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Former deputy president, David Mabuza, fondly referred to as DD is no more
Former deputy president, David Mabuza, fondly referred to as DD is no more

The Star

time07-07-2025

  • Politics
  • The Star

Former deputy president, David Mabuza, fondly referred to as DD is no more

Pali Lehohla | Published 7 hours ago The former deputy president, David Mabuza, fondly referred to as DD is no more. A man who mysteriously rose to be a deputy president was supported by evidence. But even the then Statistician-General (SG) nor the current SG saw it coming. Perhaps like Malvollio in the Twelfth Night held true that rise to power has a universe of triggers, which includes the odd and unexpected. Once smelling power Malvollio would say, "Some are born great, some achieve greatness, and some have greatness thrust upon them". Truth be told DD might have moved up through the cracks by mantra of illusive unity and this might be the way the cat arranged its cheese. But by 2016 October the current SG and I when I was still the SG went to the provincial government. On the agenda was the release of the 2016 Community Survey. Premier Mabuza invited us to his office where to our surprise we held court for an hour. We did not discuss the numbers and instead he discussed his plans. He repeatedly said, "I am not coming back. I am done with province." So finally he set us free to go and present. So as we had this private space with Risenga Maluleke we giggled like small boys wondering in which ministry DD could deputise. In our estimation the man could not even be a minister and he could only deputise. So we looked around and we thought he could be in education. But truth be told as we discussed on reflection from the numbers David Mabuza was a deserving deputy president. The numbers stacked favourably. I even went to write in one of my columns that indeed evidence favoured him. The results of the Community Survey showed that it was only in his province of Mpumalanga and at the level of City of Cape Town that the performance was positive on all indicators and in fact on poverty Mpumalanga and City of Cape Town were showing positive outcomes whilst the rest were sluggards worthy of the remarks of the then minister of sports when he referred to Banana-Bafana as a bunch of losers. Using such an objective measure DD was deserving after all. But given the oddity of the logic of politics, it was exactly when Auntie De Lille, the then mayor of the City of Cape Town, had her fate of separation sealed despite the good track record as mayor of Cape Town and she fell out with Zille. Not surprising again was when then president Thabo Mbeki, the only president who consistently achieved indicators of positive development. These pointed to a different future, as South Africa danced with at least a 5% growth per year for six years. Gross fixed capital formation was at an unprecedented 25% per annum, a far cry from a single digit we have experienced in the past 17 years, and unemployment dropping from a high of 30%, to a still high 22%, which has not been achieved in the past ten years. Credit extension growth was 15% per annum, a rate unheard of in the last 17 years. All municipalities were experiencing monotonically declining poverty compared to a third increase in poverty in the last 15 years and possibly counting. Yet it was in the face of that evidence that the question of "uhamba nini lo zizi" was asked, and the chorus at that fateful NEC was khonaNgogo. The uhamba nini has become our unfortunate moment as irate politics govern over rationality. Perhaps if our decisions were based on national objectives as the prime motive forces, we would see better results and a country on the ascent. DD's mask of unity to ascendancy needed not to be what made the cat sneak through in the NDZ 17 and CR2017. His performance in the province, as the only ANC governed province to continue witnessing a decline in poverty, should have been the reason for his ascendance to high office. And perhaps the unity aerodynamics could have added the emotive noise that necessarily accompanies the queer logic of political settings. Evidence of delivery showed he was a clear winner, but the cat needed the additional invisible lives to survive and be an unexpected deputy president. Perhaps if we were guided by performance we would not see a South Africa of two halves. One of ascendant quality of live for ordinary citizens from Mandela to Mbeki's 15 years and followed by monotonic decline from Zuma into Ramaphosa and counting. The cat did its unity footwork and became deputy president of the country. But the cat delivered better quality of life to citizens of Mpumalanga so says the evidence. And DD was determined to leave the province. Hands clutched to each other, index fingers pointing in the sky following on his eyes starring upwards, a signature gesture of Mabuza, he told Maluleke and I in 2016 that he was not coming back to the province. One term he said he was not coming back to presidency, and now he is not coming back and forever he is gone and belong to the ages. May his soul rest in peace. May his family be consoled. He served the people of Mpumalanga well and was exemplary in addressing poverty. The facts will remember him for that. What will the facts remember others for. This is what a forward looking and design thinking and systems design based national dialogue should do. Set rules of engagement on what we will hold each other's for. Dr Pali Lehohla is a Professor of Practice at the University of Johannesburg, a Research Associate at Oxford University, and a distinguished Alumni of the University of Ghana. He is the former Statistician-General of South Africa. *** The views expressed here do not necessarily represent those of Independent Media or IOL . BUSINESS REPORT

