News

South Africa needs another Mandela

  Share Bookmark Print Email
Email this article to a friend

Submit Cancel
Rating
Nelson Mandela and his then wife Winnie, after his release from Victor Verster prison in Western Cape in this February 11, 1990 photo. Twenty years on, most black South Africans still live in abject poverty. Photo/REUTERS

Nelson Mandela and his then wife Winnie, after his release from Victor Verster prison in Western Cape in this February 11, 1990 photo. Twenty years on, most black South Africans still live in abject poverty. Photo/REUTERS 


Posted  Tuesday, February 9  2010 at  20:00

In Summary

  • Two decades after the most famous son of Africa walked out of prison to lead the country to freedom, the euphoria has waned, and with it the expectations of most black natives. Will a rebirth help?

JOHANNESBURG, Tuesday

Twenty years after Nelson Mandela was freed from prison, South Africa is a vibrant democracy, but the millions still living in poverty are now looking for leadership that can tackle its economic problems.

Mandela’s release on February 11, 1990, after 27 years in apartheid-era jails, set in motion the country’s transformation to democracy which culminated in historic all-race elections in 1994 and his inauguration as the country’s first black leader.

Some critics say Mandela’s legacy has been blighted by his successor Thabo Mbeki’s sacking as president by the ruling ANC, and the latest sexual scandal involving current President Jacob Zuma which has damaged the party’s image.

South Africa’s change to democracy has been heralded as a miracle. Mandela’s reconciliation drive won over hardline white conservatives, previously segregated communities are integrated and most blacks and whites now treat each other with respect.

But two decades on, many black South Africans still live in grinding poverty in squalid shantytowns, official unemployment is just under 25 per cent, and analysts say actual joblessness is much higher.

Racial inequality

“The challenges are identical. If there are three categories of things, it will be unemployment, inequality with a racial overlay and poverty. The changes between 1990 and 2010 are not profound,” said independent political analyst Nic Borain.

Share This Story
Share

Crime is rife and South Africa has one of the world’s highest rates of violent crime. The country also has to deal with one of the heaviest global HIV/Aids caseloads.

Income inequality between different race groups has increased from 1995, and the World Bank describes South Africa as a country with “extreme differences in incomes and wealth”.

At least 34 per cent of South Africa’s estimated 50 million people live on less than two dollars per day, according to the World Bank.

The economy under the African National Congress, which has been ruling since the end of apartheid in 1994, saw its longest spurt of growth on record until the fallout from the global financial crisis pushed it into recession at the start of 2009.

Two decades after Mandela’s release, South Africa needed to put in place real change to address economic structural problems and the low potential growth rate, said Peter Attard Montalto, emerging markets economist at Nomura International.

“There is currently no one to lead South Africa to this consensus. We need to hunt for the next Mandela, not the nation builder, the economic revolutionary,” Attard Montalto added.

Despite the obvious problems facing South Africa, much has changed since Mandela was released.

1 | 2 Next Page »

Add a comment (5 comments so far)

  1. Submitted by msholozi

    Kenya is in more need of a Mandela than SA does.

    Posted  February 11, 2010 02:03 PM  
  2. Submitted by maziwa_lala

    @wuod_aketch, You hit the nail in the head. This is the biggest problem Africa faces. The so called freedom fighters turn out to be destructive dictators.

    Posted  February 11, 2010 12:47 PM  
  3. Submitted by ruthiee96

    He is the man and will always be. look at what zuma is doing with south africa now. boosting around that he is a man yet he goes around sleeping with women. What are his wife four. I pity south africa

    Posted  February 11, 2010 11:02 AM  
  4. Submitted by rofi

    The secret is empowered institutions, effective teams, clear strategy, policies and procedures. Not prima donnas. That is the lesson for Africa, it is the reason why Japan for example is a million miles ahead because they recognise the need for dialogue and consensus.

    Posted  February 10, 2010 08:48 AM  
  5. Submitted by wuod_aketch

    SA is experiencing the independence/freedom syndrome that most African countries experienced after they got independence. The freedom fighters and the pseudo ones have to eat first. These old guards have taken power and are enjoying their fruits of Uhuru. Be it Algeria with FLN of Boumedienne, the ANC of Zuma, Kenya's Kenyatta (aliteswa sana!!!), the freedom fighters have to enjoy the matunda ya uhuru. The the populace is left out of it.

    Posted  February 10, 2010 01:38 AM