Tony Leon salutes Barry Streek

Published Aug 8, 2013

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Cape Times political writer Barry Streek, who died in 2006, was honoured at a memorial lecture by former leader of the opposition TONY LEON at the Cape Town Press Club last night.

This is the speech Leon prepared, under the title: “The Mandela Presidency: Beginning or Ending of Free Space for South Africa? Some Lessons for Today and the Future”

Barry Streek, whose imperishable memory we honour tonight, was foremost a

man of the press, the embodiment of a passionate and proficient journalist, in

whose veins the printer’s ink ran very deep indeed. For a significant part of his

professional life, writing for a South African newspaper, through the thicket

of curbs, bannings and regulations, was in the words of the doyen of media

lawyers of the apartheid age, Kelsey Stuart, “Like walking through a minefield

blindfolded.”

Barry and other colleagues of that time did more than navigate this treacherous

terrain with tenacious skill and some daring; they brought to light and to the

attention of an often somnambulant country and unsuspecting world, the full

and unexpurgated story of the dark underbelly of the apartheid state and the

forces which it unleashed to protect its privileges.

When Barry’s journalistic career was in its commencement, the legendary Joel

Mervis was Editor of the Sunday Times. In his commissioned history of Times

Media, and its predecessor South African Associated Newspapers (SAAN), in

whose employ Barry worked for much of his professional life, Mervis wrote –

“Even though statecraft and the craft of journalism have much in common, they

are, like opposing barristers in court, basically adversaries.”

Until the advent of full-blown democracy here in 1994, Barry and his likeminded colleagues in the so-called “Morning Group” of SAAN newspapers had

no doubt on which side of the equation they operated. He was an impassioned

champion for the fairness, openness and equality which was the almost exact

opposite of both the state and its craft until the ascent to the presidency of FW

De Klerk in 1989.

It was at a moment shortly after the election, in early September 1989, that

Barry and I encountered each other for the first time, in the rabbit-warren

of first floor offices at the back of the old assembly in Parliament where the

parliamentary press gallery was housed.

“Have a drink”, might not be the first words he uttered to me on entering the

office which he shared with Anthony Johnson, his Cape Times journalistic

Siamese twin, but it was a good approximation of our early relationship at any

rate. A stop over with Barry and his colleagues was an early and essential

rite of passage for a freshly minted and somewhat ambitious Member of

Parliament such as I was back then; and I made many rounds to his and

neighbouring offices, desperate to ensure some coverage in the next day’s

editions! Many libations helped ease those and many subsequent encounters.

Those were remarkable and heady days indeed as the apartheid order started,

both under its own hand and from the forces ranged against it, to yield to

the demands of the new. The contours of the new democracy could only be

vaguely seen at the time of the dawning of the country’s new age. Even the

announcement of its arrival - in perhaps the most remarkable and unexpected

speech ever delivered form the podium of parliament - on 2 February 1990 -

was unimaginable just weeks before its delivery.

The British historian CV Wedgwood wrote-

“History is written backward but lived forward. Those who know the end of the

story can never know what it was like at the time.”

Barry and his colleagues and I and others who entered parliament at the end of

the apartheid era, and those who joined the negotiations process from exile and

from prison, lived that history and helped write that story; perhaps one of the

most remarkable in the annals of the modern world.

Sadly, Barry Streek’s early death seven years ago, in July 2006, robbed him

of the opportunity to see how the journey to democracy continued. Doubtless

he would have strong views about our uneven progress, and some significant

regressions, since then and Barry being Barry would have made them known in

emphatic and vivid terms!

Barry’s passions for social justice and media freedom and indeed for the very

Cape Town Press Club which honours him with this lecture tonight are well

known to us all. They were his sheet anchors in the turbulent times which he

ably chronicled. Less well known to me, at any rate, was a fact gleaned recently

from a colleague, that Barry was an avid and prodigious collector of maps.

