Wednesday, 14 March 2018
CYRIL RAMAPHOSA - NEW DAWN, FALSE HOPE
This article is about how President Cyril Ramaphosa has given South Africans false hope with his promises but disappointing actions.
While Ramaphosa's South Africa seems hopeful, his Budget is harsh and his Cabinet is still in effect captured. We must pierce through the veil of Ramaphoria and acknowledge that justice has not yet been done for the majority, notably the victims of apartheid. Early indications are that the much-heralded New Dawn might be betrayed by false hopes. The framing of Cyril Ramaphosa's South Africa does not look very dissimilar to our recent past, but there are some silver linings. Eskom is a start, SARS is promised, and the pending commission of inquiry into State Capture is urgently required. Parliament just recently took its first steps to amending the constitution for land expropriation "without compensation". This would represent a significant break with post-independence South Africa's early history, and would constitute a revolutionary change targeted at alleviating certain burdens and pains still so severely present 24 years after apartheid. A necessary palliative to cure the residual ills of the past nine years of a corrupt government is the importance of holding those who designed this impoverished and captured state to account.
The Cabinet reshuffle was an indicator that the so-called New Dawn was dead on arrival; it was a case of out with the crooked, and in with the same old and still crooked cadres. The silver linings were represented by the return of Nhlanhla Nene back as the Minster of Finance and Pravin Gordhan back in Cabinet heading Public Enterprises. However, the gurus of State Capture also acquired and retained their seats at the Cabinet table. The best place to start would've been to include younger voices in government, yet as stated, the "new" Cabinet has a very elderly look to it. Ramaphosa was unequivocal that "young South Africans will be moved to the centre of our economic agenda". Using the Cabinet as a benchmark, this seems like empty rhetoric since they appear to be excluded from the policy and framework decision-making.
Despite this terrible oversight, the Budget plan seems to be promising some relief in terms of financing free education for the poor. All students coming from families with an income lower than R350,000 per year will be fully funded for the first year of their studies in 2018. Paradoxically, the VAT increased from 14% to 15% has the negative consequence of affecting those who could benefit from free education through additional taxation.
Ramaphosa has, however, taken a strong stance against the culture of collusion that his predecessor had fostered over the last two terms. "We will urgently take decisive steps to comply with all directions of the Constitutional Court. I want to personally allay fears of any disruption to the efficient delivery of this critical service, and will take action to ensure no person in government is undermining implementation deadlines set by the court." This is an indication to any dubious characters in government that their behaviour would be monitored from now on, relevant especially considering the lack of action that followed most Constitutional Court decisions in the past.
While Ramaphosa's South Africa seems hopeful, his Budget is harsh and his Cabinet is grey and still in effect captured. We must pierce through the veil of Ramaphoria and acknowledge that justice has not yet been done for the vast majority, notably the victims of apartheid; the war on corruption must continue; and so much more needs to be done to alleviate poverty, inequality, unemployment as well as racial and gender discrimination. Civil society needs to stay vigilant and forceful, and push government to uphold its obligations and promises beyond what has been shown so far. Otherwise, the New Dawn will only persist as a False Hope.
source: msnnews.co.za March 14, 2018
Thank You For Reading. Please comment and share. H&W.
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Until Ramaphosa remove Malusi Gigaba in the Cabinet people will throw stones on him, I believe that someone must be given a chance before we can judge him. He haven't been even lead as a president for 6 month but they now saying he is giving false hopes.
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