The Economist - USA (2020-08-08)

(Antfer) #1
TheEconomistAugust 8th 2020 Middle East & Africa 35

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U


ponarrivalatanexpensiverestau-
rantnearSandton,Johannesburg’s
financialdistrict,nothingfeelsunusual,
atleastinthisageofcovid-19.The
maître-d’zapsa temperaturegunat
patrons’maskedfacesandspritzestheir
handswithsanitiser.Onlywhenushered
intothediningroomdoessomething
seemodd:everytablehasa potoftea.
SouthAfricansliketheirrooibos,but
theliquidinmanytea-cupsisa darker
red—claret,even.Onothertablesthere
arecansoftonicnexttoteapots.Reality
dawnswhentwoyoungwomenaregiven
shotglassesofJägermeisterinsidetheir
tea-cups.
SouthAfricabannedalcoholsalesfor
thesecondtimethisyearonJuly12th,so
astopreventdrunksfromtakingup
preciousspaceinhospitals.Butrestau-
rants,whicharestrugglingtostayafloat,
areopenandcustomersarethirsty.“Are
youservingspecialteas?”yourcorre-
spondenthesitantlyasksa waiter.“Yes”,
hereplies,therippleofa smilejustvis-
iblefromtheedgesofhismask.
Anunscientificsampleoflocalestab-
lishmentssuggeststhepatchinessof
prohibition.A steakhouseinanaffluent
suburbalsousesteapotsforredwine,
andputscansoffizzyapplejuicenextto
glassesofbeer.Otherjointsaremore
brazen.Ata cafépopularwithfamilies,
parentskeeponeeyeontheirchildren
ricochetinginsidea bouncycastleand
theotherontheiricebucket.
ThewillingnessofSouthAfricansto
flouttheboozerulesisa signthatbans
rarelywork.It showsthatthepoliceare
unwillingorunabletoenforcethem—at
leastinrichareas.Butit alsoreflectshow
manySouthAfricansarereluctantto
obeylawssetbya rulingpartythatitself

showslittlerespectforpropriety.
Inrecentweekslocaljournalistshave
revealedhowmembersoftheAfrican
NationalCongressandtheirfamilies
havewonjuicycontractsforsupplying
personalprotectiveequipment,despite
havinglittleexperienceinmedicalkit.
Cronyismhasbeenrifeforyears,butthe
sightof“tenderpreneurs”coiningit is
especiallygallingwhenthousandsare
dying.OnAugust3rdPresidentCyril
Ramaphosacomparedsuchpeopleto
hyenascirclingwoundedprey.
Yethehasdonetoolittletostopthe
scavengers.Morethantwoyearsafterhe
tookoffice,SouthAfricansarewaiting
forprosecutionstobebroughtagainst
thoseaccusedofwrongdoingduringthe
reignofhispredecessor,JacobZuma.
Meanwhiletheformerpresidentcontin-
uestostallhisowntrialoveranarms
dealcutmorethan 20 yearsago.It is
enoughtomakeoneordera cupoftea.

Tea-total


Prohibitionina pandemic

JOHANNESBURG
TeasalesareboominginJohannesburgrestaurants.Atleastthat’sthestory...

15,000 unpeacekeepers. eu troops are also
training local soldiers. Yet if Mali’s govern-
ment is shown to lack legitimacy, Western
efforts are more likely to fail.
Dodgy legislative elections in March
and April triggered the protests. The poll,
which had been delayed for 17 months, was
rushed through as the covid-19 pandemic
began to spread. Turnout was only 35%.
When the results were first announced, the
ruling party got 41 of 147 seats, and lost al-
most all its seats in Bamako. A week later
the constitutional court awarded it another
ten seats, smoothing the path to a ruling
coalition and reinstating close allies of Mr
Keïta, one of whom has now been elected
president of the national assembly.
Though the questionable election provid-
ed the spark, it was “neither the principal
cause nor the motor of the protests”, says
Ibrahim Maïga, who is based in Bamako for
the Institute for Security Studies.
Much of the anger stems from the gov-
ernment’s inability to stop the violence. In
the first six months of this year more than
1,800 people were killed in fights involving
jihadist groups and ethnic militias, about
as many as were killed in the whole of last
year. On March 25th the main leader of the
opposition, Soumaïla Cissé, was seized by
gunmen, probably jihadists. He has not
been seen since. To make matters worse,
the French intervention itself is unpopu-
lar. One survey found that almost 60% of
Malians think that the French forces are in
cahoots with the insurgents.
Malians are fed up with corruption,
while the economy goes from bad to worse.
Karim Keïta, the president’s son, who
heads parliament’s defence committee, is a
particular target of derision. He resigned
from his post after videos circulated on so-
cial media showing him cavorting in Spain
with scantily clad women.
Yet President Keïta does not fit the
mould of those ousted by protests in other
parts of the region. He did not come to
power through the barrel of a gun. He has
been president since 2013 and is not expect-
ed to run for a third term in 2023. The main
charge against him is that he is out of touch
and incompetent. In normal circum-
stances he would be voted out.
Some now worry that Mr Dicko will use
his growing power to push Mali in a more
Islamist direction. In 2009 he campaigned
successfully against amending a law that
compels married women to obey their hus-
bands. He has inveighed against racy Mex-
ican telenovelasbroadcast during Ramadan
and against sex education in schools.
Other leaders in the Sahel may be more
worried that the crisis could spill over into
their countries. In late July five presidents
from the region flew to Bamako to mediate.
They proposed a reform of the constitu-
tional court, a government of national un-
ity, an inquiry into the deaths of protesters,

and new elections for 31 seats in parliament
that are still disputed. But the mps who
would have to run again rejected the idea.
So has the m5-rfp.
The gap between the parties is still wide.
Mr Dicko has suggested there may be a way
out without the president having to step
down. But the m5-rfpstill demands he
leaves. There are few good options. Most
Malian institutions are in trouble. The con-
stitutional court was dissolved in July. The
prime minister’s cabinet has only six min-
isters. The composition of the national as-
sembly is disputed. If the president were to
resign, it would mark “a big jump into the
void”, says Ibrahim Yahaya Ibrahim, who is

based in Dakar for the International Crisis
Group, a conflict-prevention ngo. Yet if Mr
Keïta were to stay on, violence in the streets
might worsen, he adds.
The truce is over. Some protests re-
sumed on August 3rd. Mr Keïta could still
seek to forge a compromise with the prot-
est leaders by sacking his prime minister,
Boubou Cissé. After all, he is already on his
sixth prime minister in seven years. Yet if
he merely plays musical chairs among the
elite and ignores deeper problems, says Mr
Maïga, “it will only delay the next bomb,
the next explosion.” And next time the
protests could be led by firebrands far more
radical than Mr Dicko. 7
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