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Shock and horror over Zuma painting

The Presidency says it is “shocked and disgusted” at the painting by Brett Murray depicting President Jacob Zuma in an offensive manner.

The painting on display at the Goodman gallery has sparked national debate on the issue of freedom of expression and the right to dignity. 
“We are amazed at the crude and offensive manner in which this artist denigrates the person and the office of the President of the Republic of South Africa,” Zuma’s spokesperson, Mac Maharaj, says.

Maharaj said nobody had the right to violate the dignity and rights of others while exercising their own. “Other than his position as Head of State and as President of the ruling party, President Zuma as a citizen has a right to human dignity, which is enshrined in the Constitution of the Republic. No human being deserves to be denigrated in this shocking manner.”

Maharaj said they were also concerned that the painting perpetuated a shocking new culture by some sections of the artistic world, of using vulgar methods of communicating about leading figures in the country, in particular the President.

Intense hatred of the new democratic administration or the ruling party should not translate into distorting South Africa’s value system of emphasising respect and of ensuring that disagreements are expressed in a cultured and civilised manner, which these artists are failing to do, added Maharaj.

The Presidency also condemned some media houses, saying it was shocking that they found this sort of work worth displaying on their websites and were eager to publish it repeatedly. – BuaNews

Comment: Paintings are one thing ... paint what you want and bear the consequences. Art should be about pushing boundaries. So is freedom of speech. However, talk and action about controlling the media in South Africa abound. Is it not a bit irresponsible to publish pictures of this and then complain when a party that represents more than 6 out of 10 South Africans puts laws in place that stops the media from doing this in future?

US judge Oliver Wendell Holmes once said, talking about freedom: "The right to swing my fist ends where the other man's nose begins".

I think this time the punch might have hit the wrong person on the nose. (ed)

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