Friday, March 31, 2017

'Jacob Zuma Exercising His Constitutional Power' says Mogoeng

Mogoeng Chief Justice says the only comment he can make about the Cabinet reshuffle is that President Jacob Zuma is exercising his constitutional powers, but adds that the judicial arm of the state is closely observing what's happening.
Mogoeng held a media briefing at the Chief Justice offices in Midrand on Friday alongside provincial judge presidents.
He gave feedback on their meeting discussing the annual performance of the judiciary.
As the country continues to express its views about last night's Cabinet reshuffle, Mogoeng said there was little he could say about the matter.
"It appears the president acted in terms of his constitutional powers. I think that's as far as any judicial officer can go."
He, however, added that he and his colleagues were carefully watching what was happening in politics.
Mogoeng said the DA's urgent application to interdict the swearing in of new ministers on Friday night may end up in the Constitutional Court.

'Gigaba is rotten to the core' - Malema

At a press briefing in Johannesburg‚ Malema confirmed the EFF had written to the Speaker of the National Assembly Baleka Mbete to ask for an urgent sitting of parliament so that a vote of no confidence can be tabled against Zuma following his bombshell cabinet reshuffle at midnight.
The DA has also written to Mbete seeking the same motion.
“We are going to do everything in our power against Zuma‚” Malema said. “We now have to put our political differences aside to ensure that there is unity of purpose to save this country.”
He said the EFF would meet about 70 ANC MPs to convince them “not to abstain” from the vote.
On the point of Gigaba‚ Malema pulled no punches‚ saying “Malusi is corrupt to the core”.
“We know there were serious allegations against Malusi over an offshore account and he has never done anything to prove he doesn’t have an offshore account.
“We were told of huge amounts of money he exchanged with his friends. Why would a minister carry go around carrying huge amounts of cash‚ and exchange it? An allegation he has never denied. You can only carry cash if it’s corrupt money from the Guptas‚” said Malema.
He added that Gigaba was a “regular at Saxonwold Shebeen”‚ a reference to former Eskom chief executive Brian Molefe‚ who denied visiting the Gupta family at their Saxonwold mansion‚ saying he had visited a shebeen.

DJ Fresh says goodbye to 5FM and join Metro FM

 DJ fresh just recently announced that he had hosted his last show on 5FM and is ready to start his new journey on Metro FM Speaking to 5FM's Rob and Fix, .
DJ Fresh said "very much excited at the opportunity to be on Metro FM and looking forward on the future.
"I'm so excited. That kind of 'literally, pee yourself' excited. There is zero fear," he added.
Fresh did not reveal who he will present the show with.  Fresh's announcement comes only hours after Metro FM morning host Unathi Msengana announced that she was leaving Metro FM..

Thursday, March 30, 2017

A metro cop shot and killed at his home

 Isaac Mahamba Spokesperson Superintendent said " the officer was at home with his family before the arrival of three men‚ two wearing balaclavas‚ barged in at around 8pm.
“They demanded cell phones‚ bank cards‚ a laptop and his car keys‚ and then shot him. His family members were not harmed‚” Mahamba said on Thursday.
He said the suspects sped off in the officer's Audi A4 and he was rushed to the nearest hospital where he was declared dead on arrival.
Mahamba said cases of house robbery and murder were opened and being investigated by local SAPS stations.
“The three suspects are still at large. We appeal to members of the public who might have any information regarding this incident to contact their nearest police station or the Tshwane Metro Police Department on 012 358 7095/6 or 082 891 8625‚” he said.
Mahamba said the TMPD sent its deepest condolences to the victim’s family‚ friends and colleagues.
He said they were deeply shocked by this incident and would assist the surviving family members with counselling.
“We will also work with the SAPS to apprehend the suspects‚” he added.

Jacob Zuma axes 9 ministers, 6 deputies

South African  President Jacob Zuma axed six deputy ministers and nine ministers earlier on Thursday night, after an impromptu meeting of the African National Congress (ANC) top six, according to reports.  

ANN7 television station, owned by the wealthy controversial Gupta family whom Zuma has a close relationship with, reported that the President was meeting with affected ministers at the presidential house in Pretoria after 10pm.  

