NYDA: Stop breaking things, start creating jobs
The Chairperson of the National Youth Development Agency (NYDA), Andile Lungisa, has threatened to make South Africa "ungovernable" and suggested illegal action to this end. This is akin to the chairperson of Eskom saying they would destroy all electricity pylons because electricity costs too much (see Sowetan report).
If the NYDA wants to play a meaningful role in turning around our country's unemployment problem, the best place to start is to stop playing politics and instead start to focus on making a real difference.
Lungisa's statements are problematic for three reasons: a failure to understand the purpose of a public body, conduct unbecoming of a civil servant, and they are hypocritical.
In the first instance, the NYDA is not a political party. It is a state institution, funded by public money, answerable to South Africa at large. It is not the place of its chairperson to mobilise people to what is essentially political action.
Second, Lungisa's suggestion that, at the NYDA's call, the youth will "close every street in South Africa" and that "if there is a [sic] cheese in your fridge, they are going to take it", is a deplorable statement for a public servant (indeed, the suggestion that one steal would be deplorable coming from anyone).