The drama around Mosito’s instant appointment and instant dismissal reflects two fundamental things.
The first is that the National Security Services (NSS) is a silly excuse of an organisation.
There is no doubt that Mosito was not properly vetted before being thrust into the cabinet. Any spy organisation worth its salt would have known that his appointment would open a can of worms.
It doesn’t matter how small the transgressions were. That the charges were dropped, as he claims, doesn’t matter in politics. What matters is that his political enemies found something with which to paint him as a scoundrel.
Mosito can release press statements espousing his virtues but the deed is done. He is down and out.
The second lesson is that we should never underestimate Mapesela’s power.
He didn’t have to brandish a gun like he did when villagers in Khubetsoana allowed their cattle to swallow the grass on his farm across Mohokare River.
This time he just stood on an anthill and started shouting: “Never, never, ever, ever, ever, ever!”
And by the time he came down Mosito was receiving his marching orders.
Mosito says he knows that some ABC hawks piled pressure on Mr Softie to fire him.
That is neither here nor there. In any case, Mr Softie could also have been pressured to appoint him.
So, it’s far in square: There was pressure to get him in and pressure to get him out.
Mosito is now suing Mapesela for allegedly damaging his reputation.
That is his business and the court will decide if he had a reputation worth protecting.
Muckraker however suspects he is on a fool’s errand. His lawsuit also looks a tad misdirected for two reasons.
First, he is demanding M3 million in damages from a man whose whole worth is not even close to that.
Second, he is suing Mapesela for the wrong things. What Mapesela said about him is not new. And if even it was true, he will not be the first politician to be elevated to the cabinet despite a chequered reputation.
In Lesotho being a politician with tainted history is like a badge of honour.
We once had a thug for a minister. Thieves have been ministers.
What should really anger Mosito is that Mapesela called him Mr Softie’s goat. Now that is below the belt.
It is important that Mapesela did not call him a merino sheep or an Angora goat because that would have meant he comes with some valuable wool.
Mapesela just called him a goat. The one that spends months tied to a tree waiting for the next hlophe (ritual). In this case it didn’t take a week for the ritual to happen.
Boom! Mosito the goat has been sacrificed to appease Mapesela.
That, and that alone, should be the crux of his defamation suit against Mapesela. It’s better to be called an ill-disciplined soldier or a thief than to be labelled a hlophe goat.
No man, small or big, deserves to be called that. Any judge would listen to that case. Not that he will get a lot in damages.
All he might get is a few hundreds to sooth his pain. The goat label will however persist. It’s his nickname for keeps.
Nka! Ichuuuuuuuuuuu!
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