The link between the lavish refurbishment of President Zuma's Nkandla homestead with its bunker and the passing of the Protection of State Information Bill and Cabinet's threat to transform the Judiciary should not be under-estimated. It is a portent of things to come.
The building of the bunker should not be our only worry, but its link to underground tunnels that connect it directly to a helipad, should fill us with horror. Political rulers, with life-long ambitions to stay in power, build bunkers. Ditto Muammar Gaddafi, Saddam Hussein, Robert Mugabe and many dictators who have gone before. But dictators never learn. Hussein was found hidden in a hole, looking like a frightened rat. Gaddafi's maze of tunnels did not help either; he met his end in a sewer pipe! Should we prepare ourselves for more draconian rule in future? And, is government alone to blame for where we are today?
Newspaper editors have made a great hullabaloo about this Bill, have joined activists into Parliament, yet they have remained relatively passive about the SABC, our public broadcaster about which a dossier of scandals exist. They were worried about the appointment of Chief Justice Mogoeng Mogoeng, but their concern did not end in Parliament. And the question is why?
The media acts when its own interests are threatened. When Ferial Haffajee, laments the passing of this Bill (City Press 27 November) claiming naively to have acquired her democratic training from the ANC, it is precisely this lack of political autonomy that makes her despair.
"And so, as I hung onto Parliament's balconies on Tuesday, watching the people who personify the era of openness and freedom for me press the "yes" button to vote to pass the first stage of the secrecy bill, I was deeply sad."
The ANC long ago ceased to personify these values. If anything the R69 to R400 million allegedly spent by Zuma on the expansion of his homestead, signifies the worst of conspicuous consumption and how much the ANC disrespects the poor. Widespread corruption and theft of state tenders have become the hallmark of governance in eight of the provinces under its rule.