‘ANC disbands Dr Ruth Segomotsi Mompati Region ahead of ANCYL’


APicture: Werner Beukes/SAPA

BY REGINALD KANYANE

IT SEEMS the African National Congress mean business in curbing ill-discipline within the party. This came to light yesterday at Potchefstroom were the leading party deployees met with ANC’s motherbody in Dr Ruth Segomotsi Mompati region. The team from Luthuli House led by Secretary-General, Gwede Mantashe and his deputy-general, Jessie Duarte disbanded the ANC Regional Executive Committee.

According to information, the disbandment came after the reports that the executive committee for the region was not elected accordingly.

Our attempt to get a comment from ANC was proven futile before going to print as the leadership was preparing for ANCYL elective conference that is underway at Gallagher Estate in Johannesburg where North West MEC, Collen Maine is expected to be elected as the new ANCYL president.

Maine is contesting for the hot seat against league’s former executives, in Pule Mabe (ex-treasurer) and Ronald Lamola (ex-deputy president).

-TDN

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ANCWL president Motshekga hits out ANC men


Pic: ( ANCWL president, Angie Motshekga)

Pic: ( ANCWL president, Angie Motshekga)

Pretoria – Men in the ANC had the “audacity” to instruct women who to elect as leaders, ANC Women’s League (ANCWL) president Angie Motshekga said on Thursday.

She was delivering her political report to the conference in Pretoria.

“It cannot be [that in] the ANC… as women are currently subjected to… male leaders have the audacity to instruct us on who to choose, as recently happened in some regions and provinces. That was nothing but abuse of office and relationships, and should be condemned in the strongest terms,” she said.

For more http://www.news24.com

Nkandla not a ‘major discussion’ point at ANC lekgotla – Mantashe


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Johannesburg – The ANC’s three-day lekgotla held in Pretoria at the weekend did not go into detailed discussions about President Jacob Zuma’s Nkandla home following an in loco inspection by Parliament’s ad hoc committee, secretary general Gwede Mantashe said on Monday.

“It was not an issue for major discussion in the lekgotla,” he told reporters in Johannesburg,

For more http://www.news24.com

SACP urges members to unite in a fighting against capitalism


Picture: (Northern Cape MEC for Agriculture, Norman Shushu)

Picture: (Northern Cape MEC for Agriculture, Norman Shushu)

BY OBAKENG MAJE
THE SACP has called for unity among its rank and file so that factional tendencies could be defeated.

This was said during a fund-raising gala dinner held in Hartswater, near Taung on Saturday.

Held under the theme, Socialism in our lifetime, the gathering attracted leaders like Northern Cape MEC for Agriculture, Norman Shushu and several ANC and other alliance members.

Shushu said the dinner was organised to raise funds and bring SACP members together.

“We see factionalism and divisions within the ANC and as alliance partners, we are very concerned with the state of affairs in the party. ANC is losing mostly middle class supporters and we want to find answers as to why.

“The SACP still pledges its support to the ANC and would like to inform members of the ruling party to desist from tendencies of supporting individuals and to refrain from abusing their positions for personal gain because they were elected by the people,” Shushu said.

The SACP leader called on the youth to register cooperatives so that they can be able to fight poverty and unemployment.

“We would like to inform the youth not to become tenderpreneurs, but become entrepreneurs so that they can help government to alleviate poverty and create jobs,” he said.

ANC regional secretary Webster Dichaba said the dominant capitalist economy continues to compromise the plans the ruling party has for young people.

“As we celebrate the 39th anniversary of the Youth Month, we do so with quantitative and qualitative gains to show for the youth of our country,”

According to Mojaki Legobane, an SACP member from Jan Kempdorp: “The dominant capitalist economy undermines the blood that was shed in 1976 for the equal liberation of the youth of today in economic, social and political terms,”
-TDN
Follow us on Twitter@Taung_DailyNews or @IceT_

ANC does not value dead people – cultural commission


(shutterstock)

(shutterstock)

Johannesburg – The ANC-run eThekwini municipality is precipitating a crisis and disrespecting cultural values by recycling graves, the CRL Rights Commission said on Tuesday.

