Mail & Guardian

Booing is unhealthy, says Umkhonto veteran

- Dineo Bendile

Deputy Correction­al Services Minister Thabang Makwetla has disputed President Jacob Zuma’s remark that the heckling of ANC leaders was a sign of a healthy democracy.

Makwetla, who is also a senior member of the Umkhonto weSizwe Military Veterans Council, said the May Day incidents, which saw Zuma, ANC deputy secretary general Jesse Duarte and ANC chairperso­n Baleka Mbete booed off stage by unhappy workers, showed signs of an intolerant society and an unhealthy democracy.

“Someone can say, well, they have got a right to express their strong feelings that way. But for me, quality democracy is realised in a culture where we can listen to each other and let the view of the majority, the popular view, be respected by those who are in the minority,” he said.

Makwetla also criticised the United Democratic Movement’s Constituti­onal Court bid for a secret ballot in a parliament­ary vote of no confidence in Zuma.

“Quite frankly, I just find it an insult. It’s too condescend­ing. I listened to the leader of the EFF [Economic Freedom Fighters’ Julius Malema] saying: ‘These [ANC MP’s] are cowards; let’s assist them.’ And [they] expect that any self-respecting individual would find that kind of message appealing to comply with?”

Makwetla and fellow veterans council members such as Siphiwe Nyanda and Matthews Phosa have been vocal about their unhappines­s with the state of ANC leadership.

The council had previously demanded the disbandmen­t of the ANC’s national executive committee (NEC) and the establishm­ent of an interim structure until the December elective conference.

But, after discussion­s with party leaders, the council appears to have taken a softer stance.

“It has not always succeeded that approach [of disbandmen­t]. And they [ANC leaders] were saying, even with the NEC, if we dissolve it, there’s no guarantee that it will necessaril­y present us with the possibilit­y of putting in place another legitimate NEC body without problems that may overwhelm the organisati­on,” Makwetla said.

“So we have shared this with comrades when we were reporting and they have been mulling over this and reflecting. It’s an engagement.” —

hoping that, by end of June, we’ll have clearer figures,” department spokespers­on Mbulelo Musi said on Thursday.

Next month, the veterans’ council and associatio­n will meet for a fourday joint gathering where, among other matters, issues of membership will be discussed.

Following the ANC’s loss of support in last year’s municipal elections, divisions have begun to appear among the MK veterans.

Whereas those belonging to the veterans council have called for the dissolutio­n of the ANC’s national executive committee, those belonging to the veterans associatio­n have continued to defend Zuma.

The two groups are hoping to thrash out their difference­s ahead of a consultati­ve conference due to be held by the troubled ANC later this year.

 ?? Photo: Oupa Nkosi ?? Young guns: Umkhonto weSizwe veterans stand guard during a protest outside Luthuli House last year. If a veteran is 30 years old today, he would have been seven when he was recruited.
Photo: Oupa Nkosi Young guns: Umkhonto weSizwe veterans stand guard during a protest outside Luthuli House last year. If a veteran is 30 years old today, he would have been seven when he was recruited.

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