Zuma met with Deputy President Cyril Ramaphosa, secretary-general Gwede Mantashe, ANC chairperson Baleka Mbete, deputy secretary general Jesse Duarte and treasurer-general and Zweli Mkhize, at Mahlambandlopfu, earlier on Thursday night. 

Zuma was expected to address a press conference at 11pm. Earlier on Thursday, the SA Communist Party (SACP) confirmed that Zuma had told the party he planned to replace Finance Minister Pravin Gordhan and his deputy Mcebisi Jonas, based on an adverse intelligence report. SACP deputy secretary Solly Mapaila said his party decided to divulge confidential discussions held with Zuma and other top leaders because of “selective and factional leaking of discussions” to the media. 

“The SACP wishes to state that the president informed us of his intention to effect Cabinet reshuffle to replace both minister and deputy minister of finance. We objected to the reshuffle,” Mapaila told reporters in Johannesburg. 

“The President cannot use outside intelligence information for any action he wishes to exercise ... we have state organs that occupy themselves with irrelevant things. Where were these security state organs when 20 schools burned down in Vuyani? It is these rogue elements we want to remove.”  

On Monday Zuma recalled Gordhan and his team from an investor roadshow trip overseas.

Date Trial set in case against five man accused of killing DA Councillor

 The date trial has been set in the case against the five men accused of the murder of a Northern Cape DA councillor and his business associate.
 Shuping Nose and Hannes Baatjies  were shot to death in August outside Postmasburg. The trial will start on 12 June in the Northern Cape High Court.
 Baatjies and his business partner Nose were lured to a bogus business meeting the night they were shot outside Postmasburg last year.
Baatjies died at the scene hours before being sworn in as a councillor at the Kgatelopele Municipality.
Nose died in hospital a few days later.
The accused were arrested shortly after the murders.
Among them is Zonisele Magawu, who failed in his bid to stand as an ANC councillor.

Chiefs' Komphela to Downs' Mosimane at press conference: 'I beg to differ. Underdogs in what sense?

 Pitso Mosimane On Wednesday winning the PSL’s coach of the month award for February‚ had declared Chiefs favourites for a title-crucial fixture at FNB Stadium.
He was at it again sitting alongside his Chiefs counterpart Komphela at a press conference in Houghton‚ though Mosimane did have a little more than his normal glint in his eye while he said: “We are the underdogs at this point in time.
“Because Kaizer Chiefs have been doing better than us in the league. If you check the last seven or eight games‚ they have not lost. There was a stage where they won five in a row.
“And we envy them and wish we could win five in a row too. And they have drawn three recently‚ but we have drawn two and lost one. So we are not in a very good space at the moment.
“I understand that Chiefs’ medical room is empty and we have a lot of injuries.
“And obviously there are the number of games that we have to come back from in Caf [the Champions League] and the games we have had to catch up‚ and they have fresh leg. 
“So this is not the right time for us to play them.”
Komphela was having none of it.
“I beg to differ. Underdogs in what sense?” Chiefs’ coach asked in disbelief‚ though matching Mosimane’s wry grin.
“Underdogs are not defined on a sprint.
“Underdog is such a dangerous tag because the universe favours the underdogs.
“So perhaps Mr Mosimane is seeking some favour from some divine power.
“But that they are underdogs – we will never abide by that. We give them the respect that they deserve. Their achievements are clear. We just have to give our best with the utmost humility.”
Fourth-placed African Champions Sundowns have 34 points from 17 games and can deal a significant blow to Chiefs' PSL title chances. Amakhosi have 36 points from 21 games.

Wednesday, March 29, 2017

Oakbay to continue to fight Gordhan' Guptas

 Ronica Ragavan the company’s acting CEO said" that the group will continue to argue for Gordhan’s application to be dismissed in the statement on Wednesday.
The statement follows a Tuesday preliminary decision in which the North Gauteng High Court in Pretoria ruled that mention made in the minister’s court papers of 72 suspicious transactions involving the Gupta family and their companies, had to be “striken out” of the papers.

