"YOU'RE a despot," Christopher Hitchens once said, "if you can make your subjects feel sorry for you." Here at the Mahogany Ridge we've dug up that remark from the late author and journalist before when writing about President Jacob Zuma, but it seems particularly apposite to use it again given his emotional outburst during question time in Parliament on Thursday.
His family, the president said, has been hurt by all this hoo-hah over his home at Nkandla and -- extraordinarily enough -- it had nothing to do with him. (We're still trying to wrap our heads around the particular dynamics of that assertion.)
"I have never asked government to build a home for me, and it has not done so. My residence in Nkandla has been paid for by the Zuma family. All the buildings and every room we use in that residence, was built by ourselves and not by government."
Ignore, if you can, the Zumantics and the ease with which he has twisted the meaning of words here -- government has never been accused of building the president a home, only of substantially upgrading the existing pile -- and feel instead the chief's hurt and pain; he has, he said, been "convicted, painted black [and] called the first-class corrupt man on facts that are not tested" over the R248-million or so in public money that has been seemingly been blown on the little TLC, as the realtors say, that was required to turn the crib into a national key point.
Zuma is correct when he claims that accommodation for police and army units in the compound did not fall within his ambit. That, I would humbly suggest, is perhaps why there is such interest in all the goings on behind the fortress fence . Why then is he so dismissive of inspection visits? He described, for example, the Democratic Alliance's recent attempt as a "trip to come and photograph my house and make a laughing stock of my family", but this was simply not the DA's intention. If he has nothing to hide, what's the problem?
In any event, we have some idea, thanks to news reports, of the work undertaken at Nkandla. We also know what government has paid for this work -- and therein lay fears, considering that this is the taxpayer's tom, that costs have been grossly inflated. Suspicions of widespread corruption and looting are not without basis.