Former deputy president, David Mabuza, fondly referred to as DD is no more
Former deputy president, David Mabuza, fondly referred to as DD is no more

IOL News

time07-07-2025

  • Politics
  • IOL News

Former deputy president, David Mabuza, fondly referred to as DD is no more

Former deputy president David Mabuza has died. File Picture Image: File image The former deputy president, David Mabuza, fondly referred to as DD is no more. A man who mysteriously rose to be a deputy president was supported by evidence. But even the then Statistician-General (SG) nor the current SG saw it coming. Perhaps like Malvollio in the Twelfth Night held true that rise to power has a universe of triggers, which includes the odd and unexpected. Once smelling power Malvollio would say, "Some are born great, some achieve greatness, and some have greatness thrust upon them". Truth be told DD might have moved up through the cracks by mantra of illusive unity and this might be the way the cat arranged its cheese. But by 2016 October the current SG and I when I was still the SG went to the provincial government. On the agenda was the release of the 2016 Community Survey. Premier Mabuza invited us to his office where to our surprise we held court for an hour. We did not discuss the numbers and instead he discussed his plans. He repeatedly said, "I am not coming back. I am done with province." So finally he set us free to go and present. So as we had this private space with Risenga Maluleke we giggled like small boys wondering in which ministry DD could deputise. In our estimation the man could not even be a minister and he could only deputise. So we looked around and we thought he could be in education. But truth be told as we discussed on reflection from the numbers David Mabuza was a deserving deputy president. The numbers stacked favourably. I even went to write in one of my columns that indeed evidence favoured him. The results of the Community Survey showed that it was only in his province of Mpumalanga and at the level of City of Cape Town that the performance was positive on all indicators and in fact on poverty Mpumalanga and City of Cape Town were showing positive outcomes whilst the rest were sluggards worthy of the remarks of the then minister of sports when he referred to Banana-Bafana as a bunch of losers. Using such an objective measure DD was deserving after all. But given the oddity of the logic of politics, it was exactly when Auntie De Lille, the then mayor of the City of Cape Town, had her fate of separation sealed despite the good track record as mayor of Cape Town and she fell out with Zille. Not surprising again was when then president Thabo Mbeki, the only president who consistently achieved indicators of positive development. These pointed to a different future, as South Africa danced with at least a 5% growth per year for six years. Gross fixed capital formation was at an unprecedented 25% per annum, a far cry from a single digit we have experienced in the past 17 years, and unemployment dropping from a high of 30%, to a still high 22%, which has not been achieved in the past ten years. Credit extension growth was 15% per annum, a rate unheard of in the last 17 years. All municipalities were experiencing monotonically declining poverty compared to a third increase in poverty in the last 15 years and possibly counting. Yet it was in the face of that evidence that the question of "uhamba nini lo zizi" was asked, and the chorus at that fateful NEC was khonaNgogo. The uhamba nini has become our unfortunate moment as irate politics govern over rationality. Perhaps if our decisions were based on national objectives as the prime motive forces, we would see better results and a country on the ascent. DD's mask of unity to ascendancy needed not to be what made the cat sneak through in the NDZ 17 and CR2017. His performance in the province, as the only ANC governed province to continue witnessing a decline in poverty, should have been the reason for his ascendance to high office. And perhaps the unity aerodynamics could have added the emotive noise that necessarily accompanies the queer logic of political settings. Evidence of delivery showed he was a clear winner, but the cat needed the additional invisible lives to survive and be an unexpected deputy president. Perhaps if we were guided by performance we would not see a South Africa of two halves. One of ascendant quality of live for ordinary citizens from Mandela to Mbeki's 15 years and followed by monotonic decline from Zuma into Ramaphosa and counting. The cat did its unity footwork and became deputy president of the country. But the cat delivered better quality of life to citizens of Mpumalanga so says the evidence. And DD was determined to leave the province. Hands clutched to each other, index fingers pointing in the sky following on his eyes starring upwards, a signature gesture of Mabuza, he told Maluleke and I in 2016 that he was not coming back to the province. One term he said he was not coming back to presidency, and now he is not coming back and forever he is gone and belong to the ages. May his soul rest in peace. May his family be consoled. He served the people of Mpumalanga well and was exemplary in addressing poverty. The facts will remember him for that. What will the facts remember others for. This is what a forward looking and design thinking and systems design based national dialogue should do. Set rules of engagement on what we will hold each other's for. Dr Pali Lehohla is a Professor of Practice at the University of Johannesburg, among other hats. Image: Supplied