This information inspired me use tonight’s lecture to contemplate a period of

which Barry was a full and enthusiastic reporter - the presidency of Nelson

Mandela. Did that now almost golden, and increasingly distant, chapter in

our national story, provide us with a road map to guide us in building a house

of durable freedom and democracy on the stony soil of our country? Has the

structure which Mandela helped to build and withstood the unanticipated

damage and corrosion in the years which followed?

The ‘first rough drafts of history’ was the wonderful definition of journalism

penned by the Washington Post publisher Phil Graham. And so, the issue

is: How will future generations, as they leaf (or more accurately, Google)

through the ‘first rough drafts of history’ judge the Mandela years and what

has followed: will his successors be remembered for consolidating the new

democracy, or will some be remembered as having lost their way as they

vandalised the structures and excavated under the foundations they were

bequeathed?

Foremost, is the difficulty of separating the power of human agency from what

Karl Marx termed the “motive forces of history”, and the confluence of events

and the formations which propelled them. Undoubtedly, while Mandela was

at all times the servant and symbol of the political movement he led, he also,

at key moments, provided personal leadership which proved quite decisive in

determining the course of this country.

On the personal, as I wrote in my political biography: “Mandela was an

extraordinary phenomenon. At one level he was all too human, but at another

level he inhabited a plane out of reach of most mortal politicians (in which latter

category I decidedly place myself). It had been my great gift that my leadership

had commenced under his presidency and had grown, not under his enormous

shadow, but because of that special light which he shone on so many, including

me.”

There are many members of tonight’s audience, and certainly the man whose

memory we honour in this lecture, who also basked in that radiance.

Equally, Mark Twain reminded us that “Every man is a moon with a dark side

that he doesn’t show anyone.” We can also bracket Mandela with Mahatma

Ghandi, as one of the select few of any age who transcend the politics of their

age and rank in that rare category of truly good and the great. But we should

bear in mind George Orwell’s necessary caution and apply it to both men:

“The problem with conferring sainthood on Ghandi is that you need to rescue

saints from under a pile of tissues and saccharine.”

Certainly, from my angle of both proximity to and distance from him, the

Mandela presidency was an all-inclusive effort, which operated on many fronts.

He led a Government of National Unity until 1996 and no sooner had its largest

minority component (the National Party) left it, than he sought to include others,

including my party, in it. Even when we could not agree to square that circle,

of going into government but also maintaining a critical stance outside of it,

Mandela continued to reach out by both gesture and intervention, to ensure that

minority views were obtained and some buy-in on critical issues was achieved.

I was, accordingly, often at the receiving end of what the ghost writer of his

autobiography (and, latterly, Editor of Time Magazine) Richard Stengel defined

as “The full Mandela”-

“He is a power charmer –confident that he will charm you, by whatever means

possible. He is attentive, courtly, winning, and to use a word he would hate,

seductive. ..The charm is political as well as personal, and he regards himself

not so much as the Great Communicator but as the Great Persuader…he would

always rather persuade you to do something than order you to do so..(but) he

will always stand up for what he believes is right with a stubbornness that is

virtually unbending.”

I used to tell my political colleagues after one or another session with the great

man and a dose of “The Full Mandela” that, from an opposition perspective,

it was a little like the political equivalent of the seduction scene from “Fatal

Attraction”!

My first conclusion, on contrasting the Mandela presidential years and those

which followed it, starts with a caution: His great personal characteristics aside,

Mandela’s presidency had the advantage of occurring at a time of transcending

national and international change. He was the bookend between the dying of

the old order and the dawn of a new age. By the time he took office, the seventy

year era of Communist rule over Eastern Europe and forty-six years of apartheid

rule (and three centuries of racial domination) at home had just come to at an

end. It was an era of new and brave and dramatic beginnings.

It was on his watch that the first democratic parliament convened, a new

constitution was negotiated and inked, the Truth and Reconciliation

Commission commenced and concluded its work and the country and its First

Citizen basked in the attention and admiration of the world. Such an alignment

of stars is rare in any country’s history; and, sometimes it is easier to guide the

ship of state through the high seas of big events than it is navigate through the

smaller, but often unseen and therefore more treacherous , currents which it fell

to his successors to manoeuvre .

