logo
Mandela Day: We need compassion not corruption

Mandela Day: We need compassion not corruption

Mail & Guardian18-07-2025
Madiba's life and words show us that humaneness is the balm our country needs to heal (Trevor Samson/AFP)
The world joins South Africa in celebrating Mandela Day in various ways to honour the memory and legacy of a freedom fighter, who, while facing a death sentence, declared his commitment to equality and justice. Yes, he was a family man, but the passion for ending the injustice millions of South Africans endured seemed like a burden he and his comrades could not ignore.
Every so often, people like him walk the Earth as passing lights carrying hope for the societies they were called to exist among. They, like us, have their own struggles and failures, but they look like giants because they dare to do what many fear – to stand up to injustice.
Madiba reminded us that he, too, was merely mortal. His words, 'I am not a saint, unless you think of a saint as a sinner who keeps on trying', are a testament to this.
We can therefore draw many lessons from Madiba's immense contribution and actions that have been solidified by writers, creatives and leaders around the world to keep his work alive. These include integrity, advocacy and selflessness, in an attempt to actualise ubuntu. It is a call to action for us to remember our role in contributing to the advancement of an equal society by bringing to mind Madiba's contribution to ending behaviours such as corruption.
Corruption is the denial and compromise of the rights of others, and it takes on many forms in its manifestation. The National Planning Commission identified it as one of nine traits that contribute to South Africa's inequality and poverty. But applying our minds to Madiba's words will remind and encourage us to act swiftly when we witness it in motion.
In his first address to the nation as president, Madiba asserted: 'Our hope for the future depends also on our resolution as a nation in dealing with the scourge of corruption. Success will require an acceptance that, in many respects, we are a sick society.'
The temptation may therefore be to empathise with those who act corruptly because perhaps they are sick. But in response to this, Madiba states: 'Our human compassion binds us the one to the other — not in pity or patronisingly, but as human beings who have learnt how to turn our common suffering into hope for the future.'
He advises us to use our suffering (or sickness) as fuel to serve those who find themselves in the same situation we were in before occupying seats of leadership. As a legal expert and from a royal family, Madiba possessed extensive knowledge of bureaucracy, yet he also embodied the importance of empathy and championed the cause of the everyday individual. This balance is perhaps what shaped the man, who could have easily abandoned his quest for equality for a somewhat comfortable life. He chose compassion and a life of service.
'There is nothing I fear more than waking up without a programme that will help me bring a little happiness to those with no resources, those who are poor, illiterate, and ridden with terminal disease.'
Being a compassionate leader requires one to look beyond one's comfort, because therein lies that familiar concept enshrined in our Constitution and expected by law to be extended to all citizens, ubuntu. It is an intrinsic South African characteristic, built and cultivated by our diverse societies to position the needs of others above our own. But when we browse breaking news and trending developments, we repeatedly witness its collapse: the actions of this devastatingly broken society expose its foundations.
How long will we allow this plague to grow, fester and grab life from the future of our beloved nation?
As Madiba notes: 'Corruption is a cancer that steals from the poor, undermines trust in institutions, and destroys the moral fabric of society.'
If you are in a position of influence, regardless of its reach, please take heed and make the necessary change. Start with 67 minutes of integrity, then move to 67 minutes of transparency with those you lead, then courage and advocacy until your actions become habits. It may seem like a romantic notion, but it is a reminder that our country's healing isn't the responsibility of a few elected individuals.
As Madiba demonstrated with his life, transformation is the burden of every person brave enough to chase after the equality, fairness and dignity of society. But don't take it from me; let Madiba's words be the seal this conversation needs:
'We must work together to ensure that the corrupt are brought to book and that justice is served.'
It is not impossible; it just requires action. A chain reaction that starts with the action of a single force until each move builds the necessary momentum to achieve the desired outcome. This concept is further elaborated on by the wisdom of Madiba's fellow Nobel Prize-winner, Archbishop Desmond Tutu, who said: 'Do your little bit of good where you are; it is those little bits of good put together that overwhelm the world.'
It may not be apparent, so allow me to clarify it: You are at the centre of the Batho-Pele principles, the South African transformation agenda, and other associated policies for social change.
Let this serve as a call to action and a plea: let change begin with you this month. Start a chain reaction by offering 67 minutes of service aimed at achieving dignity through active compassion for others.
Mase Leshilo is a social commentator and researcher. She aims to bridge the gap between theory and real-world application through her writing.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Sunday Times launches new show with eNCA, bringing you headline news
Sunday Times launches new show with eNCA, bringing you headline news

