Henry Srebrnik, [Summerside, PEI] Journal Pioneer
On July 18, Nelson Mandela turned 95. Although he left office in 1999, after serving five years as South Africa’s first democratically elected president, he has remained the conscience of the country and a man beloved throughout the world. He has been a unifying symbol of the “rainbow” nation.
How will South Africa fare after he is
gone? Will it remain, two decades after the dismantling of white-minority rule
and legally-entrenched apartheid, and as the most industrialized state on the
continent, a beacon of hope, or might it slide into ethnic conflict and
dictatorship – the fate of so many other states in Africa?
The transition from white-only to majority
rule was carefully managed and thus the country did not fall into chaos. The
interim constitution, in place from 1994 to 1997, introduced an entrenched bill
of rights, and created a Constitutional Court with broad powers of judicial
review.
In any new country – and post-apartheid South Africa was effectively
just that -- individual leaders have played important roles. They set the
“rules of the game” and provide the state with a new political culture. In
general, they can either enhance democracy and state legitimacy or undermine it
through corruption and excessive preoccupation with power, which often leads to
dictatorial rule.
Fortunately for South Africa, Mandela’s absolute commitment to democracy
kept post-apartheid South Africa on a democratic path. Although the African
National Congress (ANC), the organization Mandela headed for decades, has won
every election since 1994 by overwhelming majorities, elections have been free
and fair and opposition parties have had full opportunity to contest them.
Mandela’s
successor was Thabo Mbeki, like Mandela a member of the Xhosa national group.
During Mbeki’s time in office between 1999 and 2008 he created employment in
the middle sectors of the economy and oversaw a fast-growing Black middle class.
He expanded trade with other rising powers such as Brazil, Russia, India, and
China, the so-called BRIC nations.
However, Mbeki was criticized for his failure
to denounce Robert Mugabe’s dictatorial rule in neighbouring Zimbabwe, and,
according to some observers, he grew remote, paranoid and autocratic while in
power. His ongoing clashes with his own deputy president, Jacob Zuma, who had
been accused of corruption, fraud and rape, led the ANC’s executive in 2007 to
remove Mbeki as party leader. Instead, Zuma was nominated by the party as its
presidential candidate in 2009 and won the presidency.
The country’s first Zulu president, Zuma has
battled controversies throughout his career. He has been reproached for
introducing Zulu nationalism into a party that prides itself on rising above
tribalism. Then there were the allegations of money-laundering and
racketeering, stemming from a controversial $5 billion 1999 arms deal; Zuma was
charged with enriching himself in the procurement of arms for the country by
accepting bribes while he was deputy president under Mbeki. However, the
charges were thrown out just weeks before the election which saw him become
president.
Zuma has also faced repeated investigations
over $27 million in government money spent on security upgrades to his private
residence in his home village of Nkandla, in KwaZulu-Natal province. Not
surprisingly, he has failed to tackle increasing corruption among members of
the ANC at all levels, from government members to local councilors.
While some people were getting rich, life remains very hard for the majority of Black South Africans. The unemployment rate averages 25 per cent but twice that among young Black workers. Whites, just 10 per cent of the population of 48 million people, earn on average six times as much as Blacks. About 40 per cent of the population survives on less than $2 a day, nearly a quarter are without electricity, and nearly a fifth are without proper sanitation facilities.
South Africa has one of the greatest divides between haves and have-nots anywhere in the world. But Black-empowerment schemes to redress apartheid’s injustices have been widely abused to enrich ANC-linked people, including Zuma’s relatives. Meanwhile the economy is floundering.
In
August 2012 miners went on strike at the Marikana platinum mine in the nation’s
northwest. The strike turned violent, and police opened fire on demonstrators,
killing 34 workers. An additional 10 people died in the protests, including two
police officers. Working and living conditions were terrible, as was the pay.
Deadly violence, illegal strikes and union infighting have continued
to plague South Africa’s platinum belt since last year’s deadly strikes. This
past June, a union official was killed and another injured in shootings at the
Marikana mine.
Thousands of truckers have also staged strikes, threatening supplies of fuel and food. But since 1994 the ANC has overwhelmingly won every election and controls two-thirds of the seats in Parliament. The opposition Democratic Alliance is still largely perceived as “too white.”
None of this bodes well as the country faces a future without the
stabilizing inspiration of Nelson Mandela.
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