But, some blind spots aside, Mandela led by example in opening up the

free space necessary for a democracy to take root in this country. His rare

combination of personal history and enforced 27 year period of reflection and

introspection perhaps uniquely equipped him for the task of being the country’s

cheerleader-in-chief for democratic freedom.

Recently, Mandela’s close colleague, Pallo Jordan, reminded us that-

“During the Rivonia trial, Nelson Mandela cited the Magna Carta, the Petition

of Rights and the US Bill of Rights as expressive of his vision of a free society.”

No less than his own movement’s Freedom Charter, these international

testaments of freedom clearly informed and helped shape his world view and his

tone of governance.

Famously, Mandela’s rich and complex background also helped inform

and shape his politics and, later, his style of presidency. British statesman

Denis Healey said properly-rounded leaders needed “a hinterland”, a life

and philosophy beyond the narrow confines of the party diktat. Few of any

country’s rulers - and certainly none here since his presidency - have enjoyed

Mandela’s breadth of experiences.

Richard Stengel, again, captures the complex and contradictory forces which

shaped his life and informed his politics: “His persona is a mixture of African

royalty and British aristocracy. He is a Victorian gentleman in a silk dashiki.”

Politics and imprisonment might have shaped his life, but so too did his decision

to escape an early arranged marriage, commence the first-black law practise

in Johannesburg, and earning a living independent of the Party. He was more

certifiable member of the human race than a narrowly formed political partisan.

Doubtless it was this rich personal hinterland which allowed him to call the

Queen of England by her first name and to win the adulation of rural peasants

in his home Province. It also informed some of his most powerful gestures and

symbols.

Today, in contrast, almost our entire political leadership is drawn from the

ranks of life-time politicians and trades unionists. This is not confined to the

governing party: many emerging leaders on the opposition side, as well, have

had no career outside of party politics.

Gestures and symbols are, incidentally, hugely important and often

underestimated in statecraft, and Mandela had an almost genius-like ability to

use them to shape his nation and bind its component parts together. The Invictus

moment in the 1995 Rugby World Cup, the tea party in Orania with widow of

the architect of grand apartheid Dr H.F. Verwoerd, and signing into law the

1996 South African constitution at Sharpeville, site of the grim police massacre

of anti-pass law protesters thirty five years before, were among the highlights of

a crowded, consequential and celebrity-filled presidency.

He set the benchmark even before entering office: You might recall a dramatic

moment on the eve of South Africa’s first democratic election in 1994, during

the only television debate between President FW De Klerk and Mandela. In

the main it was a rancorous and point-scoring exercise, with Mandela spending

much of it on the offensive. Yet toward its conclusion, Mandela reached across

to De Klerk and took his hand and said of his main rival, “I am proud to hold

your hand…Let us work together to end division and suspicion.” Posterity

remembers that gesture better than the debate, and thus the “Rainbow Nation”

was born.

Paradoxically, the most partisan of politicians, Mandela was also able to look

beyond the interests of the Party and make tough calls on it, to meet the needs

of the country-in-the making.

There was another critical moment just after the 1994 elections, during

its chaotic counting process. You might recall the drama of unregistered

ballots, pirate voting stations and other jarring irregularities. During this

long tallying process, the very future was in the balance due to extreme

electoral infringements in key places. At one point, ANC senior officials met

in Johannesburg and demanded the Party take action, and at least call a press

conference concerning what many insiders apparently regarded as “grand theft”,

which they believed had robbed the party of victory in Kwa Zulu Natal and

elsewhere. An eye witness at the meeting describes its conclusion:

“Mandela had said nothing during the discussion. Then he brought the room to

a full stop. “Tell the comrades to cancel the press conference. We will not do

anything to make the election illegitimate. The ANC will not say the election is

not ‘free and fair.’ Prepare our people in Natal and the Western Cape to lose.’ “

