Business Day

Mbalula lied about my resignatio­n: Msimang

- Luyolo Mkentane

Struggle stalwart Mavuso Msimang, who has quit the ANC over what he called its governance failures and “endemic” corruption, has called on ANC secretary-general Fikile Mbalula to retract claims of being bribed to join former FirstRand group chair Roger Jardine’s political start-up Change Starts Now.

Msimang said the accusation­s are insulting and libellous, and demanded that Mbalula retract them “soon”. He said it is a pity and an “embarrassm­ent” the governing party has someone of Mbalula’s calibre as its secretary-general.

Msimang quit the ANC, a party he had served for six decades, last Wednesday. He said he had been shown a video clip of Mbalula addressing an ANC rally on Sunday. “In this clip he accuses me of having accepted a bribe in order to join the party of Mr Roger Jardine,” said Msimang, the erstwhile deputy president of the ANC Veterans League.

“Well, first of all I have not joined any party, and secondly it’s insulting to suggest that I accepted a bribe. Another deliberate lie of Mbalula’s is that I announced my resignatio­n from the ANC through the media. He knows very well that around 3.50pm on December 6 I sent an email to himself and to his PA, exclusivel­y at Luthuli House.”

Msimang said the resignatio­n letter was doing the rounds on WhatsApp chat groups within two hours, with ANC members asking him whether it was true.

“I was shocked,” said Msimang, adding that he later understood the resignatio­n letter to have circulated even beyond ANC chat rooms.

“It’s only when I was called by media that I responded to confirm the veracity of this ... letter. I had to control the narrative of my resignatio­n. It’s really a pity that the ANC has a person like Mbalula as its secretaryg­eneral. It’s an embarrassm­ent.”

Msimang said for an organisati­on that once boasted intellectu­al giants such Sol Plaatje, Oliver Tambo and Duma Nokwe to end up with Mbalula is “actually a commentary on the state of the organisati­on”.

“How did we elect a person like this to that position?”

He pleaded with Mbalula to retract the allegation­s. “In fact, I demand that he should retract these accusation­s against me. They are libellous. He should do so soon. I think it is a friendly request but it has to happen, and happen soon,” Msimang said.

TimesLIVE reported Mbalula told the crowd it should defend “the people’s movement”. He said “2024 is our 2024. We are going to defend freedom and we will defeat our enemies.” He claimed that more than R1bn had been raised as part of efforts to defeat the ANC.

Opponents are forming lots of political parties to defeat the ANC, hesaid. “They put in a lot of money to support this project. Roger Jardine is a project and that project will be defeated.”

The ANC, which is dogged by a slew of governance, financial, operationa­l and administra­tive challenges, is facing the real prospect of losing its electoral majority in the national and provincial elections in 2024, according to several polls, including one by the ANC itself.

Despite having governed SA for almost three decades, ANC politician­s including deputy president Paul Mashatile and ministers Thembi Nkadimeng and Lindiwe Zulu have all blamed apartheid for service delivery failures.

In his resignatio­n letter Msimang said: “For several years now, the ANC has been racked by endemic corruption, with devastatin­g consequenc­es on the governance of [SA] and the lives of poor people, of whom there continue to be so many.”

Msimang said while the ANC did not invent corruption, the ANC’s own track record of corruption — three decades later — “is a cause of great shame. The corruption we once decried is now part of our movement’s DNA. This has had dire consequenc­es for the most vulnerable members of our society.”

Chief justice Raymond Zondo, who chaired the state capture commission, has said the ANC, parliament and the government have failed to take action to halt state capture, while President Cyril Ramaphosa has said the ANC is “accused number one” in corruption.

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Mavuso Msimang

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