The Herald

time16 hours ago

  • The Herald

Sunday Times launches new show with eNCA, bringing you headline news

The Sunday Times has joined forces with eNCA to bring you a fast-paced current affairs programme every Sunday morning, sharing insights and analysis behind the headlines of South Africa's biggest newspaper. Each episode opens with rapid headline analysis, complete with live audience polling, before transitioning into deeper panel discussions between eNCA anchors and Sunday Times editors. The Brief launches on Sunday at 8am. Full episodes will be available on eNCA's YouTube channel, while highlight clips are tailored for social platforms. Viewers can engage with embedded content on TimesLIVE, and podcast versions will be available across major audio streaming services, creating one of the most dynamic and far-reaching news ecosystems in the country. 'We are proud to bring the excellence of South Africa's most influential Sunday read onto your screens,' said Nwabisa Makunga, managing director of news and media at Arena Holdings. 'This groundbreaking partnership with eNCA marks a significant step in our multi-platform strategy. It demonstrates our commitment to broaden our journalistic offering and to extend our trusted investigative voice.' TimesLIVE

AI must serve labour, not subjugate it, G20 labour group says
AI must serve labour, not subjugate it, G20 labour group says

Mail & Guardian

time16 hours ago

  • Mail & Guardian

AI must serve labour, not subjugate it, G20 labour group says

Graphic: John McCann/M&G Labour 20, the G20's employment track, has called for the reclassification of workers in the digital economy, where many are labelled as 'independent contractors', which it said enables exploitation and strips workers of core rights. 'Platform workers are being misclassified, denied basic protections and subjected to inhumane working conditions by companies that exploit regulatory gaps. We believe that this is not innovation but is exploitation wrapped in code,' it said in a communiqué. 'We call for international standards to ensure cross-border accountability, worker data sovereignty and fair taxation of platform giants. Technology must serve labour, not subjugate it.' G20 working groups have made similar recommendations ahead of the November summit of heads of state, with the South Africa, which holds the current Workers in the digital economy are effectively outside the law, Cosatu head of policy Lebogang Meelis told the Mail and Guardian. 'People working in the digital economy who are classified as independent contractors are not recognised as workers. As such, they are not covered by labour legislation and this leaves them vulnerable to severe exploitation,' she said. These workers can't join trade unions, have no protection from unfair dismissals and are excluded from unemployment insurance and collective bargaining. 'They are not afforded a process to try and protect them from retrenchment and minimise the negative impact,' Meelis said. Fedusa general secretary Riefdah Ajam described the 'independent contractor' label as 'a deliberate tactic used by capital and employers to strip them of basic rights'. Contractors, she said, 'are required to work full days and answer to supervisors — whether human or algorithmic', yet are denied basics like UIF, paid leave and the right to unionise. 'The platforms that use this model get away with avoiding responsibility and, ultimately, being non-compliant with the labour laws and other rights as provisioned for in the Constitution and other statutes,' Ajam added, warning that if unions don't push back, a rights-based labour system could soon be a thing of the past. Labour 20 called on governments to implement mandatory due diligence and public oversight of all digital labour platforms operating within their borders. The summit rejected 'digital colonialism', declaring that the infrastructure of the digital economy 'must be public, universal and democratic'. 'We further demand algorithmic transparency, where workers have access to the data that governs their performance and livelihoods. No worker should be at the mercy of a faceless system they cannot question,' it said in its communiqué. Fedusa wants tough regulations that force platforms to disclose how they treat workers, what algorithms they use and where their profits go. The union also backs penalties for non-compliance and calls for stronger local ownership of the digital economy. 'We can't outsource our future to companies who see us as a market but never as equal partners. This is about sovereignty, dignity and economic justice,' Ajam said. With more than 60% of workers globally 'trapped in informal and precarious employment', Labour 20 called for 'a comprehensive agenda for formalisation'. Recommendations included labour law reform, strengthened inspections, ratification of International Labour Organisation conventions and inclusive social protection. 'Trade unions must be at the centre of this shift. We affirm that informal workers are workers. Their rights are not negotiable,' said the communiqué. Governments and employers, it said, must end delays and move decisively toward institutionalising decent work. Meelis said Cosatu had secured a win through negotiations at the National Economic Development and Labour Council with the government agreeing to allow atypical workers — including actors and digital platform workers — to join unions and engage in collective bargaining. However, Meelis said the deployment of AI risks deepening inequality. 'In the short term, more women risk losing their jobs than men — particularly because the initial impact of AI will be the replacement of administrative jobs, which are predominantly held by women workers.' 'If we are to address inequality and not exacerbate it, digital transformation must not outpace social integration,' Meelis added. 'If someone works regularly for a platform, follows set conditions and depends on that income, they should be presumed an employee until proven otherwise. That's how fairness can be restored.' South Africa's labour laws haven't caught up with the gig economy, Ajam said. 'We need them amended so that platform workers are clearly included.' She also criticised new terms like 'dependent contractors' as potential loopholes for further abuse. 'Any new category must carry full protections.' Ajam wants the International Labour Organisation to adopt a binding convention on platform work. 'It should cover fair pay, set working hours, access to benefits, transparency around algorithms and the right to organise.' The communiqué also noted that 'workers are facing spiralling inequality, stubborn unemployment, rising authoritarianism, deepening climate devastation and collapsing public services'. 'In the Global South, these crises are compounded by debt, weak state capacity and the brutal legacies of colonial exploitation. Our call is simple and unwavering: the working class will not pay for the failure of a system rigged against them.' Labour 20 said workers' futures should not be 'sacrificed at the altar of profit and geopolitical power', urging a 'reclaiming and rebuilding' of multilateralism and a reversal of the declining labour share of income. 'Workers are not commodities nor statistics. We are the architects of society, and any global recovery that excludes them is a blueprint for deeper inequality,' the communiqué said.

