
If it ain't broke, break it anyway
If only the Gauteng education department's racism SWAT team – the fastest scrambling unit anywhere in government – was as good at hunting out weapons and drugs in our schools as it is chasing the ghosts of victimisation, then perhaps our institutions of learning would be a whole lot better off.
We have just witnessed the sick spectacle of the department conducting an expensive and ultimately unsuccessful witch-hunt against the principal of Pretoria High School for Girls, Phillipa Erasmus, over trumped up allegations of racism among her pupils.
The details of the alleged case are not worth going into, save to say that no less a personage than former president Thabo Mbeki and a team of similar luminaries could find no evidence of racism. Yet, despite that, education MEC Matome Chiloane and his henchmen pursued the unfortunate Erasmus.
In the end, a disciplinary hearing – questionable in and of it itself – found her guilty of two breaches… failing to do her duty when appointing a new finance manager for the school and allowing her husband, Mike, to help tend the school's gardens – for free, nogal!
Quite what the motive for the crusade against Erasmus is, is not clear, although there is probably an element of jealousy in the fact that this white-run school is excellent by any educational standards.
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Maybe there is a black school head waiting in the wings – possibly a well-connected ANC apparatchik – to take over to push the claim of black excellence… who knows?
Meanwhile, in the schools in poorer areas, there are principals who have bought their positions, who dip their fingers into the school funds, fire teachers on a whim and generally show that, for them, teaching is just another way to acquire wealth.
In these schools, unionist teachers don't give a damn, pitching up late and then sexually harassing the youngsters they are meant to mentor and protect.
Sure, that is a generalisation, but it is not an exaggeration of what is going on in the lower quintile schools, where the ANC hierarchy would never send their kids.
Also, while there are undoubtedly dedicated and professional teachers and heads in some of these schools, the jewels in the crown of education in Gauteng are those former model C ones which often have whites at the helm.
ALSO READ: Two schoolboys face court over fatal stabbing of Pretoria pupil
I know – my wife taught at one of them. I marvelled at how they nurtured girls who were not only knowledgeable but confident. Some have gone on to become leaders themselves in the private sector.
My wife and her colleagues lived to teach.
At the school my son and daughter attended, the much-reviled 'standards' are still high both in academic and sporting terms.
The same is true of many Afrikaans schools: just down the road from us, Laerskool Fairland produced Olympic champion and world record holder Tatjana Smith.
Because they are perceived by the ANC as enclaves of Afrikaner privilege, these schools are now also in the sights of the ANC through the Basic Education Laws Amendment Bill.
ALSO READ: Waterkloof principal transferred amid witness interference claims
However, the ANC, in its headlong pursuit of the chimera of transformation, apparently does not believe in the truism that 'if it ain't broke, don't fix it…'
On the contrary, in most places in society it has taken functioning systems – from Eskom, to the defence force, to municipalities, to virtually every single state-owned enterprise – and broken them.
And, all the while, as we pursue the ghosts of the past and our victimisation, the rest of Africa is queuing up to eat our lunch.