He followed through on this example toward the end of his presidency. When

the Truth and Reconciliation Commission prepared to publish its report in

October 1998, both his predecessor and successor as President attempted legal

action to either amend or suppress its findings. In contrast, Mandela said the

equivalent of “publish and be damned.” As his authorised biographer, Anthony

Sampson, noted: “As head of state he saw himself as having loyalties which

went beyond the ANC…”

Indeed, as president and even before, Mandela ensured that his presidential

office was no echo chamber reserved only for approving voices. He sought the

counsel of a range of viewpoints.

While he was unyielding on his bottom lines, Mandela claimed no monopoly of

wisdom on key issues and sought a range of views and voices beyond the party

faithful and his inner circle.

I recall when I first met Mandela in July 1992, at a dinner he arranged at his

Houghton home, he told me and two party colleagues how his recent visit to

the World Economic Forum at Davos had convinced him on his return that

the ANC had to change its economic policy. As he rather pithily put it on that

occasion, “Some of the biggest and most influential businessmen in the world

were at Davos. They were very happy to meet me, but practically every one

of them bashed me over the head because of our policy of nationalisation (of

industries). So when I got back to South Africa, I got hold of our economics

team, and said to them, “Boys we have got to change our policy …and they

agreed.”

Compare and contrast that impulse with what prevails today in South Africa’s

inner councils of power, at a time of deep economic crisis. Last week, in

a somewhat gloomy, bit I fear accurate, description, the Financial Mail

editorialised –

“Rightly or wrongly, the ANC struggles to bring itself to listen to any

institution, organisation or individual outside its own ranks. The most important

debates within the ANC happen within the ANC. In the minds of the cadres,

many of whom think of themselves as part of a liberation movement rather than

a political party, outside critiques are almost by definition wrong. “

Contrary voices are often irritating and discomfiting, but they are vital for

obtaining society’s buy-in and correcting course when change is indicated. They

are often the equivalent of the canary-in-the-coalmine who avert to the dangers

which lie ahead.

At a meeting shortly after the 1994 election, Mandela told me, in private, “It is

important for the opposition to hold up a mirror to the government and point

out where we do things wrong.” He used almost this exact formula when he

benchmarked, in public, his soon-to-be elected government’s relationship with

the media. In February 1994, Mandela told the International Press Institute

Congress-

“…The media are a mirror through which we see ourselves as others perceive

us, warts, blemishes and all. The African National Congress has nothing to

fear from criticism. I can promise you, we will not wilt under close scrutiny.

It is our considered view that such criticism can only help us grow, by calling

attention to our actions and omissions which do not measure up to our people’s

expectations and the democratic values to which we subscribe.”

Four years in office somewhat changed Mandela’s views, on both opposition

and media scrutiny. In December 1997, at the ANC 50

he severely criticised the press, non-governmental organisations, the opposition,

and other elements of civil society. He identified them as part of some vast

and ill-defined ‘counter revolutionary movement.’ Even his staunch press ally,

The Guardian of London called it “a profoundly depressing assault.” I thought

it marked the low -water mark of political paranoia, so distinct from his hugely

buoyant presidency.

I also believe that this Conference, far more decisively than the better reported

and more dramatic gathering at Polokwane ten years later, set South Africa

on the wrong course: it was here that the finishing touches were sealed on

cadre deployment, the capture of the State by the Party and other elements of a

determined hegemony so at odds with the constitution concluded just one-anda-half years before.

However intemperate Mandela’s remarks in Mafikeng, they were a far cry from

the poisoned waters which now seem to separate government and the media

and the opposition and civil society today. They certainly did not lead to any

introduction of legislation to muzzle the media, such as the Protection of State

information Bill. But perhaps it sowed the seeds for a future showdown.