Peoria Library's Easter egg hunt back with more eggs this year
Peoria Library's Easter egg hunt back with more eggs this year

Yahoo

time15-04-2025

  • General
  • Yahoo

Peoria Library's Easter egg hunt back with more eggs this year

PEORIA, Ill. (WMBD) — Last year, the Peoria Public Library crew hid 6,000 eggs, and it took two minutes for the happy hunters to find them. This year, there are even more eggs up for finds at the Lincoln Branch, April 19. Jennifer Davis, a library spokeswoman, told WMBD This Morning that she timed the Easter egg hunt last year, 'it was two minutes,' so this year, they're hiding more eggs, but her advice is still 'it starts promptly at 2:30, you don't want to be late.' Davis also talked of other Earth Month activities at all branches, such as the April 22 Earth Day celebration at the McClure Branch, and a seed planting at the Main Library on April 23. Davis also invited the community to take part in the Community Survey on their website through the end of April. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Information from public to form police 'vision'
Information from public to form police 'vision'

Yahoo

time07-04-2025

  • Politics
  • Yahoo

Information from public to form police 'vision'

Guernsey's chief of police said information gathered from a community survey and a public meeting would "form a vision and a mission" for the force. The comments came as part of his first community meeting - where islanders could meet Damian Kitchen, and listen to his plans for the force over the next few years. About 60 people attended the meeting, consisting of police, the general public, deputies and prospective deputies. Mr Kitchen also said he would like to see updates to the police complaints legislation. Mr Kitchen said: "The information from tonight and from the survey, from speaking to our officers and from elected members over the last few very shortly will form a vision and a mission for Guernsey Police and some real key pillars around community policing, keeping people safe, protecting victims and our professionalism going forward." He added: "In terms of watchdogs and the complaints legislation there's a number of us on the same page around that, it needs refreshing." The Community Survey was launched at the beginning of February and explored a number of areas like trust and confidence in the police, perceptions of crime and the night time economy. It had 1,698 responses, an increase from the 755 responses the crime and justice survey carried out in 2018 had. Of the respondents, 16% said they had been victims of crime within the past two years. Just over 75% of those reported crime to the police but only 36% of those victims were satisfied with the service they received. Respondents cited a number of reasons they did not report crime. About 34% said they felt the police simply would not do anything. Mr Kitchen said: "The barriers for policing is not taking the community with us. "The barrier to us policing effectively is a lack of trust and lack of confidence." Follow BBC Guernsey on X and Facebook. Send your story ideas to Guernsey Police launch public priorities survey Police remind residents about community survey Police chief lays down law on misconduct Guernsey Police States of Guernsey

Information from public to form police 'vision'
Information from public to form police 'vision'

BBC News

time07-04-2025

  • Politics
  • BBC News

Information from public to form police 'vision'

Guernsey's chief of police said information gathered from a community survey and a public meeting would "form a vision and a mission" for the comments came as part of his first community meeting - where islanders could meet Damian Kitchen, and listen to his plans for the force over the next few 60 people attended the meeting, consisting of police, the general public, deputies and prospective Kitchen also said he would like to see updates to the police complaints legislation. Mr Kitchen said: "The information from tonight and from the survey, from speaking to our officers and from elected members over the last few very shortly will form a vision and a mission for Guernsey Police and some real key pillars around community policing, keeping people safe, protecting victims and our professionalism going forward."He added: "In terms of watchdogs and the complaints legislation there's a number of us on the same page around that, it needs refreshing." 'Lack of trust' The Community Survey was launched at the beginning of February and explored a number of areas like trust and confidence in the police, perceptions of crime and the night time economy. It had 1,698 responses, an increase from the 755 responses the crime and justice survey carried out in 2018 the respondents, 16% said they had been victims of crime within the past two over 75% of those reported crime to the police but only 36% of those victims were satisfied with the service they cited a number of reasons they did not report 34% said they felt the police simply would not do Kitchen said: "The barriers for policing is not taking the community with us. "The barrier to us policing effectively is a lack of trust and lack of confidence."

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