Dear friends and fellow South Africans,
Ms Joana Cotar of Frankfurt asked the Dalai Lama, "How do you stay so optimistic and faithful when there is so much hate in the world?" His response was published in Time Magazine in June this year: "I always look at any event from a wider angle. There's always some problem, some killing, some murder or terrorist act or scandal everywhere, every day. But if you think the whole world is like that, you're wrong. Out of 6 billion humans, the troublemakers are just a handful."
I wish I could agree with my old friend on this. It would certainly make me more optimistic. But while I too look to the good, honourable and pleasing aspects of life and meditate on these, I am confronted by the facts of the society we live in and know that we cannot reduce the plague of criminality to a few evil hearts.
In October last year President Zuma addressed a large meeting of police station commanders and said, "We have an abnormal criminal problem in South Africa. We must therefore apply extraordinary measures." That was the meeting that sparked the controversial "shoot to kill" dictum.
Why then does the ruling party insist on sticking its head back in the sand whenever a particularly despicable crime is highlighted? The tragic murder of Anni Dewani has been met with a flood of shock and sympathy from around the world. But in its response, the ANC said: "In essence, South Africa is not a violent country. Violent elements should be detained and dealt with the full blow of the law."
It seems the ANC would also like to believe that the daily scourge of crime is just because of a few bad people. One cannot help remembering the mistake of the Minister for Safety and Security, Mr Charles Nqakula, when concerns were raised about high crime rates during his 2007 budget debate: