* * *
There were numerous instances where Mandela had to crack the whip, increasingly against people from his own corner. He’d internalised Seneca’s adage that ‘he who dreads hostility too much is unfit to rule’. Even though he understood that the new South Africa was a work in progress, he had to ensure that people took their responsibilities as adults. People had to be dismissed – or be asked to resign – from cabinet or from leadership positions. He found it painful to take action against comrades; he was inevitably disappointed when his trust in others’ integrity was not fulfilled. But even when he voiced anger at being taken advantage of, he was ready to rebuild trust.
Those who worked closely with him recall his powerful, and often conflicting, emotions when deciding to act or to refrain from taking action. Ahmed Kathrada spoke of Mandela’s loyalty as ‘his strength and his weakness. When he is loyal to someone, he’s not going to hear something contrary; his loyalty goes beyond. But when you cross him, it goes the other way.’81
For Sydney Mufamadi, ‘a key facet of his [make-up] was that he did not want to be taken for granted or taken advantage of when he put his trust in the integrity of others’.82
Jakes Gerwel described how Mandela’s view of human nature informed his actions:
He had this genuine belief – and he often argued with me about the provability of it – that human beings are essentially ‘good-doing beings; beings who do good’. We had an incident in government where somebody very senior did something very silly and stupid, and had to step down from that position. But, at the same time, he had played a crucial role in ensuring the stability of the transition period. In the end, we had to part ways with him, and he stepped down. Madiba said to him, ‘If there is anything that I can do for you, please don’t hesitate to ask me.’
And the man did. A day or two later, he came back asking for an appointment to another international position. Everyone advised Mandela against giving him another chance. Upset, he argued that ‘if you are able to follow human beings from the moment that they get up in the morning until they retire at night, you would find that most of them do the proper things most of the time, and that the erring is an aberration’. And he really acted on that. He is not naive, but he has a faith in the goodness of human beings, no matter how they disagreed politically or otherwise, and he always acted in line with that belief. Of course, this attitude also helped to lay the basis for the furthering of social cohesion and national unity in the country.83
He sought to achieve this goal by going out to where people were, impelled by a need to see for himself the impact of the new dispensation on them. There was also the allure of the newness of a country from which he’d been separated for decades, which unveiled itself on a daily basis. This was represented by the youth of the land. One of his long-serving bodyguards, Mzwandile Vena, relates how this enthusiasm made Mandela unpredictable and a nightmare for his security detail. He would order his driver to make an unscheduled stop, step out of the vehicle and go across the street to greet a group of children.
‘You had to be alert all the time,’ Vena says. ‘A choir would be singing at an event and without any warning he would just get up from his chair and join the choir. We were forced to improvise all the time.’84
An aspect of this spontaneity was part of Mandela’s own sense of political timing, when he imparted important messages that subverted orthodoxies. Toine Eggenhuizen, a Dutch ex-priest stationed at the ANC office in London, remembers how Mandela pre-empted the debate about symbols in the run-up to the Rugby World Cup in 1995.
There was some controversy about the Springbok emblem, which many felt was a throwback to the apartheid exclusion of blacks in sport. However, someone had sent a rugby cap with the Springbok emblem to Mandela, which was accepted – and quickly forgotten – by his personal assistant, Beryl Baker. Shortly thereafter, Mandela, as president of the ANC, was addressing a rally in the Eastern Cape. As it was hot, Beryl was worried about Mandela in the sun. Therefore she took out that cap with an apology that she didn’t have anything else. Madiba was totally happy with that, with the result that the evening news showed him wearing that cap.85
By the time he rehabilitated the Springbok emblem at the memorable Rugby World Cup in Ellis Park – and united South Africans of all races – Mandela had gone a long way towards blunting criticism against the emblem through a gesture that was totally unrehearsed.
CHAPTER SIX
The Presidency and the Constitution
As president, Nelson Mandela’s relationship with the judiciary would be severely tested. And for someone who ended up presiding over the creation of one of the world’s most admired constitutions, Mandela’s relationship with South Africa’s courts had not always been favourable. As a young lawyer he’d had constant skirmishes with magistrates who objected to his seemingly ‘uppity’ attitude. It didn’t help that he was six foot two inches and always immaculately dressed during court appearances, projecting an image that was inimical to the old-school image of an African. He also had a disconcerting knack of ensuring that, whatever the subject of proceedings, he found his way back to what he really wanted to talk about.
The speech he made from the dock on 20 April 1964, during the last months of the Rivonia Trial, is a case in point. Facing a probable death sentence, Mandela told the court – and the world – that he had ‘cherished the ideal of a democratic and free society in which all persons live together in harmony and with equal opportunities. It is an ideal which I hope to live for and to achieve. But if needs be, it is an ideal for which I am prepared to die.’1
It was only in prison that Mandela completed part-time the law degree he had started in 1949. Through years of study he had been unable to complete the degree at the University of the Witwatersrand. But incarcerated on Robben Island, he studied for his LLB from the University of South Africa (UNISA) by correspondence, finally graduating in absentia in 1989.
After his release, his first encounter with the justice system was an affront to his dignity when he sat – a lonely, if stoical, figure – in the public gallery of the Rand Supreme Court in May 1991, witnessing the mortification of his then wife, Winnie, on trial for assault and kidnapping.
Subsequently, in matters that affected him as president, Mandela’s relationship with the judiciary was tested in two instances. Would he, when it came to matters that affected him personally, remember his oath of office and heed the ponderous words that defined his role as president, head of state and head of the national executive? Had he internalised the fact that to hold the highest office in the land made him, as first citizen of his country, indispensable to the effective governance of democratic South Africa? Would he uphold‚ defend and respect the Constitution as the supreme law of the Republic? Would he affirm that ‘in the new South Africa there is nobody, not even the President, who is above the law, that the rule of law generally and, in particular, the independence of the judiciary should be respected’?2
The first test came even before the new constitution had been drafted. Running into deadlines for preparations for local government elections, Parliament adopted the Local Government Transition Act before its terms had been completely finalised. To compensate for this, a clause was included giving the president power to amend the Act. Armed with that provision, Mandela transferred control over the membership of local government demarcation committees from provincial to national government. However, that invalidated decisions made by the premier of the Western Cape, Hernus Kriel, who took the matter to the Constitutional Court. The court found for the Western Cape provincial government and gave Parliament a month to rectify the Act.
Within an hour of the court delivering its adverse judgment, Mandela publicly accepted the ruling and welcomed the fact that it showed that everyone was equal before the law.3 Later, he wrote:
‘During my presidency, Parliament authorised me to issue two proclamations dealing with the elections in the Western Cape Province. That provincial government took
me to the Constitutional Court, which overruled me in a unanimous judgment. As soon as I was informed of the judgment, I called a press conference and appealed to the general public to respect the decision of the highest court in the land on constitutional matters.’4
Mandela discussed the court judgment with his advisers and the speaker of Parliament, Frene Ginwala. She remembers the day: ‘He called us to a meeting at his house and told us that he had been informed that it had gone against the government. He said, “How long will it take to change?” I said, “We could reconvene Parliament if necessary…,” but even before I could finish, he said, “But the one thing is this: we must respect the decision of the Constitutional Court. There can be no question of denying or in any way rejecting that.”’5
In a public statement, he went further, announcing that Parliament would be reconvened to deal with the matter and stressing that, apart from Cape Town, things were on track for the elections:
‘Preparations for local government elections must continue so that these elections take place as planned. The Court’s judgment does not create any crisis whatsoever. I should emphasise that the judgment of the Constitutional Court confirms that our new democracy is taking firm root and that nobody is above the law.’6
Mandela was somewhat less sanguine when it came to the other case that had him personally appearing in court. He had worked hard, using the iconic victory in the 1995 Rugby World Cup, to entrench the spirit of nation building and reconciliation among South Africans. But the euphoric surge of unity and embrace of the future had remained within the perimeter of the Ellis Park Stadium, amid the debris of trash and match memorabilia. For some of the spectators, players and rugby administrators, everything was as it had been before the match. Two years on, prompted by reports of maladministration, resistance to change and racism in the sport’s governing body, after consultation with Minister of Sport and Recreation Steve Tshwete, Mandela appointed a commission of inquiry, led by Justice Jules Browde, to look into the affairs of the South African Rugby Football Union (SARFU).