The company’s acting CEO, Ronica Ragavan, said in a statement on Wednesday, that the group will continue to argue for Gordhan’s application to be dismissed.
Its statement follows a Tuesday preliminary decision in which the North Gauteng High Court in Pretoria ruled that mention made in the minister’s court papers of 72 suspicious transactions involving the Gupta family and their companies, had to be “striken out” of the papers.Oakbay Investments wanted the court to strike out a certificate issued by the Financial Intelligence Centre (FIC) referring to 72 transactions involving the Guptas and companies affiliated to them.
These transactions were cited in Gordhan’s application in which he seeks a declaratory order that he has no powers to intervene in the relationship between banks and its clients. That move came after several of SA’s largest banks closed accounts of Gupta-linked companies, which the family – last August – claimed threatened the livelihood of thousands of staff.
Later, the family said it never disputed that Gordhan didn’t have the power to intervene in banking repaltionships.
The Guptas have argued that these transactions are irrelevant to Gordhan's court application.

Ragavan says, in a statement, that the company has “suffered unjustified and severe reputational damage as a result of the minister’s application. His [Gordhan’s] inclusion of the FIC report and Deputy Minister Jonas’ affidavit, which were both struck off yesterday, clearly demonstrate the motives that sit behind the application.
“We will continue to argue in court for this unnecessary application, which is a waste of taxpayers’ money and the court’s time, to be dismissed. As the architect of the application and the campaign to smear Oakbay, if anyone is to withdraw it should be the minister.”
The court case started a day after Gordhan was summonsed home from an international roadshow to the US and UK to sway investors. His recall, by President Jacob Zuma, sparked fears of a Cabinet reshuffle and saw the rand plunge.
The usual Cabinet meeting has now been postponed.
Ragavan adds the company still wants details of the so-called suspicious transactions so it can prove its innocence. It has repeatedly denied that there is anything untoward in the dealings.
“For months we have said the list of 72 transactions has been a tool to smear our name and drive unsubstantiated negative media coverage of our business and our shareholders. When attached to a totally unnecessary application, with no contested legal issue, it becomes clear what the Finance Minister is up to.
One of the deals involves a R1.3 billion transaction.

Jacob Zuma Requested to stay away from Kathrada's Funeral

South African President Jacob Zuma confirmed that he will not be attending Ahmed Kathrada’s memorial service and funeral this morning in compliance with the wishes of the stalwart’s family.
A statement released a short while ago the president has reiterated that Deputy President Cyril Ramaphosa will lead the government delegation to the services.
Following reports that the president was not welcome at the funeral, the Ahmed Kathrada Foundation moved to clarify that everyone was welcome.
Kathrada, who died yesterday at the age of 87, will receive an official special funeral
The funeral is expected to be an inter-faith service but the late struggle stalwart will be buried according to Muslim rites.
Read the full statement from the Presidency below:
President Jacob Zuma has postponed the start of today’s Cabinet meeting to later this afternoon to enable members to attend the funeral of struggle stalwart Mr Ahmed Kathrada.
President Jacob Zuma has again expressed deep sadness and extended his heartfelt condolences to former Public Enterprises Minister Barbara Hogan and family on the passing of one of the most respected struggle stalwarts and former Member of Parliament.
“The nation has lost one of its valuable and most respected freedom fighters, Isithwalandwe, Mr Ahmed Mohamed Kathrada, one of the accused of the famous Rivonia Treason Trial. The passing of Mr Kathrada is a monumental loss not only to his family but to all South Africans as he was one of the fearless and dedicated architects of the free and democratic South Africa. He sacrificed his personal freedom and persevered through hardships for the liberation of all South Africa and to create a democratic, non-racial, peaceful and prosperous South Africa,” the President said.
Mr Kathrada will be remembered for his discipline and the fearless leadership that he displayed which led to his arrest in 1963 in Rivonia, near Johannesburg.
He became one of the accused in the Rivonia Trial and was sentenced to life imprisonment along other struggle stalwarts, Mr Nelson Mandela, Mr Walter Sisulu, Mr Govan Mbeki, Mr Andrew Mlangeni, Mr Elias Motsoaledi, Mr Raymond Mhlaba and Mr Denis Goldberg for charges of sabotage and attempting to overthrow the apartheid government through violent means.
Mr Kathrada served 26 years in prison in which he was held at Robben Island and Pollsmoor Prisons. Following his release in 1989, he was elected to serve as a member of the democratic parliament, representing the governing party.
President Zuma has declared a special official funeral and directed that flags be flown at half-mast until the evening of the memorial service.
Mr Kathrada will be laid to rest today, 29 Mar 2017 at West Park Cemetery in Johannesburg.
An official memorial service is being organised by government led by the Presidency, to pay tribute to the struggle hero. Deputy President Cyril Ramaphosa will lead the government delegation to the funeral and memorial service.
President Zuma will not attend the funeral and memorial service in compliance with the wishes of the family.

