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By William Saunderson-Meyer

Journalist


ANC government is in power, but not in charge

President intervenes to order Eskom to move from a wage freeze to a starting offer of 7%, but at any costs to end the strike.


State power can be less impressive than it seems. When tested, it is surprisingly brittle and illusory. In tandem with the decline in its electoral fortunes and a president who, by nature, is cautious to the point of timidity, we are seeing an ANC government that is increasingly reluctant, or unable, to exercise the legitimate security powers upon which depend the survival of SA as a functioning state.

Another factor is the uncomfortable truth those who are literally destroying the infrastructural fabric of the country are disaffected former supporters from the ANC’s biggest political constituency, black Africans.

It’s one thing for the minister of police to order the arrest of the bikinied blondes on Clifton beach during the lockdown. Quite another for him to respond forcefully against criminality that appears to be fomented by militants within the black nationalist radical economic transformation faction of his own party.

Last year, President Cyril Ramaphosa’s administration showed fatal levels of paralysis when the riots broke out in KwaZulu-Natal and Gauteng. Recent events are a further reminder that the power it can exercise is limited.

Last month, an illegal blockade by truck drivers closed the N3, the vital link between the Gauteng economic hub with the country’s major port, for four days. A few arrests were made but everyone was subsequently released.

And now stage 6 load shedding is to teeter terrifyingly close to a total national blackout. Public Enterprises Minister Pravin Gordhan ascribed these catastrophic levels of load shedding directly to the sabotage of Eskom facilities. So, too, has Eskom CEO André de Ruyter.

It’s been clear that destruction is not only wreaked with the benefit of insider knowledge of the most critical pylons and transformers, but that some of it can only have been carried out by Eskom workers operating on-site.

Despite these Eskom facilities falling under the provisions of the apartheid era’s Key Point legislation, which gives draconian powers to the security services to ensure their safety, there have been no arrests and the sabotage is escalating.

ALSO READ: Eskom strikes: Unions have not rejected 7% wage offer yet – Numsa

Despite the availability of facial-recognition closed-circuit television and biometric access controls, there have been no arrests and the sabotage is escalating. It makes for irresistible and unflattering comparisons.

It is a fact that more damage has been done to Eskom’s power grid in the past year by Eskom workers and disgruntled ANC supporters, than all uMkhonto we Sizwe’s soldiers and agents together managed in almost 50 years of the struggle.

During that period, 25 somewhat ineffectual documented bombings of Eskom pylons took place, for which 29 people were arrested, 14 were charged and 10 were convicted, ultimately serving between five and 15 years in jail. Their disruptions caused not a hiccough to the apartheid economy.

The present government’s impotence, in comparison, is embarrassing. Striking Eskom workers, seeking a double-digit wage increase from a bankrupt power utility that is grossly overstaffed, have ignored a court injunction declaring it an illegal strike and launched violent attacks on workers who have tried to continue to work.

The SA Police Service public order units are “monitoring the situation”. That’s political speak for standing and watching the chaos from a safe distance. The president, in contrast, has been decisive in his intervention.

No, it wasn’t to order arrests or instruct the National Prosecuting Authority to apply for punitive damages orders against the law-flouting unions. It was to order Eskom to move from a wage freeze to a starting offer of 7%, but at any costs to end the strike. That’ll teach them not to break the law.

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African National Congress (ANC) Columns Eskom

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