One of the
many acts of terrorism perpetrated by the ‘liberation Party’ that the ANC has
worked assiduously to expunge from public memory is the series of ‘necklacing’
carried out by ANC cadres to ensure that the Blacks presented a united front
against the Apartheid regime. Necklaving
was the brutal practice of a crowd of ANC sympathisers grabbing an innocent
civilian, stripping him or her naked, tying their hands and feet with barbed wire,
putting a car tyre (the ‘necklace’) over them, dousing them with gasoline or
paraffin and setting them alight, to burn to death in a gruesome display of ‘democracy
in action’, witness by a jeering crowd of the supporters of the ‘freedom movements’. Those acts must remain as a statement of the extent
to which the ‘noble’ ANC will go to gain and hold onto power. They are not, by any stretch of the
imagination, a statement of democracy.
They were cold-blooded murders in the name of politics and power, a
series of acts which, in any rational mind, would exclude the perpetrators from
any position of authority or influence in a civilized society.
Why raise
necklacing now?
The reason
is simple. The murder of a person who
might speak out against the policies and aims of the Party is, in essence, no
different than the beheading of ‘non-believers’ by the Islamic militants, or
the jamming of cellphone signals in Parliament, to prevent the truth of the
actions and non-actions of Members of the ruling Party from escaping into the
public. It is in the same category as
preventing the broadcast of scenes of Policemen illegally entering Parliament,
the heart of democracy, to evict all Members of a Party that was demanding the
giving of an account by the President of his abuse of the powers of his office,
and the simple corruption committed by him.
It is akin to the arrest of supporters of the Opposition outside
Parliament, when they were doing nothing other than what the supporters of the
ruling Party were doing. It is a simple brutal
suppression of the expression of any view other than what the ruling Party
would want the world to believe.
Thinking
South Africans have been subjected to many instances of the rewriting of
history to a form that suits the ANC.
They have been subjected to an insidious brainwashing over two decades
of ANC rule. In many cases they have
succumbed, at least in public, to the pressures. Businesses have come to understand that if
they do not toe the Party line, they will be excluded from Government
business. Individuals have come to
understand that any statement critical of Party members will result in them
being targeted by SARS, the SAPS, the SARB or any of the numerous bodies
stacked with incompetent but loyal cadres, who hold their jobs and receive
their inflated salaries by the favour of the ruling Party. Twenty-seven per cent of the employed people
in South Africa receive their salaries directly from the Government (read ‘the
ANC’), and many, if not most, of them can be relied upon to do what the Party
wants, not what is their constitutional and democratic duty. The Policemen who invaded the sanctity of
Parliament to expel the EFF during the State of the Nation Address must have known
that their actions were unconstitutional and outright illegal. The fact that they did so, that they, Policemen
and the upholders of the law, will no doubt be explained by the claim that they
were following orders. The trials of the
Nazi war criminals at Nuremburg established clearly that ‘following orders’ in
the commission of a crime is not an acceptable excuse. Hopefully, the Courts in South Africa will
not feel compelled to follow the Party dictates, and excuse the perpetrators.
Amongst the
perpetrators who should be brought to trial in this extremely serious breach of
the Constitution are the Speaker, the Chairperson of the National Council of
Provinces and the President, who, in interviews after the event, discussed the
actions of the EFF in a way that demonstrated clearly that he at least condoned
the actions, if he was not an instigator.
As the leader of the Nation and supposedly prime upholder of the
Constitution, his silence and lack of speaking out during the discussions
regarding the illegal jamming of cellphone signals and the subsequent illegal
expulsion of all Members of the EFF from the Chamber, speaks volumes of his
failures as President and his unsuitability for the position. The same is true of all other ANC Members
present at SONA, and the subsequent failure of all members of the ANC disqualifies
each of them from any position of leadership in South Africa in the
future. It is clear that being a member
of the ANC is more important to these people than upholding the democracy they
claim to have fought for, some of them by necklacing the people who were
claiming the right of freedom of speech that the President and the ANC, even
now, refuses to accord the people of South Africa.
It is of
interest that numerous academics and talk show hosts have started to question
the motivations behind the proposed new laws announced by the President during
SONA. Some have even gone to the extent
of questioning the second agenda behind these proposals. It seems that these daring people are, at
last, willing to put themselves at risk in exposing the corruption of the ANC, joining
the tens of thousands of thinking South Africans who discuss these things in
private. The next step is for the
discourse to become public, and for the official Opposition to become more
vocal, within Parliament and in the media, in protection of the rights of the
individual and the limitations on the rights and actions of the Executive.
The
Americans have a saying: I may not agree
with what you say, but I am willing to die to protect your right to say
it.
It is a
great shame that the President, the Speaker and the ANC do not subscribe to
that essential element of democracy.
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