The Commission for the Promotion and Protection of the Rights of Cultural, Religious and Linguistic Communities (CRL Rights Commission) released a report on Tuesday entitled “The Re-Use of Graves by Local Government”.

Commission chairperson Thoko Mkhwanazi told reporters of a crisis, at a media briefing held ahead of the release of the report.

“For this to happen 21 years into democracy, for the ANC not to value the dead people, it tells you we are in a crisis,” she said.

For more http://www.news24.com

North West Modise to meet police over farm scandal: Report


Thandi-Modise.jpg
NCOP chair Thandi Modise on Sunday declined to discuss a report that she would meet police to discuss the discovery, earlier this year, of dead and starving animals on her North West farm.

“I don’t want to comment,” Modise said when asked about the Sunday Times reporting that a meeting with police had been scheduled for next week.

The newspaper quoted North West police spokesman Brigadier Thulani Ngubane as saying the National Council of Provinces chairwoman had been “co-operating with us from day one”.

He said a meeting planned for July had been postponed, but that police understood “the nature of her work and business”.
In July this year, police and NSPCA inspectors found more than 100 dead animals, including sheep, geese, goats and ducks, on her farm. It appeared they had been without food or water for over a week.

About 85 pigs, who were still alive, had begun cannibalising 58 dead pigs, and were reportedly drinking their own urine. Many others found alive had to be put down.

There were no farmworkers on the property, no electricity, and the water pumps were broken.
On Sunday, Ngubane said while police were still awaiting Modise’s version of events, others involved in the matter had already been providing statements. Modise had reportedly told police she would travel to Potchefstroom to meet them.

The National Prosecuting Authority told the Sunday Times it had not received a docket, indicating whether Modise would be prosecuted.
On Friday the NSPCA said conditions on the farm had improved.

“Cattle on the farm have been supplied with sufficient food and appear to be in an acceptable condition,” spokeswoman Grace de Lange said in a statement.
She said farm managers were implementing advice from vets on how to run the farm.

-Sapa

Police, media face off at ANC policy conference


Pic: Daniel Born

The media and the police faced-off over access to ANC delegates at the party’s national policy conference on Wednesday.

The media and the police faced-off over access to ANC delegates at the party’s national policy conference on Wednesday.

For more details http://www.timeslive.co.za

Pikoli resigns because of ANC – report


vusi pikoli

Former National Prosecuting Authority head Vusi Pikoli has been pressured into resigning from his job at an auditing firm because of political interference, according to a report on Friday.

But Public Enterprises Minister Malusi Gigaba dismissed it as a “malicious rumour”.

According to the Mail & Guardian Pikoli was asked to resign from SizweNtsalubaGobodo (SNG), the fifth-largest auditing firm in the country, after African National Congress officials allegedly threatened to cut off government contracts if Pikoli did not leave.

Pikoli, once a shareholder, director and partner in forensic investigations at the firm, confirmed to the weekly newspaper that he was unemployed after being told “there is a clear expectation to resign” at the end of February this year.

Pikoli left SizweNtsalubaGobodo in the middle of March.

“I was told that there was a clear expectation of me to resign because some unnamed people in the ANC were not happy that I was working for SNG and that it would in future be difficult to award contracts to SNG because of me, I was told,” Pikoli told the Mail & Guardian.

He said the firm’s chairperson Nonkululeku Gobodo refused to name “the ANC people” who raised objections to his employment.

“She didn’t want to tell me who exerted pressure on her to fire me.”

According to the newspaper, SNG’s biggest contract was with Transnet. The total value of the external auditing contract, worth R300 million, was never before awarded to a 100 percent black-owned company.

Both Gigaba and Transnet denied Pikoli’s version of why he resigned.

Gigaba’s spokesman Mayihlome Tshwete told the newspaper the minister had merely implemented the recommendation from the board of a state-owned enterprise.