The president of SARFU, Louis Luyt, best described as a carpetbagger, had in 1976 founded an English-language newspaper, The Citizen, using slush funds from the Department of Information, in what was known as the ‘Infogate Scandal’, which purveyed propaganda aimed at polishing the apartheid government’s image overseas. Singularly unlikeable, Luyt had precipitated a walkout by the New Zealand All Blacks rugby team when, instead of being magnanimous in victory, he made inappropriate remarks at the after-match dinner.*
The president’s office issued a statement, saying that ‘the cloud hanging over South African Rugby needs to be lifted and the President is confident that the inquiry presents an opportunity to do so, and to dispel any impression that … it is retreating into a laager of racial chauvinism. The President believes that rugby will meet the challenge of being one of our most celebrated sports, a sport played and supported by South Africans throughout the country.’7
Mandela’s intention was to help pull SARFU out of its ‘laager of racial chauvinism’ but it simply prompted its president, Louis Luyt, to apply to the Pretoria High Court to quash the appointment of a commission of inquiry into the administration of rugby. Judge William de Villiers summoned Mandela to appear before the court as a witness. Not only setting aside legal advice, but also controlling his own feelings – having to testify in court ‘made his blood boil’ he told journalists – Mandela complied, in the interests of justice.8 He writes about the episode:
‘Judge William de Villiers of the Gauteng High Court subpoenaed me to appear before him to justify my decision to appoint a commission of enquiry into the affairs of the South African Rugby Football Union. Some of my Cabinet colleagues advised me to challenge the subpoena, pointing out that the judge in question was, to say the least, extremely conservative, and that his real aim was to humiliate a black president. My legal adviser as well, Professor Fink Haysom, was equally opposed to my appearance in court. He argued with skill and persuasion that we had sound legal grounds to challenge the subpoena.
‘While I did not necessarily challenge any of these views, I felt that at that stage in the transformation of our country, the President had certain obligations to fulfil. I argued that the trial judge was not a final Court of Appeal, and that his decision could be challenged in the Constitutional Court.* In a nutshell, I wanted the whole dispute to be resolved solely by the judiciary. This, in my opinion, was another way of promoting respect for law and order and, once again, of the courts of the country.
‘As we expected, the judge had serious reservations about my evidence, and gave judgment for Louis Luyt, the petitioner. But the Constitutional Court set aside the decision of the lower court despite the fact that they maintained that my attitude in testifying was imperious. The Constitutional Court was not wrong. In that situation I have to be bossy and establish that I obeyed the subpoena out of strength and not weakness.’9
Mandela’s reaction to the ruling in SARFU’s favour was his commitment to ‘abide by the decisions of our courts’. He said that ‘all South Africans should likewise accept their rulings. The independence of the judiciary is one important pillar of our democracy.’10
Addressing Parliament later in April, Mandela told the assembled members that they would have to ask themselves ‘some very basic questions’, as it was ‘only too easy to stir up the baser feelings that exist in any society that are enhanced in a society with a history such as ours. Worse still, it is only too easy to do this in a way that undermines our achievements in building national unity and enhancing the legitimacy of our democratic institutions. We need to ask such questions because it is much easier to destroy than to build.’11
He enjoined the members of Parliament to grapple with constitutional questions, such as the implications of hauling a sitting president to court to ‘defend executive decisions’, going straight to the principle of the separation of powers and its application in an emergent democracy. He hoped that ‘our finest legal brains, both in the courts and in the profession,’ would apply their minds to the question.12
As a trained lawyer, Mandela probably knew the answers to the questions he was posing, but he was dealing with the Constitution, which he saw as a foundation for the building of democracy – a democracy whose central plank was national unity and reconciliation. He wanted everyone’s buy-in, no matter that his own interpretations might have been both correct and justifiable. His appeal to the parliamentarians, then, was for them, in their disparate parties, to help build rather than destroy.
