Mail & Guardian

Angry SACP goes for the jugular

Utterances by the communist party belie the claim that all is well in the alliance

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Natal, Sihle Zikalala, has also been linked to the group, which is believed to support Nkosazana Dlaminini-Zuma, the outgoing African Union Commission chairperso­n, to succeed Zuma.

The SACP, on the other hand, supported by the trade union federation Cosatu, apparently would prefer Deputy President Cyril Ramaphosa as the next leader of the ANC.

Mapaila said the premier league was getting its way in the ANC. “There is evidence out there that it exists. They killed some of our members and nothing is being done.”

Last week, the Mail & Guardian reported that there have been at least seven political killings this year, with at least five recorded in 2015. In January this year, two people were killed at an SACP meeting in Inchanga outside Durban.

There is no evidence linking the murders to the ANC or any faction in it, and the party immediatel­y dismissed any suggestion that its leaders were either responsibl­e for deaths or for failing to prevent them.

Mapaila said the SACP, once considered the intellectu­al engine of the ruling alliance, has been trying to raise concerns about issues in the ANC but its reports have been ignored. Among the issues it raised, he said, is evidence that ANC Women’s League elections were “won by money”.

He also cited the ANC’s decision this week to abandon the investigat­ion on state capture, which directly implicates Zuma and the Gupta family, as an example.

The SACP is not happy with the decision of the ANC’s national executive committee (NEC) to endorse the party’s national working committee’s decision to accept Zuma’s apology on Nkandla.

The ANC’s deputy secretary gen- eral, Jessie Duarte, dismissed claims by Mapaila that the ANC is being controlled by a faction and that the SACP is being sidelined.

“If SACP is making allegation­s, they must be able to do so in a bilateral with the ANC, not through the media. As far as I know, they are the ones who were supposed to have a bilateral [meeting] with us two weeks ago. They said that they were not available. Then the president [of the ANC, Zuma] was not available and they said they do not want a meeting in his absence,” Duarte said.

The ANC’s spokespers­on, Zizi Kodwa, agreed with Duarte and suggested that the SACP is trying to dictate to the ANC.

“We make our interpreta­tions independen­tly. We would have thought the SACP would have had a bilateral with the ANC before ventilatin­g [their grievances] in public,” he said.

“We reject that observatio­n [that the decision to abandon the investigat­ion of state capture] was factional. It is a decision of the NEC, not a faction.”

Kodwa added the ANC is committed to meeting the SACP as soon as Nzimande is back in the country.

The communist party, which at one point was regarded as one of the staunchest supporters of Zuma, also accused him and his friends of using state institutio­ns and resources to target individual­s who are critical of his leadership.

The SACP drew parallels between the current developmen­ts with events that took place in the lead-up to the ANC’s national general council in Polokwane in 2007, where Thabo Mbeki, then president, was accused of employing state intelligen­ce institutio­ns to destabilis­e his opponents.

“Z u ma s h o u l d k n o w b e t t e r because this was done against him. Now he is using the same tactics,” said Mapaila.

He said the SACP was convinced the Hawks boss, Berning Ntlemeza, is using the unit to settle political scores and is trying to intimidate communists by using what he described as “apartheid intelligen­ce tactics” to deal with opponents.

The Hawks have dismissed the allegation­s.

Nzimande said there is no contradict­ion in criticisin­g the ANC while still voting for it but warned that the results of factionali­sm will show at the polls.

“Our people will punish us. We must never take voters for granted; they are not stupid,” he said.

 ?? Photos: Madelene Cronjé ?? Knives out: SACP general secretary Blade Nzimande and his deputy, Solly Mapaila, are among those who are increasing­ly voicing their frustratio­n with the ruling party. Mapaila alleged this week that the ANC was being controlled by the so-called premier league faction.
Photos: Madelene Cronjé Knives out: SACP general secretary Blade Nzimande and his deputy, Solly Mapaila, are among those who are increasing­ly voicing their frustratio­n with the ruling party. Mapaila alleged this week that the ANC was being controlled by the so-called premier league faction.
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