Africa Needs Genuine Friends and Solidarity, Not Big Brother Mentality
Africa Needs Genuine Friends and Solidarity, Not Big Brother Mentality

IOL News

timea day ago

  • IOL News

Africa Needs Genuine Friends and Solidarity, Not Big Brother Mentality

Trump 2.0 has gone measures up, selectively and divisively putting African countries under the Orwellian gaze in ways that project, 'Big Brother mentality." Image: Brendan Smialowski/AFP The most challenging emotion for any African international relations observer and ordinary person today is processing the current US administration's stance against South Africa, in particular, and Africa in general. The legacy of the US in Africa may be problematic and mostly detrimental to the African population. But Trump 1.0 and 2.0 have demonstrated shocking derisive contempt for the continent and its people. Depending on which side of the debate one is on, the US could be the world's number one superpower or a rapidly declining one. The rise of a multipolar world and global pluralism, which recognises the emergence of other civilisations and nations, and their right to chart their foreign policies as long as they align and recognise the United Nations Charter, must be recognised. Gideon Chitanga, PhD, is an international relations and political analyst. Image: Supplied Video Player is loading. Play Video Play Unmute Current Time 0:00 / Duration -:- Loaded : 0% Stream Type LIVE Seek to live, currently behind live LIVE Remaining Time - 0:00 This is a modal window. Beginning of dialog window. Escape will cancel and close the window. Text Color White Black Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan Transparency Opaque Semi-Transparent Background Color Black White Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan Transparency Opaque Semi-Transparent Transparent Window Color Black White Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan Transparency Transparent Semi-Transparent Opaque Font Size 50% 75% 100% 125% 150% 175% 200% 300% 400% Text Edge Style None Raised Depressed Uniform Dropshadow Font Family Proportional Sans-Serif Monospace Sans-Serif Proportional Serif Monospace Serif Casual Script Small Caps Reset restore all settings to the default values Done Close Modal Dialog End of dialog window. Advertisement Next Stay Close ✕ Although the African continent bled its most important asset, its human resources, through the slave trade, and was later subjected to close to a century of colonialism, its contribution to human civilisation through intellectual production and culture, abundant natural resources and trade, and the struggle for independence, self determination and national sovereignty should never be taken for granted. There is no doubt about the realisation and direction the continent needs to take, despite many national challenges. Africa is part of a fast-changing world order in which genuine friendships, partnerships and solidarity informed by empathetic historical understanding of its contradictions and choices could steer a robust path towards development. The rise of China, the second-largest economy in the world, and a nucleus around which the multipolar world is emerging into a reality, attests to changing times attuned to genuine multilateralism. Africa-China cooperation, and growing ties among countries of the global south are producing irrefutable evidence of progressive socio-economic transformation in infrastructure, energy, agriculture, and industrial partnerships, which are unfortunately rattling other powers, instead of supporting such initiatives. Increasingly, Africa and other countries in the global south are demanding an equal voice, responsible exercise of power and an equal share of economic prosperity in the interest of Africans and the whole human race. Despite resonant calls for commitment to multilateralism, a more participatory and equitable world order based on solidarity, international cooperation and mutually beneficial relations, respect for the national sovereignty and self-determination of other nations, the Trump Administration is rewriting history to the age of power is mighty, characterised by 'big brother mentality.' Trump 2.0 has gone measures up, selectively and divisively putting African countries under the Orwellian gaze in ways that project, 'Big Brother mentality." There is no denying the power of partnerships, including bilateral relations with the US, but Africa needs genuine friendship and solidarity that is informed by, and shares common concerns with, the structural legacy of poverty and inequality induced by close to a century