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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsMandela's Death Highlights How Messed Up South Africa Is Now
LONDONIn Johannesburg a few months ago, I asked a young, black, and politically savvy South African journalist how his newspaper would cover Nelson Mandela's death. He shook his head: He dearly wished not to have to cover it at all. "I just hope I'm not in the office that day. I just hope I'm away, maybe in a different country."
He knew, of course, what Mandela's death would bring: a moment of national reckoning, an assessment of "what have we achieved" in the years since Mandela's release from prison in 1990 and his inauguration as South Africa's first black president in 1994. I told the young man that what was written in the wake of Mandela's death would probably reveal less about the man and more about his country. He agreed: That's exactly what he didn't want to have to face.
And thats exactly what has happened. As my journalist colleague predicted, the worlds sudden focus on Mandela's life has already begun to cast South Africas current leaders in an unflattering light. "Mandela looms like a one-man Mount Rushmore over his successors," David Smith wrote for the Guardian, "throwing their flaws into sharp relief." The Economist, more bluntly, points out that "misguided governance, low-quality education, skills shortages and massive unemployment levels of around 40%" have made the black population of South Africa "more disadvantaged today than when Nelson Mandela was still behind bars."
He knew, of course, what Mandela's death would bring: a moment of national reckoning, an assessment of "what have we achieved" in the years since Mandela's release from prison in 1990 and his inauguration as South Africa's first black president in 1994. I told the young man that what was written in the wake of Mandela's death would probably reveal less about the man and more about his country. He agreed: That's exactly what he didn't want to have to face.
And thats exactly what has happened. As my journalist colleague predicted, the worlds sudden focus on Mandela's life has already begun to cast South Africas current leaders in an unflattering light. "Mandela looms like a one-man Mount Rushmore over his successors," David Smith wrote for the Guardian, "throwing their flaws into sharp relief." The Economist, more bluntly, points out that "misguided governance, low-quality education, skills shortages and massive unemployment levels of around 40%" have made the black population of South Africa "more disadvantaged today than when Nelson Mandela was still behind bars."
http://www.businessinsider.com/mandelas-death-highlights-how-messed-up-south-africa-is-now-2013-12
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Mandela's Death Highlights How Messed Up South Africa Is Now (Original Post)
FarCenter
Dec 2013
OP
Seeking Serenity
(2,840 posts)1. I thought these last two sentences were interesting
But although it might be uncomfortable, his death should cause South Africans to look critically at the state he helped create and, above all, at the ANC, the party he led. If South Africans really want to honor Mandelas memory, they should deepen South Africas democracy, and vote for somebody else.
Read more: http://www.slate.com/articles/news_and_politics/foreigners/2013/12/nelson_mandela_and_the_anc_south_africa_needs_new_leaders.html?wpisrc=hpsponsoredd2#ixzz2mqFwyGjp
One-party rule never goes well ultimately.
malaise
(269,157 posts)2. Let's face it - Mandela was granted his freedom but the terms for the democracy
were that the ANC government take on all the debts run up during apartheid with a nasty IMF agreement.