By the time we wake up, we'll be a 'has-been' nation…
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The South African
2 hours ago
- The South African
Springboks, Rassie accused of spying on B&I Lions in 2021
Back in 2021, the Springboks secured a hard-fought 2-1 series win over the British & Irish Lions, but the tour was marred by a number of controversies and a well-publicised spat between Rassie Erasmus and Warren Gatland. Erasmus was then serving as South Africa's director of rugby, but he was still very involved in various aspects of the Springboks' preparations, while Gatland was once again the coach of the touring team. During the tour, Erasmus also found himself at the centre of a highly controversial leaked video in which he criticised World Rugby and match officials, and which eventually led to a lengthy ban. The series was also played behind closed doors during the Covid-19 pandemic, and was nearly called off after a number of positive tests severely disrupted proceedings. Now, in a bombshell column written by Gatland in The Telegraph , he has accused Rassie Erasmus and the Springboks of spying on the Lions. 'We felt that during the tour we were spied on while we were based at the Arabella Country Estate near the coastal town of Hermanus,' he wrote. 'The Covid restrictions meant we had to stay there during the three Tests, which were moved to Cape Town to reduce the risk of infection. 'We trained at the nearby Hermanus High School and although we had security guards checking out the potential sites where cameras could be placed, there was only so much they could do. 'Our suspicions grew in the first Test, when Lukhanyo Am hit Elliot Daly with a massive man-and-ball tackle, reading a move that we had not used before during the tour matches. 'Because there were no supporters in the stadium, we could hear what was being said in the Springboks' coaches box. We could hear the messages being relayed to their physio on the pitch about the moves that they thought we were doing. 'Rassie was also on the pitch acting as a 'water boy,' carrying a piece of paper. One of the photographers got a picture of him holding the page standing beside Faf de Klerk, their scrumhalf, and after the game, we enlarged the photo which showed that there were some of our moves and calls on it.' The former Lions coach went on to suggest that the famed touring team had been filmed and photographed from a covert location. 'The first Test experience seemed to confirm our fears. We just didn't know how they could have so much information on us. We started training indoors in a gym to negate the suspicion we had of being watched. But we still felt we were being filmed. 'Our concern was that they were using a long-range lens to video us from somewhere nearby. 'Later on, well after the tour had finished, I talked to someone who is well-connected in South Africa, who told me that a house that overlooked our training pitch had been rented for the duration of the series and that a long-lens camera had been placed in the top corner of the house to record us. 'It was so frustrating because you go on tour with plans to use different moves and options, but if the opposition knows what they are, they can plan to defend them. I am not sure in other sports like football it would have the same impact. I think there is a lot of it going on in the game at the minute.' Let us know by leaving a comment below, or send a WhatsApp to 060 011 0211. Subscribe to The South African website's newsletters and follow us on WhatsApp, Facebook, X and Bluesky for the latest news.

IOL News
2 hours ago
- IOL News
Mathews Phosa: They did not call David Mabuza 'The Cat' for nothing
The ANC top six which emerged from the 54th ANC national conference in 2017 - deputy secretary-general Jessie Duarte, secretary-general Ace Magashule, chairperson Gwede Mantashe, president Cyril Ramaphosa, deputy president David Mabuza and treasury-general Paul Mashatile. Image: Picture: Motshwari Mofokeng/IOL Former Mpumalanga premier, Dr Mathews Phosa, has paid tribute to former deputy President David Dabede Mabuza who also hailed from Mpumalanga and also previously served as premier of the province from 2009 to 2018. IOL reported on Thursday that Mabuza died in hospital at the age of 64. He served as deputy president during President Cyril Ramaphosa's first term at the Union Buildings. On Friday, as tributes continue to pour for the man nicknamed 'The Cat' in South African politics due to his survival instinct, Phosa described Mabuza as a shrewd politician who contributed significantly to South Africa. 