of colonial hegemony. To the extent that some of the African leaders have failed their nations, and indeed Africa, friends of the continent and its people should work positively with Africans, who have a better, deeper understanding of their conditions to improve national institutions, governance, and equip the young generation of leaders with proper skills to lead during increasingly complex fluid global context. Furthermore, they must closely collaborate with African countries, and together with much of the global south, to advocate for more equitable international relations, fostering mutually beneficial win-win relations among all nations. While African countries and much of the global south are focused on improving socio-economic transformation at home, and multilateral relations that uplift many of us, Washington has chosen to go isolationist, seeking to 'Make America Great Again' (MAGA). Since the Trump Administration assumed power, it has imposed economic tariffs, including on some of the weakest economies in Africa, unilaterally cut aid, walked away from multilateral commitments such as the Paris Agreement on climate change, and recently from the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO). UNESCO is a specialised agency of the United Nations whose core mission is to build peace and security through international collaboration in education, science, culture, and communication. A statement attributed to Audrey Azoulay, the Director-General of UNESCO, says that the US withdrawal was anticipated, of course reflecting the general recognition that Washington is rolling back or out of major multilateral institutions. Azoulay profoundly noted that the decision to withdraw from UNESCO contradicts the fundamental principles of multilateralism. While withdrawing from multilateral institutions may be a legitimate choice of the current US Administration and American voters, it is its external behaviour that is not only concerning, but also boggles the mind. Let's take the example of South Africa, a major continental economic and political hub, which now finds itself as a major target of the US republican government. South Africa is a relatively stable multiracial democracy facing severe economic challenges, which, among many factors, largely accounts for its sluggish economic growth at an average of 1% in the past decade. A combination of growing violent crime, partly attributable to growing unemployment and a huge influx of economic and political migrants, has created major challenges for South Africa's Government of National Unity, under the African National Congress (ANC) and the Democratic Alliance (DA), a party dominated by the minority white population. US-South Africa relations are in jeopardy, but not because Pretoria has violated any of its domestic or international obligations. South Africa has consistently sought to exercise its foreign policy under its constitution and historical norms, in some cases to the consternation of US foreign policy, which tends to be oblivious of the human rights of its targets and the interests of the Global South. South Africa assumed its continental and global prominence after probably experiencing the harshest apartheid policy suffered by any nation. Secondly, like many post-colonial African states, the exercise of its national sovereignty and self-determination was realised out of a painful liberation struggle by its oppressed population. Yet, recently, the U.S. House Foreign Affairs Committee voted 34-16 to send the ''U.S.-South Africa Bilateral Relations Review Act'' to the full House of Representatives. The bill seeks a review of U.S.-South Africa relations over objections to the latter's foreign policy, and imposition of sanctions on South African government and business officials. The US is also snubbing the G20 under South Africa's Presidency, threatening the imposition of high tariffs, expelling Pretoria from AGOA, which, for all purposes, seems to have been overtaken by tariffs. The Trump Administration has also threatened to impose 100% tariffs on members of the BRICS, and to punish South Africa for its close relations with China, as well as its human rights advocacy on the Israeli war on Gaza. Sanctions will complicate South Africa's future economic prospects. Perhaps this US administration has ushered in a critical juncture for African countries to stand together in unity. The global south must reinforce national and international solidarity, intensify calls for robust multilateralism based on the United Nations Charter.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store