Red Alert: The SABC: When the people's trust relationship is breaking like an unreliable signal
Last week, South Africa's governing alliance partners, the ANC, SACP and the COSATU, expressed reservations on the appointment of Mr Hlaudi Motsoeneng to the position of the public broadcaster the SABC's Chief Operations Officer. On Friday 11 July, the SACP youth-wing, Young Communist League of South Africa (YCLSA) came out in support of the main alliance partners. There are serious repercussions when contradictions occur between a deployed cadre and the governing Alliance.
Forcing the governing Alliance to oppose the decisions taken and to question the processes followed is totally unacceptable. Although it is necessary to allow deployed cadres to take decisions without being micromanaged, there are strategic positions for which appointments should never be made without consultation first, particularly in relation to the processes followed. The position of SABC Chief Operations Officer is obviously in this category. This the ANC's perspective as communicated by Spokesperson Comrade Zizi Kodwa.
Head of ANC communications sub-committee Comrade Lindiwe Zulu captures this well, concurring in an interview with the Mail & Guardian (11 July 2014). Confirming that the communications Minister Faith Muthambi did not attend the sub-committee's meeting convened to discuss among other issues ANC policies and the direction the department needed to follow, Zulu correctly says Ministers are expected to engage with ANC sub-committees and implement its policies and decisions.
In addition, there are established legal and corporate governance frameworks that the board the public broadcaster's board and the Communications Minster must follow. As the political head of the Communications department on the basis of ANC electoral mandate, the Minister must follow the governing party's framework in executing such strategic functions. Moreover, we also have a Cabinet which must be factored in.
The ANC has a policy framework of meritocratic recruitment of personnel in the state and public entities. At the level of political leadership in the state, this includes alignment with the historic mission of the national democratic revolution and the vision of the Freedom Charter. This is critical in taking forward our second radical phase of transition: the immediate task facing the revolution.