A 11-year-old Girl Found dead on the Field

She was found dead on the field on Tuesday after been reported missing on Monday.The motive behind the murder of a girl in Mitchells Plain remains unclear.
She was reported missing on Monday and her body was found on a field following an intensive search on Tuesday.No arrests have been made at this stage for 11-year-old Stacha Arendse's killing.
The local community policing forum's Abie Isaacs says: “We extend our condolences to the family of the missing child. Once we received information that the child was missing, we activated our rapid response child unit in conjunction with the South African Police Service. We found a body after our search.”

Tuesday, March 28, 2017

'Rest in peace my sister' says Winnie Mashaba

The universal music label confirmed that Matlakala Ramathoka died on Monday after complaining with pains chest and flu.
A press statement was released by the gospel star Winnie Mashaba  earlier on confirming that Matlakala was rushed to hospital in Pretoria by her family where she died peacefully. She started her career with Masole a Tumelo and Bana Ba Kanana but is known for her hits Tlogelang Go Lwana Ditaxing and Sello Sa Lesea.

The musician recently released her latest album, Emmanuel.
Fellow gospel singer Winnie Mashaba posted an image of herself with Matlakala and said that she had been left deeply affected by her death.
"Rest well kgadi ya Khwadubeng. My sister, i am confused. Who will ever call me baby girl? Who will ever call me ngwana ko gae? Who will ever call me legafa la Mama? Deep down in my soul i am happy that i was able to grant you your wish of becoming a member of our family in Universal Music. Sesi. You have just released an album titled Emanuel. What were you trying to tell us?"


The real truth about the beef between Nasty C and Dr Malinga

Dr Malinga the Akulaleki hitmaker was recently involved in a feud with young rapper Nasty C few weeks back and took to Twitter this past weekend to warn the star against reigniting the beef with a diss track.
Malinga said that he was not scared of anyone and would respond to any "diss song" by remixing it and making it into a hit.
PLEASE NOTE IF U WRITE A DISS SONG ABOUT ME LOL I'LL REMIX IT AND MANY MONEY MORE THAN YOU.
Ever since the pair began their social media feud earlier this month, fans of the artists have speculated that Nasty C would respond to Malinga's constant shade by dropping a song lambasting him.


Nasty C has yet to respond to Malinga since he dropped a video on Instagram labelling his rival "a f*cking gimmick" and a "publicity stunt".