In researching tonight’s lecture, I was reminded -in lighter vein - that Mandela

had his own “The Spear” moment, though how we diffused it was perhaps

telling. He had an aversion to censoring anything, even pornography. In

February 1998, Hustler magazine indecorously named Mandela as “Asshole of

the Month.” Then deputy minister of Home Affairs, Lindiwe Sisulu, slammed

the issue as ‘vile, outrageous and obscene’, and apparently considered banning

it. Mandela, in sharp contrast ‘laughed the matter off’ and instead of rushing

to court he said, somewhat oxymoronically, the magazine’ should use its own

sense of morality and judgment’. He surprised his Director General, Jakes

Gerwel, by asking impishly: “Have you seen this month’s Hustler?”

More consequentially, it was Mandela’s attitude toward the courts and his

faith in the supremacy of the constitution and respect for its institutions which

separated him from some of his successors.

Our current President’s own ascent to office can be, diplomatically, best

described as a Houdini-like escape from the coils of court processes, rather than

an embrace of them.

In contrast to Mandela’s championing of the constitution which he signed

into law, consider the recent scepticism of senior ANC executive member

and Deputy Minister of Correctional Services Ngoaka Ramatlhodi. In 2011,

he stated that the constitutional transition was a victory for ‘apartheid forces’

who wanted to ‘retain white domination under a black government’. This

was achieved ‘by emptying the legislature and executive of real power’ and

giving it to ‘the other constitutional institutions and civil society movements.’

Apparently, other powerful voices in Mr Ramathlodi’s party and government

share this sentiment.

We might conclude from this contrast that while the ruling party certainly

celebrates Nelson Mandela and his early legacy of armed struggle, it is far more

ambivalent about what we might term “Latter Mandelaism”, and his embrace of

the constitution, and some of those inclusive presidential characteristics I have

enumerated above.

But let me conclude with a note of hope of how the spirit of democracy,

freedom and robust dialogue has actually taken root a decade and a half since

Mandela left formal office and entered “ a twilight of greatness.”

During his presidency, South Africa’s parliamentary opposition was deeply

fragmented; its civil society was still finding its feet after the long dark night

of apartheid and the press, whose leading editors were mostly drawn from the

minority, were at some quite decisive moments, mute and offside. The radiance

of Mandela’s leadership, ironically, both warmed our hearts but sometimes

blinded “some among us “(to borrow a favourite phrases of former President

Mbeki) on our roles in a free society and the rules of engagement needed for

democratic deepening. In this respect, at least, there has been a sea-change

today.

In June 2013, Constitutional Court Justice Edwin Cameron delivered an

influential address at the Sunday Times Literary Awards. He eloquently

signalled that in one vital respect, and despite considerable damage done, our

democracy remains afloat, and in one sense is more seaworthy than in the recent

past:

“Our polity is boisterous, rowdy, sometimes cacophonous and often angry.

That much is to be expected. But after nearly two decades, we have far more

freedom, more debate, more robust and direct engagement with each other –and

certainly more practically tangible social justice than 20 years ago.”

The push back by a diverse range of civil society actors here and the delayed

passage and marked improvement to the Protection of State Information Bill

earlier this year is a striking, encouraging example.

Just four years before Nelson Mandela’s release walked back into freedom,

another political prisoner was released from jail, the first in the Soviet Union to

be freed by Mikhail Gorbachev. Natan Sharansky had also been convicted and

imprisoned for High Treason. After nine years imprisonment, he went into exile

in Israel and subsequently became a political leader there. In 2004, he published

a powerful polemic, “The Case for Democracy’’. In the book he elaborates,

with passion and clarity, that freedom is rooted in the right to dissent, to walk

into the town square and declare one’s views without fear of consequence. “

For the many things that have gone right and wrong with South Africa since

our first steps toward becoming a free society back in 1994, Sharansky’s

universal observation that “the democracy which sometimes dislikes us is a

much safer place than the dictatorship which loves us” must serve as our guide

into the future. It was the light which illuminated the life and work of our late

friend, Barry Streek.

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