Now and again, I read something that haunts me for weeks. That’s what happened on 13th January when I read a Jonny Steinberg column in Business Day.
It didn’t tell me anything I didn’t already know. But the way it joined the dots sent a shiver down my spine when I extrapolated the implications across our society. Now, every time I read about some dystopian development in South Africa, I see it through this lens.
Steinberg’s column recalled the sense of hope of the 1990s when the vast informal taxi industry, that transported a majority of working-class commuters, was finally legalised.
It would, we all believed, herald the birth of a commercial giant, and end the brutal methods of law enforcement (including multiple contract killings) typical of industries that operate outside the protection of the country’s laws and regulations.
But the opposite happened. In Steinberg’s words: “The story did indeed come to pass, but inside out. Organised crime did not wither and die through exposure to state institutions. Instead, state institutions were infected by organised crime.”
Although South Africa’s growing “hitman industry” was born in the criminal underworld of the taxi industry, it has now extended its tentacles across society.