The time has come Gordhan face the Guptas

 Pravin Gordhan Finance Minister is in for a tough time on Tuesday when he asks the Gauteng High Court, Pretoria, for a declaratory order that he cannot interfere with the decision of the country’s four major banks not to do business with the Guptas and their companies.
Not only had President Jacob Zuma, meanwhile, joined the court proceedings as an interested party in the application between Oakbay Investments and Gordhan, but the Gupta’s company Sahara, in additional heads of argument, seeks a personal punitive costs order against Gordhan.
The minister was not at court at the start of the proceedings and it is not expected that he will attend. There is also no need for him to be there, as his case will be advanced by his legal team, headed by Advocate Jeremy Gauntlet senior counsel. Neither of the Gupta family are in court at this stage. There are about 28 advocates in total in court, of which several are on a watching brief.
The application is being heard by a full bench, including Judge President Dunstan Mlambo and Deputy Judge President Aubrey Ledwaba.
Sahara meanwhile in its papers accused the minister of embarking on a “frolic of his own” and of trying to score political points by pressing ahead with his application.
Zuma, in his application to join the proceedings, argued that he would be directly affected in any declaratory order the court may grant.
He said Standard Bank, the 17th respondent in the application, asked that no member of the executive, including the president, should be allowed to intervene in the legal tussle between the banks and the Guptas.
Zuma said Standard Bank cannot ask for a declaratory order excluding him or any cabinet minister from intervening in the closure of the accounts as he was not cited as a party to the proceedings.
Sahara, cited as the 14th respondent, meanwhile in its additional heads of argument said Gordhan approached this court for declaratory relief in circumstances where there is no dispute between the parties.
Advocate Rafik Bhana SC, argued that not a single party contends that the minister has any power that permits him to intervene in a private banking relationship where a bank decides to close the accounts of any of their clients, for whatever reason, no matter its unlawfulness.
“Despite this, the minister persists in asking this court to exercise to exercise a discretion in his favour. The question is why.”
Bhana said, unless this court acknowledged the political context in which Gordhan’s application is brought and recognised that this application is part of his own political strategy to pre-empt action by the Cabinet – in particular, the president – this court will be in danger of hearing an application that has no business being ventilated before it.
Bhana said the refusal by Gordhan to withdraw his application betrayed his real intent.
According to him, the declaratory order, if granted, will assist Gordhan in his political fight with the president and the cabinet.
“This court must fiercely guard against this and should dismiss the minister’s application for attempting to drag it into a political fight….where the involvement would be inappropriate and set a dangerous precedent,” Bhana said in his heads of argument.
Sahara will ask that the court dismiss Gordhan’s application and that that the minister must personally fork out the legal costs, on a punitive scale.
Gordhan, in his application, that R6.8 billion in payments made by the Gupta’s companies have been reported to authorities as suspicious.
Several banks, including Standard Bank, Nedbank, Absa and First National Bank as well as companies last year cut ties with the Gupta brother’s Oakbay Investments.
The Guptas said they never asked Gordhan to intervene in their relationship with the banks and that the simply asked for his assistance.
In an earlier statement issued by the Gupta family lawyer, Van Der Merwe Associates, in response to Gordhan’s affidavit, the family said they welcomed the chance to clear their name in court.
They said the application is flawed as the 72 transactions flagged by the Financial Intelligence Centre (FIC), were approved and cleared by the respective banks which processed the transactions.

Zuma wants out of Gordhan-Gupta fray

Jacob Zuma  South African President asked the High Court in Pretoria to be removed as an interested party in a case involving Finance Minister Pravin Gordhan and companies controlled by the Guptas, who are friends with the president.
Standard Bank Group in December made a court application to prevent Zuma and any of his ministers from intervening in the lender’s decision to close accounts of companies associated with the Guptas, who are also in business with one of Zuma’s sons.
Gordhan in October approached the court for a ruling that he doesn’t have the authority to interfere with whom banks choose as clients. Gordhan took the steps after the Guptas repeatedly pressured him to get the country’s largest lenders to overturn their decision.
Zuma wants the court to determine whether Standard Bank “can seek relief against parties who are not parties to the proceedings,” according to a copy of Zuma’s request, called a practice note of the interested party.
Gordhan in October approached the court for a ruling that he doesn’t have the authority to interfere with whom banks choose as clients. Gordhan took the steps after the Guptas repeatedly pressured him to get the country’s largest lenders to overturn their decision.
Zuma wants the court to determine whether Standard Bank “can seek relief against parties who are not parties to the proceedings,” according to a copy of Zuma’s request, called a practice note of the interested party.The papers have been filed, according to the state attorney. Zuma wants the matter struck off the court’s roll and that Standard Bank be held liable for the costs, according to the court papers.
The application comes as Zuma ordered Gordhan to return home from an international roadshow to market South Africa, heightening concern that he’s preparing to change his cabinet.
The court case involving Gordhan and the Guptas is scheduled to start Tuesday.

