For fifteen years South Africans have been able to freely elect their government. But many communities, such as that in Sakhile outside Standerton, behave as if the ANC is an illegitimate regime. These communities are increasingly resorting to violence to get the Government’s attention. In most cases they turn to violence despite the legitimate democratic channels that are open to them to address their grievances. The government and the ANC are therefore quite correct not to tolerate such lawlessness and to deploy the security forces to crack down hard on any community that threatens violence against the State.
The residents of Sakhile township near Standerton in Mpumalanga
must go home. They must remove the barricades they have put up in the
streets and return their township to normality. If they do not then the
State must bring the full might of the law to bear on them. The manner
of their violent protest of recent weeks has little legitimacy in a
democracy like South Africa. They voted for the Government they got and
until the next election must live with the consequences of that
choice.
The ANC is not an illegitimate regime
foisted on Sakhile. Counting all national and local government
elections the Sakhile residents have voted for an ANC Government 7
times in the last 15 years. The last national election was only six
months ago! That is an unambiguous mandate that the residents of that
township have chosen the people and the type of Government that they
want to live under.
But for the last three weeks those
same voters have been leading violent and anarchic protests against
this same Government. These have effectively shut down parts of
Standerton and caused great damage to public buildings, private
businesses, and the local economy. The violent nature of their protest
has been reported in the international media to show South Africa as
being plagued by public violence and anarchy. Standing among armoured
personnel carriers television journalists are broadcasting from 'safety
zones' outside the township and reporting that they 'may go in tonight'
as if they were reporting from some far off war zone. Soon they will be
wearing bullet proof vests and helmets creating the impression of South
Africa as being anything but the democracy that it
is.
The residents of Sakhile seek to
justify their conduct on the grounds that their local council is
corrupt and has not provided them with the services they were promised.
But these are not grounds for public violence.
If the residents are aware of
corruption in the township they must open cases with the police. If the
police do not act they must complain to the Independent Complaints
Directorate. If they are not happy with service delivery they must
complain to their ward councillor. If that does not help they must
write a letter to their MP. They can even gather for peaceful public
meetings or marches. If that does not work they can now even phone the
presidential hotline and complain. If the hotline staff do not help
them that is tough because this is all the action our democracy
allows.
Nowhere in the Constitution is there
a plan B clause that says that if you are not happy with the Government
you voted for you may engage in all sorts of mayhem and public violence
in order to get what you want. There is no justification for Sakhile
residents to burn down government buildings, throw stones at the
police, blockade public roads, or destroy private businesses. They
cannot demand that if the councillors that they voted for do not step
down they will cause more anarchy and violence. Nor can they threaten
violence if the president does not immediately and personally attend to
their grievances.
Before 1994 when South Africa was
ruled by an illegitimate white regime such action may have been
justified. The majority of the people had no say in how they were
governed. They had every right to resist the government that was thrust
upon them. The legitimacy of such action ceased in 1994 when for the
first time South Africans were led by a Government of their choosing.
The free and fair nature of that election, and of each of the following
six elections, disqualified the citizenry from resorting to violent
means or threats to change their Government.
Our democracy only has a plan A
clause which allows its citizens to access all manner of democratic
institutions to address their grievances. Where these do not adequately
address the concerns of citizens they have the opportunity every few
years to vote. In just under two year’s time there will be another such
opportunity at local government level. That is the one and only
occasion at which citizens can enforce a change in who governs them.
They do so in a peaceful and orderly way by making a cross on a piece
of paper and they live with the consequences of that decision until the
next election comes along. That the Sakhile residents live in squalor
while their representatives in the Government allegedly steal from them
is the fault of those same residents. They returned their local council
and national representatives to power election after election even
though they must have been aware of how little those same officials and
representatives were doing for them. If all other democratic avenues
are closed to Sakhile's residents they must wait for the
2011 local government elections and then vote for an opposition party
of which there are many. If they do not want to do that then they must
stay at home in their shacks and their RDP houses because our democracy
offers them no other options.
While the Sakhile residents
effectively squandered the power inherent in their vote they now behave
as if they can resort to plan B. This is not only a problem in Sakhile
but in hundreds of small towns across the country. It is also a growing
problem which undermines democratic institutions and is starting to
represent a threat to the rule of law. The State must not tolerate such
public anarchy. The Government is therefore justified in deploying the
security services to crack down on any looting and public violence.
They should indentify the agitators and instigators behind such
violence and arrest them. Communities, no matter how poor, must accept
that apartheid ended 15 years ago and with it any right they may have
had to threaten violence against the State. They must realize that if
they use extra-constitutional means to change their government they
will be met by the full might of the law.
This is not the first time that this
column is left to conclude how peculiar it is that a country and people
that suffered so much for the right to vote have been so reluctant to
employ that hard won right. It seems that many would rather resort
to the violence and anarchy of the past and threaten the very
democracy they fought so hard to create.
-
Frans Cronje
demogracy as it shouldn't be
How does one find out who your MP is, in order to write a letter to him?
There is hardly a similarity between the unelected deployments to parliament (by elected political parties) in SA, and systems where there is a real, elected constituency MP one can write to, that attends to the day-to-day business of democracy.