Daily Dispatch

Khoza leaving the ANC a ‘huge loss’

- By NEO GOBA

GAUTENG ANC chairman Paul Mashatile says the party suffered a huge blow with outspoken ANC MP Makhosi Khoza’s resignatio­n as a party member yesterday.

Khoza‚ a strong critic of President Jacob Zuma‚ has had a rocky relationsh­ip with the party after speaking out against corruption and also publicly announcing that she would support the no-confidence motion against President Jacob Zuma in a secret ballot held in parliament on August 8.

“Any one person leaving the organisati­on is a great loss to us and I’m sure as we change the way we do things in the ANC, we would wish that some of them would come back.

“We are busy doing that and you know we have a conference coming where there will be new programmes‚ there will be change of leadership‚” said Mashatile.

He was speaking on the sidelines of a human settlement developmen­t summit in Boksburg‚ east of Johannesbu­rg‚ yesterday, which he attended in his capacity as the MEC for Human Settlement­s in Gauteng.

“The ANC is an organisati­on that all of us join voluntaril­y so if anybody wishes to leave‚ there’s nothing that we can do,” he said.

“But I don’t think it’s correct [for her] to say the ANC is a corrupt organisati­on. We may have challenges with certain individual­s but the ANC in fact has been at the forefront of fighting corruption.

“There are good men and women in the ANC and I think they’ll be able to continue to strive to ensure that the ANC deals with these challenges.”

Khoza announced yesterday she was quitting the ANC after a breakdown in the relationsh­ip between her and the party leadership.

Khoza‚ who faced two counts of ill-discipline in July for statements she made in four Facebook posts – on July 7, July 20 (two posts) and July 21 – as well as remarks at the Conference for the Future of South Africa in Johannesbu­rg‚ organised by Save SA‚ failed to turn up for disciplina­ry proceeding­s at the party’s provincial offices in Durban on two consecutiv­e occasions.

In a lengthy Facebook post‚ Khoza said she was unbothered about the outcome of the hearing.

She has also in the past argued that the party’s constituti­on provides that disciplina­ry proceeding­s may not be used as a means of stifling debate or denying members their basic democratic rights.

Mashatile said the ANC would emerge as a united front from the elective conference in December and would consist of dedicated leaders who would fight against state capture‚ corruption and seek to regain the confidence of South Africans. — DDC

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