“The minister did not set any conditions for SNG in its deliberations with Transnet, least of all that SNG should dissociate themselves from any of its employees or associates. Allegations to the contrary are false and malicious,” Tshwete said. – Sapa

Phosa: Afrikaner bodies worried!!!


Mathews Phosa

Afrikaners are worried about the state of governance in South Africa, ANC treasurer general Mathews Phosa said on Tuesday.

“There was a feeling that leadership needs to shape up and address the issue of good governance,” Phosa said after a meeting between the ANC and 19 Afrikaans bodies in Johannesburg.

He said other issues of concern related to service delivery, especially at local government level, security in urban and rural areas and the position of the Afrikaans language and culture.

Afrikaans groups at the meeting included the Afrikanerbond, the Nederduitse Gereformeerde Kerk, the Voortrekker Monument, the Afrikaanse Taal en Kultuurvereniging, the Afrikaanse Taalraad and the Federation of Governing Bodies of SA Schools.

The ANC delegation included Phosa, ANC secretary general Gwede Mantashe, Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries Minister Tina

Joemat-Pettersson and Public Enterprises Deputy Minister Enoch Godongwana.

The convenors of the ANC Progressive Business Forum, Renier Schoeman and Daryl Swanepoel, also attended the meeting.

Phosa said he felt the discussions were going well.

“There were no holy cows… we said talk like you talk in the northern suburbs, don’t hide things, we want to hear things,” he said.

“We must embrace them and deal with the issues. We are not here to be buddy-buddy. We made it clear to them we not looking for votes, we are looking at issues that affect the nation… things which worry the nation.”

Phosa said the organisations spoke about their reservations, and said their merit was being undermined by government appointments.

Some raised issues about black economic empowerment.

Phosa said he was touched when one of the organisations spoke about positive citizenship.

“They want to participate, they want to give input into the policies.”

He said the ANC had also raised issues, such as rural security, with the Afrikaans organisations.

“We said, well, there must also be security for farm workers, you must treat them in a humane manner. We (are) giving each other both sides (of the story)… so not one perspective dominates,” said Phosa.

The Freedom Front Plus earlier said the ANC had ulterior motives in holding talks with Afrikaans groups.

“(It) has more to do with the ANC’s forthcoming election conference and the political survival of Mr Gwede Mantashe, then it has to do with a real concern for minority groups’ and Afrikaans people’s interests,” FF Plus leader Pieter Mulder said in a statement.

“Talks with hidden agendas, however, bedevil relationships, break trust between groups and result in nothing.”

He said the FF Plus had always been in favour of talks, and the party’s history of talks with the ANC proved that, but he wanted to know what the “sudden interest” was.

“If the objective with the talks is to go gain the political support of minorities for the ANC and to boost individual candidates’ images with a view to the ANC’s election conference, it is doomed to fail,” said Mulder.

Mantashe said the ANC had an obligation to understand the concerns of Afrikaans bodies in the country.

“Whether they vote for us or not, we have an obligation to understand where they are coming from, and their concerns.”

He said the organisations had voiced some concerns, and wanted to make a contribution to South Africa.

“People want to make a contribution in making South Africa work and making South Africa a better country to live in.”

The Afrikaans language also featured in the discussions.

“What came out was that there is no intention of elevating Afrikaans at the expense of other languages,” Mantashe said.

Phosa and Mantashe said more meetings of this nature would be held and there would be feedback on the progress made.

“Our view is that maybe we should meet more with not only them (Afrikaans groups), but with many other stakeholders in a much more structured and regular way, and give feedback to each other about problems and issues raised in this meeting,” said Phosa. – Sapa


ANC may bar lawyers at disciplinary hearings!!!


Johannesburg – Lawyers may soon be banned from ANC disciplinary hearings because they can make it “extraordinarily difficult to bring errant members into line”, while giving the rich an advantage.

This is one of the proposals contained in the ANC’s policy discussion document on organisational renewal, released in Johannesburg on Tuesday. It is one of a series of documents set to be discussed at the party’s policy conference in Midrand in June.

“The use of lawyers in disciplinary cases should be reviewed to ensure that the organisation does not end up in a situation where it is extraordinarily difficult to bring errant members into line.