'He was a very shrewd politician. They call him the cat, not for nothing, he had many political tricks which entertained people. It got him where he got at the end of the day,' Phosa said in an interview with broadcaster Newzroom Afrika. As tributes pour in, many people are remembering Mabuza for his skillful maneuvering at the African National Congress (ANC) 2017 elective conference at Nasrec in Johannesburg, where the then Mpumalanga premier became kingmaker in Ramaphosa's path to the Union Buildings. Widely believed to be a backer of contender Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma, Mabuza at the last minute threw his decisive weight behind Ramaphosa, a move which earned him the second-in-command position in South Africa. Reminiscing on the thriller conference, Phosa said Mabuza consulted him before making the tough decision. 'DD was initially standing with Nkosazana. I remember when we stood outside the conference room, he said what do I do? I said we have thrown our lot with comrade Cyril. He said he was being pulled this way and that way. I said to him it is a democracy and he had a right to choose, and he must decide and follow his heart. He supported comrade Cyril Ramaphosa," said Phosa. 'That is how the whole vote was swung against Nkosazana.' Mabuza and Phosa did not always have a rosy relationship. In 2017, IOL reported that Mabuza, then premier of Mpumalanga, lost his R10-million defamation lawsuit against Phosa, who is also former ANC treasurer-general. Former ANC treasurer-general, Mathews Phosa. Newspapers. Image: Timothy Bernard / Independent Judge Bill Prinsloo in the High Court in Pretoria not only dismissed the claim, but he also slapped Mabuza with a punitive costs order. Mabuza claimed Phosa defamed him in a spy report, which was published in the media, when he was already the premier of Mpumalanga. He claimed Phosa was the author of the report in which the premier was made out to be an apartheid spy. It contained claims that Mabuza was involved in the murder of former ANC activist Portia Shabangu. She was assassinated in the 80's by the controversial head of Vlakplaas, Eugene de Kock. Phosa earlier testified that he never compiled the so-called spy report. He said an unmarked envelope was found on the veranda of his White River farmhouse. Inside the envelope was a document which later became known as the so-called spy report. 'I was shocked by its content and worried about it, as it referred to the premier. The allegations were so serious that I decided to hand it over to the ANC top structures. If the allegations were true, the report could harm the ANC leadership. Only a traitor of the ANC would hide it from them.' Phosa said he forwarded the report to then ANC secretary-general Jessie Duarte, as before this she had visited him to discuss party issues. At the end of the meeting Duarte, out of the blue, asked him 'who is this David Mabuza', he said. Former deputy secretary general of the ANC, Jessie Duarte. Image: Nhlanhla Phillips/Independent Media 'When I held office as premier of Mpumalanga, I appointed Mabuza as education MEC and he served under me as part of my executive cabinet.' After this Phosa did not hear anything until a reporter phoned and asked him whether he knew that Mabuza was going to sue him. Phosa denied that he had anything to do with the report and said his former butler, Jan Venter – who is at the centre of this dispute – lied when he implicated him (Phosa). Venter testified that he overheard Phosa 'concocting' the spy allegations against Mabuza. But the controversial butler twice switched sides. In the end, Judge Prinsloo ruled that he could not find that Phosa was the author of the document. Meanwhile, President Ramaphosa has also paid tribute to his former deputy, Mabuza. Ramaphosa conveyed his condolences to Mabuza's family. "On behalf of government and the nation, I offer my profound condolences to the late deputy president's wife, Mrs Mabuza, and their children. I extend my condolences to deputy president Mabuza's friends and the people of Mpumalanga whom he served as Premier from 2009 to 2018, and previously as a member of the executive council of Mpumalanga across a range of portfolios." He said Mabuza had a deep commitment to the liberation struggle and to the nation's development as an inclusive, prosperous, democratic state.


