According to Alec Hogg, writing this week on his Moneyweb website, President Jacob Zuma charmed the perfidious media (as usual) in snow-covered Davos, Switzerland. Zuma had dropped in to the gathering of the world's financial and economic movers and shakers (the World Economic Forum), who get together every year to impress one another with their erudition, charm, and so forth.
The President also, incidentally, lost the ANC and himself a future supporter. After reading in Hogg's report that Zuma had been unmasked at Davos as a Liverpool supporter in the English premiership, my 15-year-old son, a gunner to the core, said that was that - he was mightily annoyed with Zuma. My son said the news confirmed that Zuma was sillier than he (my son) had previously thought. Oh well, the youth of today are unplayable, as we all know.
In his address to the media Zuma also, unsurprisingly, had his mind on football - the upcoming soccer World Cup to be precise. He "deftly" (according to Hogg) handled a question about security concerns during the tournament and then said, inter alia, the following:
"(Besides the soccer tournament) 2010 is also an important year for us because we will be marking the 20th anniversary of the re lease of Nelson Mandela from prison, which kick-started dramatic political change.
"We have achieved a lot since that dramatic day of February 11, 1990. South Africa has performed admirably in the economic, political and social spheres. This includes the political transition to a democratic State, the subsequent strengthening of South Africa's democratic institutions, as well as economic growth. We have built a resilient economy which has been able to survive the global economic crisis, and which is actually beginning to show signs of recovery.