“Otherwise, those with resources can get away with blatant transgressions and be above the organisation,” the document says.

Malema appeal

This proposal comes on the eve of ANC Youth League leader Julius Malema’s appeal against his expulsion from the ANC, to the party’s national disciplinary committee of appeal.

It is set for Thursday before the party’s national disciplinary committee of appeal – the day President Jacob Zuma turns 70.

Malema has employed two senior counsel for his hearing – advocates Dali Mpofu and Patric Mtshaulana – which has been dragging on for almost eight months. This has partly been blamed on the fact that Malema has fought the case on every technical point possible, and also because his lawyers weren’t always available at the same time as disciplinary committee members were.

Last week the ANC’s disciplinary committee betrayed their frustration with the lengthy process by taking the unusual step of suspending Malema with immediate effect for comments he made recently while awaiting his appeal.

According to the party’s constitution, sanctions following a disciplinary hearing can only kick in after the internal appeals process had been exhausted.

The discussion document further says the ANC’s elected leadership should act “firmly and promptly” regardless of who is being disciplined. “The ANC should have the right to institute disciplinary action against any member, including a member if its leagues, who may violate the ANC code of conduct.”

Malema has previously argued that the ANC had no right to discipline him in his capacity as youth leader.

The party is also seeking to eliminate any possible criticism of disciplinary committee members as being partisan because they were ambitious to become leaders. Disciplinary committees “should be composed mainly of the veterans and other cadres who are beyond reproach,” it reads.

The league has repeatedly called for disciplinary committee members to recuse themselves because they were perceived as being biased, while the head of the appeal committee, Cyril Ramaphosa, is being lobbied by groups in at least two provinces to stand for a leadership position in the party.

Political education

ANC Gauteng secretary David Makhura, who briefed journalists about the document flanked by Sports Minister and the ANC’s head of organisation Fikile Mbalula at Luthuli House, also emphasised the need for political education.

“If we don’t educate our members we could end up in permanent disciplinary mode,” he warned.

Malema was ordered to undergo political education following his disciplinary hearing in 2010, but he was hauled over the coals again for the same offence just over a year later.

Answering questions from journalists about the ANC’s position on court action against the party, Makhura said it shouldn’t be used to settle internal party disputes.

Malema said last month at a rally in Limpopo, where Mbalula was also present, that he would take the party to court, but he has since been quiet on this threat.

Mbalula on Tuesday said people who are disciplined should feel there had been fairness “and that they can appear in a disciplinary and that there is recourse”.

He likened it to the justice system where, if you are unhappy about the decision of the Supreme Court of Appeal in Bloemfontein, you go to Braamfontein, where the Constitutional Court is.

He said, however, a disciplinary hearing should only be a last resort. Elders should first try to talk to the member in question.

The organisational renewal document also proposes that there should be a six-month probation period for joining the party, rather than the current eight weeks.

Polokwane conference

The document also denies claims that all the ANC’s problems started in the run-up to its 2007 Polokwane conference.

“It is disingenuous to suggest that factionalism, ill-discipline and in-fighting started in the run-up to and after Polokwane,” the document says.

It also says the party’s problems cannot be blamed on “specific individuals who hold leadership positions”, but these should rather be “overcome through an organisational and mass approach”.

The document also proposes ways for the party to deal with corrupt members, ways for the party to function, even if in opposition, and closer cooperation with Non-Governmental Organisations.

Meanwhile, the ANCYL’s national working committee met on Tuesday, but without Malema, whose latest suspension has barred him from participating in party or league meetings.

“One of the issues discussed was the (ANCYL’s) Limpopo congress – which is supposed to take place this week – and the suspension of Juju for calling Zuma a dictator,” an insider said.

Apparently Malema wants the Limpopo Youth League PEC to be elected this week so that he can have his people serving in the structure, so that he is not out in the cold when he is expulsion is upheld.

After dealing with the issues the NWC will then bring it to the NEC of the Youth League, a source said.

ANCYL spokespeople could not be reached for official comment late on Tuesday.