A FAMOUS GROUSE
IT’S a bit of a mouthful, S-2 Diisoprophylaminoethyl methylphosphonothiolate. But then you won’t be needing anything near as much as that to get the job done.
More conveniently known as VX, this is the formal name of the nerve agent that Malaysian police claim was used to despatch Kim Jong Nam, half-brother of North Korean dictator Kim Jong-un, at Kuala Lumpur airport last week.
According to reports, even the tiniest amount of VX — less than a few grains of salt — is fatal. Administered through the skin, symptoms occur within minutes. First, there’d be confusion, possible drowsiness, headache, nausea, vomiting, runny nose and watery eyes; then, prior to death a few hours later, convulsions, seizures, loss of consciousness and paralysis.
Lethal as this banned chemical weapon may be, it is perhaps nowhere near as dangerous as our own version of VX — virulent xenophobia.
Given the violence in Gauteng earlier this week, including the razing of houses in Rosettenville, south of Johannesburg, and the destruction and looting of foreign-owned shops in parts of Pretoria, the decision by the Tshwane metro police to allow the Mamelodi Concerned Residents’ anti-immigrant march to go ahead yesterday did suggest a special kind of dumb.