 3619 If only all ministers were like Aaron Motsoaledi I REMEMBER vividly my first meeting with Dr Aaron Motsoaledi a few years back. It was at an exclusive matric results function organised by the Limpopo provincial government. It was one of those events where you were told what to wear, so that you didn’t end up making the exclusive function look like an end of year celebration for taxi drivers. I was fresh from journalism school and the closest I had ever come to Motsoaledi was listening to him interviewed on Thobela FM. So, it was a big deal when I was finally given the opportunity to meet and interview this giant figure in the province. My editor had explained to me, “Mr Musekwa, we are not lifting any quote from the speech that every journalist would have scrambled for. We mean business and we are not following everyone else.” My then-editor was a very grumpy cadre who expected only the best from us. According to him, tongue firmly in the cheek, I had to grab Motsoaledi by his neck, pin him down and tell him that I had explosives on me, and, that he had to do as I say. I had to interview him on my terms so I could file a story that didn’t look like anyone else’s. To the naive me all this looked like a first-year journalism task. I was going to be the star journalist and my career from that day onwards was only going up. I was going to wear my graduation suit so that I could look presentable to Motsoaledi and not to have him run away thinking I was a petty tsotsi sent there to harm him. I am writing about this living political legend because it’s really rare to find a minister, or any politician for that matter, worth celebrating. At least not in this country. Minister Motsoaledi has been the hardest-working servant of the people of this country since he took his oath of office as minister of health. EP Herald, 12-April-2013 Cyan Page 12 EP Herald, 12-April-2013 Magenta Page 12 This week’s announcement – that those on the anti-retroviral treatment regime will now take just one tablet daily – proved that with hard work, focus and necessary consultation anything is possible, and that we can finally win in the fight against Aids. From the dark old days of denialism, when Thabo Mvuyelwa Mbeki was still running this country like a company, we have really come a long way. But this shouldn’t just be about the ministry of health, but rather something that must inspire all ministries in government. If one thing can be learnt from this, it is that cadre deployment doesn’t work, especially if the cadres are not academically qualified for their portfolios. Motsoaledi is a qualified medical man who isn’t shy to get into the theatre and to do his job. Here is a man who is not just about talk and nothing else. He gets busy and leads by example. I am tired of seeing Jacob Zuma’s government rewarding incompetency, when people can be pushed to work as hard and efficiently as Motsoaledi and his ministry do. No healthy democracy should be having ministers like Dina Pule running failing ministries because of their obvious incompetence. Look at what the SABC has become today, and, with all the evidence on the table, why is the minister of communications still in that position when it is obvious that she is incompetent? Does somebody in Luthuli House owe her a favour? Why then? With our national police commissioner spending most of her time struggling to answer simple questions at the Marikana commission, I ask myself why isn’t she at least suspended until the matter is finalised? I am quite certain that Riah Phiyega, with her academic qualifications and passions, must have something that she can contribute to this country that she is comfortable with. But no, not at the ANC under Zuma where cadres are deployed to toe the line. But at whose expense? The people’s? Can’t this government see that there is something to learn from the efforts of Motsoaledi? And what’s stopping them? Greed? Well, back to my story of meeting Motsoaledi for the first time. Yes, as a guest speaker on the day, he was a marked man as far as we journalists were concerned, with long lenses focused on him, and sharp pens waiting to quote him. As my then editor had advised, I must corner him first before anyone else did. I followed him as he went to the rest-room and told him I needed to do an interview with him. He humbly agreed to meet me outside. Journalists from a certain struggling national broadcaster wanted to steal my thunder because they were on “deadline”. He told them I had been the first in line and that he’d gladly afford them their time afterwards. I was the Rick Ross (top rapper) of journalism that day and indeed felt like a boss. EP Herald, 12-April-2013 Yellow Page 12 EP Herald, 12-April-2013 Black Page 12
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