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Government is a servant‚ not the lord of people‚ says Bishop Mpumlwana

The provincial leadership of the African National Congress (ANC) engaged the community of Thembisa, Ekurhuleni region in the lead up to the Gauteng Manifesto launch on 04 June at the FNB stadium. Gauteng Chair, cde Paul Mashatile lead the delegation comprising of ANC volunteers from the surrounding communities. Picture: Moeletsi Mabe/The Times
The provincial leadership of the African National Congress (ANC) engaged the community of Thembisa, Ekurhuleni region in the lead up to the Gauteng Manifesto launch on 04 June at the FNB stadium. Gauteng Chair, cde Paul Mashatile lead the delegation comprising of ANC volunteers from the surrounding communities. Picture: Moeletsi Mabe/The Times

Bishop Malusi Mpumlwana has urged society to go back to ubuntu values‚ which advocates for public positions to be used to serve people and not lord over them.

Citizens‚ too‚ had a responsibility – that of oversight and engagement.

The bishop of the Diocese of Maropeng of the Ethiopian Episcopal Church was speaking on the role of ethics in democratic society at the Mapungubwe Institute for Strategic Reflection conference in Midrand on Friday.

For the past two days‚ academics‚ business and religious leaders have been debating ethics in the current South Africa‚ with all agreeing that the status quo cannot remain.

“The people that work in government are servants of the public. Government becomes necessary when you have the diversity of group interest and that needs to be regulated and managed for the best interest of most‚” Mpumlwana said.

“It then becomes a decision of this public to say‚ in order to regulate our affairs effectively we need some instrument and it is called the state ... A government‚ therefore‚ is the agency of the people in the state.

“But the state itself is not government but the embodiment of the public‚” he told the conference.

He argued that the relations between the government and people must be that of a master and servant‚ the government being the servant.

“That is why we call them ministers‚ which means servant ... that is why I bring [the debate] back to the ethic of duty in African culture of ubuntu. It says what matters is what do I owe in terms of duty to the next person‚ rather than what I’m owed myself by being in a position‚” said the bishop.

He urged society not to abandon its responsibility of providing oversight over all that government does.

“It would be unethical for citizens to abandon their responsibility for oversight and engagement. For healthy ethics of democracy it is important for citizens to pay attention to the ethic of belief that they talk about to avoid the wrongdoings of an unethical government‚” he said

Business leaders expressed frustration at the rot in the current ANC leadership and its effect on society. Youth leaders said the government had failed poor children and students by not immediately addressing the call for free education.

Different views were expressed about how ethical leadership can be restored‚ but the consensus was that all parts of society should play their role to achieve this. — TMG Digital

 

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