The British newspaper the Daily Mail has made headlines in South Africa for its coverage of President Jacob Zuma's state visit to the UK. On his arrival in the country, the paper described Zuma as a ‘vile buffoon' and a ‘sex-obsessed bigot with four wives and 35 children'. Zuma has responded by saying that the British Media is determined to protray Africans as ‘barbaric' and cannot let go of colonial views towards the continent.
The truth is that many Britons would shudder to be represented by the Daily Mail, a right-wing tabloid that makes its name out of distasteful and insensitive headlines such as this. Nevertheless, although the Mail is an extreme example, it was not alone among the British Press in its critical and somewhat mocking portrayal of President Zuma as he arrived in Britain.
The Times opened its coverage of the story with a joke about royal etiquette: ‘For hundreds of years, world leaders have agonised over etiquette at state banquets with the Queen. The president of South Africa also faced a more personal dilemma: which wife should I take?'
Taking a similar tone, the Daily Telegraph story read, ‘For all the colourful characters who have visited the Palace during the Queen's 58 years on the throne, the South African president is possibly the first guest to be a polygamist, probably the first to have faced a multitude of criminal charges including fraud, racketeering, corruption, and tax evasion, all of which were later withdrawn, and most certainly the first to have a signature anthem that runs: "Bring Me My Machine Gun".'
One column in the Guardian even went so far as to call Zuma ‘Mr Defective Zipper'.
So is Zuma right that the British, years after colonial rule ended, continue to view Africans as ‘barbaric'? Are the British, as the ANC Youth League claims, ‘racists living in a dream land [believing] that Africans are still their colonial subjects'? The answer is an emphatic ‘no'. Such accusations of racism and colonial prejudice entirely miss the point. Of course Britain is not devoid of racism; most would struggle to name a single country in the world that was. However, there are several reasons why the treatment of Zuma by the British media should not be viewed as racist.