Mail & Guardian

KZN political killings still unsolved

The Moerane inquiry heard that the assassins of three Richmond municipal officials are still at large

- Paddy Harper

S’lindile Sithole, the wife of murdered Richmond municipali­ty manager S’bu Sithole, was outwardly composed when she addressed the Moerane commission investigat­ing political killings in KwaZulu-Natal on Monday about her husband’s assassinat­ion in March.

But her voice started to tremble when she spoke of her frustratio­n over the failure of the police to find his killers — who shot him nine times a stone’s throw away from the KwaZulu-Natal Midlands town’s police station in Victoria Street — and bring them to justice.

“We urge people to speak up,” she said. “They are just silent. It’s like a criminal was killed. Richmond is a very small community. It cannot be that somebody like S’bu gets killed and yet no one knows anything.’’

Sithole told the commission her family was unhappy with the police’s approach to the case.

“Even for us to know who the investigat­ing officer is, we had to go ask. If you go to inquire on Monday, you are told there will be an arrest by the end of the week. Three times this has happened,” she said.

Sithole told the commission her husband, a lifelong ANC activist and one of KwaZulu-Natal’s most decorated municipal managers, had been about to take up a new job at the Umgeni municipali­ty. Shortly before his death, Sithole had deposed an affidavit to the police asking them to investigat­e municipal officials, including the chief financial officer, for corruption.

Commission evidence leader advocate Bheki Manyathi asked the commission to disregard the affidavit, which is part of dockets it is perusing, because it is “sensitive” and contains “names”.

The commission also heard that Sithole had opposed an applicatio­n by the council to employ two parttime councillor­s on a full-time basis because the municipali­ty could not afford it.

Sithole said that, although she knew her husband was under pressure to give people jobs and had resisted this, “I don’t think that they are going to go as far as killing you for not giving them a job”.

“It was an assassinat­ion. He was shot five times in the head, nine in total,” she said.

Sithole was the first of three municipal officials to be killed in Richmond in three months. In April, deputy mayor Thandazile Phoswa was gunned down at her home and in June fellow ANC councillor Sifiso Mkhize was shot in an ambush on his way home. No arrests have been made.

On Wednesday night, ANC Camperdown councillor Kwazi Mkhize, who was also a leader of the party’s Umgungundl­ovu region’s ANC Youth League, was gunned down in an apparent assassinat­ion after attending a party meeting.

Although a new deputy mayor, Khonjiwe Mkhize, was elected this week and a by-election for Mkhize’s ward is scheduled for October 18, Richmond is reeling from the killings.

“These three killings happened in the space of three months. Every staff members here fears for their lives. Nobody knows who will be next,” municipal communicat­ions manager Sibonelo Bhengu told the Mail & Guardian on Wednesday. “Yesterday, at Boxer, police arrested men with guns. We don’t know if they were coming to rob the shop or coming to kill somebody else.”

He said business in the town, which was the scene of bloody political conflict between the ANC, the Inkatha Freedom Party and the United Democratic Movement in the 1990s, was being affected by the new wave of killings.

“Things are not right here at the moment. Every time something bad like this comes out, people are scared off, even those who were potentiall­y going to come and invest here,” Bhengu said.

Richmond council speaker Samora Ndlovu said the council had been affected by the killings but were “healing” and “trying to soldier on”.

A presentati­on to the Moerane commission by the South African Local Government Associatio­n (Salga) on Tuesday revealed that only three successful conviction­s for killings of councillor­s in South Africa had been secured since 2016.

Statistics provided to the commission by violence monitor Mary de Haas show that 60 people were killed in suspected political assassinat­ions in KwaZulu-Natal between April 2014 and August 2016. A total of 12 councillor­s or ward candidates were killed in the two-month period ahead of last August’s local government poll.

Salga national official Lance Joel said the culture of threatenin­g and intimidati­ng councillor­s could “compromise municipal systems” and service delivery.

He said the turnover rate of councillor­s stood at 70% because of this and that many interviewe­d by Salga felt “the threats and intimidati­on make them less likely to throw their names in the hat for public office”.

Violence and intimidati­on against councillor­s and municipal officials was “widespread” across the country. A shocking 66% of councillor­s had reported to Salga that they had been threatened, Joel said, adding that “drastic action has to be taken to prevent further loss of life”.

The situation was worsened by red tape and a lack of alignment between budget cycles of local and national government, which meant it could take more than three months for the police to provide protection for councillor­s who were under threat, he said.

Salga wanted councillor killings to be treated as priority crimes by the police to ensure a better conviction rate and remove the culture of impunity surroundin­g political assassinat­ions. He said local-level politician­s needed similar VIP protection to that given to their national counterpar­ts.

 ??  ?? Questions: S’lindile Sithole (above), wife of assassinat­ed Richmond municipali­ty official Sibusiso Sithole, gave evidence to the Moerane commission. The South Africa Local Government Associatio­n’s Lance Joel (below) testified that intimidati­on and fear...
Questions: S’lindile Sithole (above), wife of assassinat­ed Richmond municipali­ty official Sibusiso Sithole, gave evidence to the Moerane commission. The South Africa Local Government Associatio­n’s Lance Joel (below) testified that intimidati­on and fear...
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 ??  ?? Photos: Madelene Cronjé
Photos: Madelene Cronjé

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