Exclusion and Corruption are Two Sides of the Same Coin.
David Hume famously wrote that “FORCE is always on the side
of the governed”. It is the governed who have the power and it is thus that the
rulers have to find ways to keep them from using that power.
Or as Walter
Lippman, a famous 20th century public intellectual once said, that
we have to protect the responsible men, the intelligent minority, from the
“trampling and roar of the bewildered herd”.
Or more to the point, as Janan Ganesh recently wrote in the Financial
Times; “The poor will always outnumber the rich. Technocracy can protect the
rich from the poor”.
In modern society this includes the use of “democratic”
systems which creates sufficient appearance of public control but which
concentrates and maintains power among the “responsible men and intelligent
minority”.
It is on this foundation, behind the scenes, away from the
scrutiny of public involvement that the schemes of corruption and deception are
allowed to spread and mutate like the cancer it is and that the seeds of
inequality are nurtured and grown.
It was in one such behind the scenes exercise of power that
the proclamation by the Minister of Mineral Resources of the 3rd
Mining Charter was made. While the
proclamation drew the immediate ire of the Chamber of Mines and precipitated a
stand-off between the Chamber and the Minister, it also inadvertently opened
the door to the possibility of advancing a deeper more structural political
solution to the mining question.
For decades, if not centuries, the governance of the sector
which has become synonymous with the inequality that manifests in broader society
has been the preserve of the political, economic and labour elites. It can thus
be no surprise that only these elites have been the main beneficiaries of a
mining regime that continues to leave massive destruction and poverty in its
wake.
The mining sector is itself a useful prism through which to
understand the problems of inequality in broader society and the inability of
both the state and business to address the historical injustices of the past
while creating opportunities for the future.
At the heart of the failure to transform the sector from one
which has historically benefitted the colonial elites to one which benefits
society more generally, is the mistaken notion that only a few responsible men
and the intellectual minority, engaged in backroom deals, have the answers to
our complex problems.
This popular notion among business and political elites is cynically
at variance with the basic demands of the South African struggle for liberation
as well as the growing sentiment across the globe for greater inclusion and
more just outcomes. This elitism also now increasingly appears to be an
anachronistic mode of governance that has no place in the future.
Historically the Anti-Apartheid struggle had at its core,
the demand for the inclusion of the majority in the regulation and governance
of society. The Constitution, while acknowledging this central requirement of
any future society and while the Constitutional Court has approved this very
notion of broad participation as being central to a society based on human
dignity, the state and organised business have more often than not, tried to
circumvent this foundational principle of our new democracy.
Even as we venture into the 21st century, the age
old wisdom and historical demand for the inclusive governance to which all
peoples have strived are finding new and innovative ways to make its case.
Take
blockchain technology as one example of how the universal wisdom of inclusive
open and transparent governance helps to reduce corruption and secures more
equitable outcomes.
The blockchain’s main innovation is a public transaction
record of integrity without central authority. Blockchain technology offers
everyone the opportunity to participate in secure contracts over time, but
without being able to avoid a record of what was agreed at that time. Fraud is
prevented through block validation. The blockchain does not require a central
authority or trusted third party to coordinate interactions or validate
transactions. A full copy of the blockchain contains every transaction ever
executed, making information on the value belonging to every active address
(account) accessible at any point in history.
The essence of blockchain technology employs the same essence
of a democracy where open transparent participation of all users /citizens
guarantees corruption-less transactions and outcomes.
The Pew Research Center, recently published a global survey
of attitudes to democracy and even in the West, the proverbial home of liberal
democracy, fully 70 per cent of those surveyed wanted a democracy where
“citizens, not elected officials, vote directly on major national issues to
decide what becomes law”.
This global reaction to the growing inequality in the world
and what is increasingly perceived as a lack of democracy should serve as a
siren warning to us that in a country where inequality is particularly severe,
repeating the patterns of dominance imbibed from the Apartheid state cannot
lead to more just outcomes than the Apartheid state delivered.
The seminal mistake
we make in preferring elite technocratic responses to what is generally a lack
of democratic participation of people in their own governance is informed by
mistaken notions such as Van Zyl Slabbert`s claim that “apartheid
self-destructed because of a massive crisis of delivery”.
This approach to governance which suggests that all a
government has to do is to deliver services to keep the citizens docile and
contained in their townships and villages, is similar to the current approach
by the democratic state which seeks to downplay the political claims of
citizens to inclusion by reducing it to a paternalistic matter of delivery.
The application by Mining Affected Communities United in
Action (MACUA) to the Pretoria High Court as part of the case seeking to have
the proclamation of the Mining Charter reviewed is thus more than a plea by
desperately poor communities for service delivery. It is, at its core, their
claim to their constitutional right to be included in their own governance.
Hopefully the Courts will provide the clarity and certainty
to government and the Chamber of Mines on the constitutional right of
communities to be consulted on matters that directly affect them and put a stop
to the double speak of token consultations and the cynical exclusion which has
been the bedrock of the most unequal society in the world.

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