Monday, March 27, 2017

ANCNEC had nothing to do with Cancelling Gordhan trip


 President Jacob Zuma's decision to recall Finance Minister Pravin Gordhan and his deputy Mcebisi Jonas from an investors' roadshow overseas had to do with government, and not the African National Congress (ANC) national executive committee, party secretary-general Gwede Mantashe said on Monday.
"Calling the minister back was not an ANC matter, that is a government matter... we do not know how it was done, who gave permission or did not give permission, we are not aware," Mantashe told reporters in Johannesburg following the governing party's NEC meeting over the weekend.
Zuma ordered Gordhan and Jonas home on Monday, as they embarked on a scheduled programme to meet business leaders and rating agencies in Britain.
The statement from the Presidency did not give reasons for the recall. Bloomberg reported on Monday, that the minister told the international news agency he intended to conclude his engagement with foreign investors in London.
He had been due to return to South Africa on Monday night. Federation of Unions of South Africa (Fedusa) Dennis George, who is part of the Gordhan delegation, told a radio station that Gordhan made assurances that the trip would continue as scheduled.
Jonas was supposed to embark on the investor roadshow to the United States of America (USA) on Monday night. The move by Zuma has resuscitated a long standing view that a Cabinet reshuffle was imminent.
Tensions between Gordhan's Treasury portfolio and supporters of Zuma who wanted him removed and replaced grew in recent times, exacerbated by the court case brought by Gordhan against the controversial Gupta family.
Gordhan wants the high court to affirm and issue a declaratory order prohibiting him from interfering in disputes between banks and their clients. The Guptas have close ties to Zuma. The case would be argued on Tuesday.

Laws criminalising racism will punish people like Zille-ANC

Parliament must fast-track laws criminalising racism and hate speech so punishment can be meted out to people such as Western Cape Premier Helen Zille, who caused a stir when she posted a tweet saying the legacy of colonialism was not all bad, the African National Congress (ANC) said on Monday.
"Where people refuse to be educated on their wrongs, they must be punished by the law. Such include opposition leaders who make utterances praising colonialism," a statement from the ANC national executive committee said.
"This demonstrates clearly that ours remains a struggle between progress and reaction. It is clear that we have hardly moved an inch from the ideological positions of the past which viewed colonialism and apartheid racism as having been good for black people."
Earlier on Monday, James Selfe, Democratic Alliance (DA) chairman of the party's federal executive said he had received a report following an internal investigation into Zille's comments on twitter. The investigation was done by Glynnis Breytenbach, the party's chairwoman of the federal legal commission.
"This report will now be discussed at a Federal Executive meeting, to be held on Sunday, 2 April 2017," said Selfe On March 16, Zille tweeted: "For those claiming legacy of colonialism was ONLY negative, think of our independent judiciary, transport infrastructure, piped water etc."
Zille's successor as DA leader Mmusi Maimane lodged a complaint following the tweets. The premier later apologised for the remarks, but not before an internal investigation was launched.

