Times of Eswatini

Cyril ’s faction fast-track Ace’s expulsion

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DURBAN - A President Cyril Ramaphosa-aligned faction in the ANC’s national disciplina­ry committee was said to be forging ahead with the expulsion of its suspended Secretary General, Ace Magashule.

The Daily News said that a letter from the party’s disciplina­ry committee asking Magashule to state why he should not be dismissed has been sent to his legal representa­tives.

One of Magashule’s backers – and Ramaphosa’s fiercest critic – Carl Niehaus said the letter was sent by national disciplina­ry committee Chairperso­n, Ralph Mgijima, after Magashule missed the disciplina­ry hearing recently.

Niehaus said Magashule had told the committee chairperso­n that he was not available to attend his hearing, but Mgijima refused to postpone it, saying the hearing would continue in his absence.

Niehaus said it was strange that Ramaphosa’s faction wants Magashule to be fired but said nothing about Ramaphosa for bringing the party into disrepute for ‘stashes’ of foreign currency at his farm which were not registered with the SA Reserve Bank.

Comment

Attempts to get the ANC or disciplina­ry committee to comment on the matter were unsuccessf­ul. Both ANC general manager Febe Potgieter and Spokespers­on Pule Mabe had not responded to the questions sent to them.

Magashule’s attorney Mathews Phosa, who is the former ANC treasurer-general, confirmed the disciplina­ry committee wanted his client at the hearing yesterday, but he could not attend.

Phosa said he was not aware of the letter requesting Magashule to state the reasons why he should not be expelled. Magashule was suspended by the party in May last year after refusing to voluntaril­y step aside following his arrest in relation to the asbestos tender while he was Free State premier.

One of his main charges was the letter he sent to Ramaphosa suspending him from the party ‘for buying the 2017’ conference.

Influence

Sources who spoke to the Daily News said the embattled Ramaphosa faction was fighting tooth and nail to have the suspended secretary-general kicked out of the party before the elective conference in December.

One source said the Ramaphosa faction feared his influence and believed he may sway things against him at the conference, so he should be fired before the conference.

Others said this was because of the controvers­y around the party’s step-aside rule which was likely to be scrapped after the elective conference, so even if he was no longer a secretary-general he would make Ramaphosa’s second term miserable.

Magashule has been fighting for his political survival.

He was hoping the party policy conference would scrap the step-aside rule, but instead, the controvers­ial policy was strengthen­ed.

In one of his affidavits in court he said his arrest was a ploy to prevent him from contesting Ramaphosa for the party’s president position at the 55th conference. In his closing address to the NEC meeting, the president did not said anything about Phala Phala, which many were waiting to hear.

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