Daily Maverick
3 hours ago
- Daily Maverick
Political entrepreneur and provincial boss — The Cat with nine lives, David Mabuza, has died
David Mabuza excelled as a political entrepreneur and provincial boss, building a foundation for what he hoped would eventually propel him to the Union Buildings as president. South Africa's former deputy president David Mabuza has died at 64 years old in Mpumalanga after a short illness, President Cyril Ramaphosa announced on Thursday, 3 July 2025. As deputy president to Ramaphosa until early 2023, Mabuza left no particularly remarkable legacy that is publicly and widely acclaimed. But Ramaphosa praised his 'leadership and mobilisation abilities in his role as the Leader of Government Business in Parliament; leading the South African National Aids Council (and) coordinating anti-poverty initiatives'. Ramaphosa also praised Mabuza's lifelong activism: he was a student activist with the Azanian Students Organisation (Azaso) and later became a teacher in what would later become Mpumalanga. The province is where his political life is written as premier and where he rose to national prominence. Herein lies his true political obituary too. Mabuza excelled as a political entrepreneur and provincial boss, building a foundation for what he hoped would eventually propel him to the Union Buildings as president. For a while, it looked like that would happen, but Mabuza died defeated by the very political chess game he was once master at. A teacher by profession, Mabuza perfected the art of power politics once the ANC came to power and when provinces became fiefdoms for regional politicians. With unprecedented access to provincial fiscal capital, he, along with the Free State's Ace Magashule and the North West's Supra Mahumapelo, turned this capital to power and the three became what was known as the Premier League of the ANC. Because constituencies in the ANC are crafted by how many branches are built at ward, regional, district and provincial structures, the more you blow up branches and sign-ups, the greater your power. Mabuza clicked to this and ballooned the relative ANC backwater province to its second largest after KwaZulu-Natal, thus propelling himself into a national power-broker position in the party. He was reverentially called 'DD' by his comrades who were in awe of his money, power and tactics as a different culture gripped the ANC once it fell victim to the sins of power and incumbency. It mattered nothing to his admirers and those who emulated him that the province was beset by the grand corruption that would later become known as State Capture for the entire time he was premier from 2009 to 2018. Mpumalanga is now a beautiful basket case, as are the Free State and North West, all testimony to how the Premier League refashioned their stewardships for mass extraction and enrichment that has never yet properly been tallied. The outcomes are however clear in the development deficits in the hinterland where all the provincial fiscal transfers should have made more meaningful dents in rural poverty. Mabuza seemed untouchable despite multiple scandals, thus earning him the moniker 'The Cat'. He claimed an assassination attempt or attempts and was treated in Russia for alleged poisoning 10 years ago and then again in 2021, according to reports. It would fill many pages to go into full detail of what his political reign is renowned for. As an education provincial minister in 1998, the province suddenly grew its matric pass rate in utterly implausible multiples from 51% to 72%. This earned it the moniker 'Mamparalanga' for the wool that the politicians tried to pull over the country's eyes. Political assassinations of whistle-blowers started in earnest in Mpumalanga in the run-up to the 2010 World Cup when corruption around the Mbombela Stadium construction cost. In 2009, a substantial amount of cash (between R4-million and R14-million) was stolen from Mabuza's home in a crime not yet fully explained. In 2018, the New York Times published a long-form investigation into school building corruption in the province. The businessman Fred Daniels has campaigned for more than a decade, alleging Mabuza used his position to usurp land by organising sham protests and occupations. The list goes on and on. The most devastating account of Mabuza's reign as Mpumalanga premier is by the journalist Sizwe Sama Yende who covered most of the late politician's time in office. He writes in the book 'Eerie Assignment' about the growth of political assassinations and the climate of fear that gripped the place. Sama Yende himself faced an attempted hit. Mabuza contested and won the deputy presidency by throwing in his lot with the reformist Ramaphosa in 2017, who, with The Cat's support, then trounced Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma, an RET (radical economic transformation) candidate. Mabuza changed his game as his big prize — the Presidency — came into view. He became a more conventional politician, sometimes even showing statesmanlike qualities. The deputy president was loyal to Ramaphosa, taking on assignments with performative diligence if without political enthusiasm — he was also ill for a large part of his tenure. But Mabuza wasn't cut out for straight-up governance and seemed to thrive instead in the cloak and dagger of regional politics. His desire for the top job was cut short by a campaigning Paul Mashatile who became ANC deputy president in 2022, leaving Mabuza an also-ran. Mabuza quit soon after, returning to his Mpumalanga farm. His family foundation is well known for its philanthropy and support for differently abled people. David Dabede Mabuza was born in Phola, Mpumalanga, on 25 August 1960 — he died on 3 July 2025 and is survived by his wife Nonhlanhla Patience Mnisi and his children. He served as South Africa's deputy president from February 2018 until his resignation in February 2023. DM