Sunday, March 26, 2017

Zuma's photographer suspended over 'skimpy' clothing

 A squabble over a government employee’s alleged skimpy dressing and seductive conduct in front of President Jacob Zuma and his deputy, Cyril Ramaphosa, has led to her suspension.
Siyasanga Mbambani, an assistant director of media production in the presidential unit of the Government and Communications Information System (GCIS), was suspended on Friday.
This took place after a long-drawn-out battle with her boss, Elmond Jiyane, the deputy director of media production in the department. Both are also photographers.The GCIS suspended her for “violating departmental policies by quoting the department on social media without authorisation”.
Mbambane, 27, alleges that Jiyane had on several occasions falsely accused her of making sexual overtures towards Zuma and Ramaphosa by being scantily dressed and flashing her “full bums” and breasts at the pair while taking pictures of them during official events.
Jiyane, she alleged, also accused her of wearing miniskirts and leggings while on official assignmentexchanges with Jiyane and correspondence to senior management.She cited a post State of the Nation address cocktail party in 2015 in Cape Town, when she had taken a selfie with Zuma.
Jiyane allegedly told her: “You asked to take a photo with the president, and you grabbed him closer, he pointed at the breast area”
Mbambani said Jiyane had made the accusations during a departmental meeting in Pretoria.
Mbambani denied this outright, and said it was the president who had asked to take a picture with her.
She also denied exposing herself to the president.
Other incidents cited were in Port Elizabeth, where the president was addressing the International Women’s Day on August 3, 2015 and in Lesotho, during one of Ramaphosa’s peace mission round-trips.
In an email correspondence which Independent Media has seen, Jiyane stated that he would give her protocol training after he “got feedback” that Mbambani had addressed a deputy minister on a first name basis during interaction on social media.
“She (Mbambani) has been given feedback on areas where she needs to improve She was advised on consistently remembering how to interact with our senior principals,” he wrote.
She alleged that Jiyane had also told her the complaints about her clothes had come from Zuma himself.
She had denied this.
“I asked him why this is only coming from the president’s office but not from the deputy president, minister (in the Presidency Jeff Radebe and Deputy Minister (Buti) Manamela’s office, and he couldn’t give me a reason.”
Mbambani further alleged the accusations were a result of apower struggle between her and Jiyane over the coverage of events presided over by Zuma and Ramaphosa.
She wrote, in an email that she sent to Ramaphosa pleading for intervention, that Zuma had once told her in front of Jiyane that “you (Jiyane) must be careful because the young woman is going to take over”.
Contacted for comment, Jiyane yesterday said: “These wild allegations were dismissed by the department and I was found not guilty of these manufactured lies.”s.
She views these accusations “as sexist, emotional and sexual harassment”.
She detailed several events in which she alleged he had bullied and harassed her.



