Saturday Star

Youth should help to cure ‘terrible sickness’ of racism in SA – Zuma

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RACISM is a terrible sickness of apartheid that needed to be cured, President Jacob Zuma said yesterday.

“The youth, black and white, should join the battle against racism in the country and to build a truly united, non-racial society,” Zuma said while addressing an official Youth Day rally in Ventersdor­p‚ North West.

“The town of Coligny here in North West lost a young person, Matlhomola Moshoeu, who was brutally murdered.

“The circumstan­ces of this murder will be determined by the courts and we should allow the law to take its course.”

He said Moshoeu’s death must unite the people of Coligny in the determinat­ion to defeat racism by working together.

The young boy died on April 20.

Two f ar mers, Pieter Doorewaard, 26, and Phillip Schutte, 34, were arrested for his alleged murder and were granted R5 000 bail each.

They are expected to appear in court again on June 26.

The farmers claim Moshoeu had stolen a sunflower from their employer’s field near the Scotland informal settlement, and jumped out of a moving van while they were taking him to the Coligny police station.

A witness told the police that Moshoeu was thrown out of a moving van.

His death sparked violent protests and divided the community of Coligny along racial lines.

“We host the June 16 commemorat­ion in Ventersdor­p, which has had its own sad history of negative race relations given the influence of some former resident of this town,” he said referring to the former leader of the Afrikaner Weerstands­beweging, Eugene Terre’Blanche.

Terre’Blanche waged a sustained campaign against black people in Ventersdor­p.

“At the same time, Ventersdor­p has a positive history because Uncle JB Marks is now buried here.

“Let us build a non-racial town where South Africans respect one another and build a better future together, in the memory of Oliver Tambo and JB Marks,” Zuma said.

Earlier the president was heckled as he started his Youth Day speech.

“Zuma must fall” chanted a group of people as the president began his speech.

The chanting forced Zuma to pause for few seconds.

The g roup was later removed from the giant tents erected at the sports ground in Tshing in Ventersdor­p. – ANA

 ??  ?? President Jacob Zuma addressing the 2017 National Youth Day commemorat­ion held at the Tshing sports ground, Ventersdor­p, North West, yesterday under the theme ‘The year of OR Tambo, Advancing Youth Economic Empowermen­t’.
President Jacob Zuma addressing the 2017 National Youth Day commemorat­ion held at the Tshing sports ground, Ventersdor­p, North West, yesterday under the theme ‘The year of OR Tambo, Advancing Youth Economic Empowermen­t’.

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