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Where, in any democracy in the world, can a handful of protestors close down a major urban highway, day after day, without facing arrest? Or, with impunity, blockade an airport; strew faeces in public places, and hurl toilet tanks into oncoming traffic?
Where in any democracy can five “protestors” invite the media to watch them hijack a truck, and force the driver to “jack-knife” across a highway, without any consequences?
The answer is the Western Cape, the only Province in South Africa where the ANC lost a free and fair election. (Watch the video link here).
ANC office bearers openly and regularly announce their intention of “liberating” the province. They have an official name for this project. It is called “Operation Reclaim”. This is ironic, not only because the Western Cape government was elected by a majority of its voters, but because, according to all official statistics, the poor get much better services in the Western Cape than in any ANC-run province.
Operation Reclaim started in a low-key way when the ANC lost the 2009 election. It escalated after the local elections of 2011 and by 2012, it went into overdrive. In July that year, ANC Youth League leader, Khaya Yozi (who is also an ANC councillor), announced in a signed declaration that the League (and several other organisations) planned to make Cape Town and the Province “ungovernable” (read the signed ultimatum here). Since then, a self-appointed “task team” has been busy doing just that. The Province and the City immediately laid charges of “incitement to public violence” but we have heard nothing since.
In any other constitutional democracy, a person inciting others to violent rebellion against a democratically elected government would be charged with sedition.
But not where the ANC loses elections. Here, seditionists announce their intentions publicly, claim responsibility for the ensuing anarchy, and hold media conferences at the scene of their crimes, as the police look on. Our seditionists are members, office bearers and public representatives of a party whose leaders turns a blind eye to criminality directed against their political opponents. I have had no response to letters sent to President Zuma asking him to condemn the “task team’s” actions. So I can only presume he condones them. No wonder they act with impunity.
Sibusiso Zonke is a good example. He is an ANC youth league branch secretary, a law student at UWC and a proud member of the “ungovernability” task team. He regularly breaks the law and undermines the constitution before his first law lecture in the morning. In a recent newspaper interview, he explained a regular routine. He gets out of his warm bed in the university residence in the early hours, catches a ride to the N2 Highway, where he blockades the peak morning traffic, throws faeces around, occasionally bares his bum for the cameras, and gets back in time for lectures (having made tens of thousands of others late for work/school/job interviews/whatever).
The rest of the ‘turd force’ (who usually strike in groups of five or six), start their day in a similar way. The names of the core group are Sithembele Majova, Sibusiso Zonke, Nangamsamo Thsutha, Bongani Ncombolo, Khaya Kama, Bongile Zanazo, Andile Lile and Loyiso Nkohla (their pictures, including links to the Western Cape ANC leadership can be found here).
Since May they have been responsible for at least 12 hits around the City. Most of the task team members live in formal accommodation, with massively subsidised services, courtesy of the taxpayer. They plan their attacks on social media via cell phone and intend to intensify them, according to Songezo Mjongile, the ANC’s Provincial Secretary (no less). He told a reporter: “We are not going to stop now. She [Zille] must expect more.”
The task team keeps itself busy over weekends as well, for example by throwing faeces at a DA community help-desk in Khayelitsha, destroying computers and printers to prevent the DA helping job seekers type and print their CVs. The DA laid a charge of malicious damage to property. Recently we asked police for a progress report and were informed that the investigator could not identify the perpetrators. So we supplied the names and photos of the attackers in the act. One of them had actually uploaded a photo himself, on Facebook, boasting about his involvement.
Arrests have been few and far between. Once, a group was arrested carrying blue faeces-filled refuse bags on a train to Cape Town. (When the police stopped them, the group argued that they could do what they liked with their own faeces). On another occasion the ringleaders were arrested after dumping the contents of stolen portable flush toilet tanks at Cape Town international airport.
Bongani Ncombolo, a task team member, explained the motive behind their attack in a television interview: “It was planned,” he said. “We targeted the airport because we know that the airport is very much important in terms of the Western Cape Economy.” That public statement would seal a conviction on charges of sedition or sabotage in most democracies. In South Africa, this little group was charged under the Civil Aviation Act.
Such arrests are a rare exception, and are often carried out by the special “Public Order Policing” (POP) unit, that has done its best to contain public violence. Often, however, the SAPS are actually on the scene, as bystanders, watching the proceedings unfold.
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