By the time the Constitutional Court set aside the Pretoria High Court ruling that the president had acted unconstitutionally, reaction to Louis Luyt’s behaviour – among the public and within rugby – had forced his resignation and led to a decision by the SARFU executive to send a delegation to apologise to Mandela.13
Although not codified until the negotiations of the 1990s, the principles of constitutionalism and rule of law had been embedded in the vision of the future shared by Mandela and the ANC at large. The seeds of an empowering constitution can be found in the Freedom Charter, adopted by the Congress of the People and the ANC respectively in 1955, which was drawn up on the basis of popular demands collected from communities across the length and breadth of the country.
Contrary to what happened in struggles for freedom in many other countries, the South African liberation movement made the law a terrain of struggle – defending leaders, members and activists in the courts – and in so doing, affirming the ideal of a just legal system. In 1995, in a lecture, Mandela spoke about using the law to turn tables on the state, as he and the other accused did in the Rivonia Trial:
‘The prosecution expected us to try and avoid responsibility for our actions. However, we became the accusers, and, right at the start, when asked to plead, we said that it was the Government that was responsible for the state of affairs in the country and that it was the Government that should be in the dock. We maintained this positio
n throughout the trial in our evidence and in the cross-examination of witnesses.’14
In 1985, Oliver Tambo had established a Constitutional Committee, which led to the 1989 publication of the ANC’s ‘Constitutional Guidelines for a Democratic South Africa’. Embodying the Freedom Charter’s political and constitutional vision of a free, democratic and non-racial South Africa, the guidelines were a statement of principle rather than a draft constitution. Even though conditions for a negotiated transition were beginning to take shape, there were still too many uncertainties about the impending transition, and the legitimacy of any constitution would depend on popular participation in its drafting.15
The ANC’s guidelines were polar opposites of the South African Constitution of 1983, which espoused a system of ‘power-sharing’ that still ensured white minority control, leaving the excluded African majority to make do with Bantustans and urban councils. The ANC rejected the constitutional protection for ‘group rights’, which would simply perpetuate the status quo.16 The ANC guidelines spoke of a unitary state and universal suffrage; a bill of rights guaranteeing fundamental human rights of all citizens; and constitutional obligations on the state and all social institutions to eradicate race discrimination and all of its concomitants.
When drafting a constitution and bill of rights during negotiations, the ANC’s Constitutional Committee drew on the organisation’s Constitutional Guidelines and also took into account universally accepted democratic principles.17
Although not involved in the nitty-gritty of constitutional negotiations, Mandela kept watch over the process to preclude any deviation from the ANC line. Always on hand to break deadlocks, Mandela was informed by two principles, one of process – that the negotiations should be inclusive and ensure public participation; and the other of substance – that the exercise should produce a fully democratic constitution.
The Record of Understanding signed between the ANC and the National Party on 26 November 1992 opened the way for a two-stage process; the first stage, a multiparty negotiating forum, produced thirty-four principles, which were enacted as part of the interim constitution by the National Party government. This provided for the election of a parliament in terms of proportional representation of parties on the basis of universal suffrage. This in turn would sit as a Constitutional Assembly that would draw up a draft final constitution. The Constitutional Court, itself established by the interim constitution, would have to certify that the new draft constitution conformed with the thirty-four principles before it could become law.
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