Recall Zille as premier and give Maimane that job too

A few years ago I attended a workshop on workplace diversity. To illustrate how a diverse workforce unlocks innovation and drives market growth, a facilitator told us an anecdote about a company that had suffered a great deal of damage to its reputation following a certain incident.
Consequently, the management called an urgent meeting to discuss the incident and come up with damage controlling measures in order to preserve the company’s image. During the meeting, narrated the facilitator, one of the managers of Chinese descent stood up and urged his colleagues, who had pressed the panic button, to view the incident as an opportunity to do things differently.
Orlando Pirates’ chairperson Irvin Khoza said the same following his club’s 6-0 annihilation at the hands of the reigning Premier Soccer League (PSL) and Confederation of African Football (CAF) champions Mamelodi Sundowns earlier this year at Loftus Versfeld Stadium in Pretoria.
After Mamelodi Sundowns had scored a sixth goal, a group of Orlando Pirates’ fans invaded the pitch, prompting a group of their Sundowns counterparts to do the same, resulting in a scuffle between the two groups of fans.
Speaking at a press conference his club had called to reflect on the incident, which came against the backdrop of a 6-1 loss to SuperSport United, prompting coach Muhsin Ertugral to resign live on television in a post-match interview, Khoza said it was “time for reflection”.
The same applies to the DA. The racist tweet by its former leader and Western Cape Premier Helen Zille, presents the party with an opportunity both to reflect on her future as the premier and do things differently as a damage controlling measure.
Zille struck a chord with black people when she tweeted: “For those claiming the legacy of colonialism was ONLY negative, think of our independent judiciary, transport infrastructure, piped water, etc.”
Essentially, Zille not only echoed journalist Paul Kirk’s views, as expressed in a Facebook post that Dianne Kohler-Barnard shared over a year ago, but also fed into a view that the DA is a racist party, using black people to win the votes.
In part, Kirk wrote: “Please come back PW Botha you provided far better services to the public - we had a functioning education system, functioning health system and the police did not murder miners on behalf of government toadies as they do now.” 
Sadly, black DA members bear a far more insurmountable burden of defending the party as non-racist than their white fellows do. For example, DA leader Mmusi Maimane, Mbali Ntuli and Phumzile van Damme, to name but a few prominent black DA leaders, spoke out against Zille while the party’s traditional white guard, which includes Athol Trollip, Desiree van der Walt, James Selfe, and Chief Whip John Steenhuisen, lost its voice over the racist tweets.
It is against this backdrop that Steve Biko’s famous quote, “black man, you are on your own,” springs to mind. Maimane is on his own to de-racialise the DA. He is fighting a lost battle.
Steenhuisen did find his husky voice amid the furore over Zille’s tweet, but on a different matter, that is, a burglary at Chief Justice Mogoeng Mogoeng’s offices in Midrand. He pointed the finger at State Security Minister David Mahlobo. Nevertheless, this may very well give credence to North West Premier Supra Mahumapelo’s assertion that Steenhuisen is a racist, or holds the same views as Zille.
Furthermore, both Zille’s tweet and the audible silence from the party’s traditional white guard undermine concerted efforts by Maimane to uproot a seed of racism within the DA.
In a speech delivered at the Apartheid Museum amid a storm of racist outbursts started by Kirk’s Facebook post and intensified by Penny Sparrow, who called the black people at a beach in Durban “monkeys”, Maimane said, “no DA member must ever turn a blind eye to racism, no matter how subtle or coded it may be”.
Not mincing his words, he went on to add, “racists are not welcome in the DA”.
In an article, “From the Inside: Lessons from Singapore”, seeking to put her tweet into perspective, Zille claims: “I have always known that African racial nationalism is the central tenet of the ANC.”
As if that is not enough to drum up support from the party’s traditional white guard in case she faces the music over her tweet, Zille adds: “The real danger is that the DA, in its quest for (black) votes, may start to swallow every tenet, myth and shibboleth of African racial-nationalist propaganda, including the scape-goating of minorities, populist mobilisation and political patronage.”
Essentially, Zille implies that the black votes would corrupt the DA. Zille should not start with it.
To start with, whose brainchild is the BEE, which Zille says is a “bribe-based black elite enrichment” scheme?
In the book Architects of Poverty, Moeletsi Mbeki says: “(The) BEE was, in fact, invented by South Africa’s economic oligarchs, that handful of white businessmen and their families who control the commanding heights of the country’s economy, that is, mining and its associated chemical and engineering industries and finances.”
He adds: “The object of BEE was to co-opt leaders of the black resistance movement by literally buying them off with what looked like a transfer to them of massive assets at no cost.”
However, to “the oligarchs”, says Mbeki, “of course, these assets were small change”.
The white monopoly capital is replete with ANC leaders as chairpersons and non-executive directors. Besides representing pseudo-transformation, some of them facilitate corrupt multimillion-rand deals between the government and white monopoly capital.
Ironically, the DA says it is investigating whether Zille has to face the music. There is nothing to investigate because Kohler-Barnard’s case has set the precedent. As I’ve explained, Zille echoed Kirk’s views.
The reality, however, is that subjecting Zille to a disciplinary hearing would be futile. The hearing is more appropriate to rein in young leaders such as Ntuli and Van Damme, not her.
I concur with former DA member-turned-columnist Gareth van Onselen that Zille’s world of politics is gone, but she does not want to relinquish the grips of power, “Not without a fight”, as the title of her autobiography suggests.
By hand-picking Maimane as her successor, Zille thought she would lead the DA from the grave through him. Her plan has backfired, as Maimane has his own vision.
Consequently, there are two centres of power within the DA, represented by Maimane and Zille, largely bordering on co-operative factionalism, albeit it is not playing itself out in the public domain as is the case with the ANC.
The DA is in a first phase of factionalism - co-operation - whereas the ANC is in the third phase, degeneration.
As I explain in the article, “President Zuma has proved to be a law unto himself” and other opinion pieces, history is likely to repeat itself in the next elections. The DA is likely to form a coalition government with smaller opposition parties to edge the ANC out of power with the EFF’s support.
To do things differently, the DA should recall Zille as premier and replace her with Maimane. This would help the party on two fronts. First, it would show responsible leadership, an important aspect of leadership that is lacking in the ANC where a spurious apology or sorry suffices to evade accountability.
Second, the premiership will help Maimane gain valuable experience in government and prepare him to become president in 2019.
Screaming from an oppositional bench is different from leading. Maimane needs experience in government.
* Tshabalala is an independent political analyst.
** The views expressed here are not necessarily those of Independent Media.