Fast Facts No 8 August 2008 - Politics
THE CHARMING MAN AND HIS MACHINE GUN
Jacob Zuma needs to clarify his stance on the use of violence to advance his cause, whether in next year’s election or at any other time.
Even in the US, where the right to bear arms is so fiercely
defended, there would be outrage if the supporters of Barack Obama or
John McCain went around chanting for the
hero’s machine guns to be brought to them as they campaigned for the
presidency.
Yet here in South Africa the chants of Jacob Zuma’s supporters have by
now been taken as a given and generally shrugged off. Mr Zuma’s various
efforts to re-assure farmers in the Free State, poor white communities
in Pretoria, and business groups abroad have all but eclipsed the
‘bring me my machine gun’ war cry.
Why? Does nobody take Zuma’s war cry seriously? Not even when some of
his leading lieutenants threaten to kill for the revolution, which in
practice means kill for him? The Human Rights Commission, the supposed
public watchdog against this kind of thing, was too
cowardly to draw the required line in the sand. In effect, it condoned
the killing talk.
One of the Zuma supporters up before the Human Rights Commission was Mr
Zwelinzima Vavi, general secretary of the Congress of South African
Trade Unions, some of whose affiliates have a track record of killing.
Vavi himself used killing talk during the security strike in which some
60 nonstrikers were killed two years ago. On his recent repeat of
killing talk, he said merely that he regretted that it offended ‘some
people’s sensitivities’.
Mr Julius Malema, leader of the ANC youth league and another Zuma
supporter, has been threatening to ‘intensify the struggle to eliminate
the remnants of counter-revolution, which include the DA [Democratic
Alliance]’ and others seeking to prevent Zuma from becoming president
of the country.
These are menacing words at any time, but especially ominous with an
election due in less than a year’s time. Thuggery in language can
easily slide into thuggery on the ground, and into thuggery in
government.