It's that time of the year when, in many parts of the world, political analysts are writing about those moments that have somehow captured the soul of a particular government or ruling party - perhaps even the zeitgeist of the country itself.
We in South Africa have of course had our share of those events in 2010. We learned, for example, that President Jacob Zuma's 28-year-old son, Duduzane, who seems to have no business experience in the metals industry, has benefited from a black empowerment deal related to ArcelorMittal (a large steel company) and that Khulubuse Zuma, the president's plump and jovial nephew, has made a literal fortune (many millions) since Uncle Jacob came to power.
Or perhaps one would prefer to point to the story about Blade Nzimande, the minister of higher education as well as the general-secretary of the SA Communist party, having chosen the Mount Nelson Hotel, the country's top luxury hotel, as his temporary base in Cape Town - bearing in mind that many who belong to the SACP can't even afford the taxi fare from their shanty homes to the gates of the place.
But for me there is one thing that has captured how the ANC government and its courts operate; its cavalier attitude towards its own people; and its ineptitude.
In 1993, Fusi Mofokeng and Tsokolo Joseph Mokoena, then aged 25 and 32 respectively, were jailed for life for their "involvement" with an ANC self-defence unit (SDU) that killed a policeman and caused permanent brain damage to another, on the outskirts of Bethlehem in the Free State. Mofokeng was related by marriage to one of the members of the unit.
Even though the trial court acknowledged that Mofokeng and Mokoena had not been present at the shootings, they were found guilty in terms of "common purpose". "Common purpose" was a bit of law introduced by the apartheid regime enabling courts to find people, especially in unrest situations, guilty of murder by association. In other words, if you were part of a crowd that "necklaced" someone, you could be found guilty of murder even if you did not strike the match yourself.