Sowetan

EFF leader

Party leader wants Ingonyama Trust to be dissolved

- By Ngwako Modjadji

Julius Malema told supporters that whites took the land “through genocide” and should not be compensate­d when it is expropriat­ed. He was speaking at a rally in Johannesbu­rg yesterday.

EFF leader Julius Malema has taken a swipe at Zulu king Goodwill Zwelithini – whom he last year presented with a herd of cattle as a birthday gift – and said people should not shiver when he speaks.

“When they speak we must shiver. No, we are in the democratic debate [about land] here. The Zulu kingdom must also contribute to the debate we are having here,” he said.

Malema was speaking yesterday at the launch of his party’s election registrati­on campaign in Johannesbu­rg. “The Zulu kingdom must never allow white people to put it against the black majority. No one is going to take land from Zulu people.

“If Ingonyama Trust is not being used properly to benefit the Zulus, then let Ingonyama Trust be dissolved and let it be returned into the hands of the people. What is this political expediency we are experienci­ng here? Why should the Zulu kingdom not be treated as one of the institutio­ns under democracy.”

Last week, Zwelithini said the Ingonyama Trust should not be dissolved. The king called on all Zulus to donate R5 each for the fight against the proposed dissolutio­n of the Ingonyama Trust.

A high-level panel appointed by the Speakers’ Forum and led by former president Kgalema Motlanthe has recommende­d that the Ingonyama Trust Act be repealed or amended and that the Trust itself be dissolved.

The Trust administer­s 2.8 million hectares of land on behalf of the Zulu nation.

The king’s comments seem to have angered Malema, whose party’s drive led to the National Assembly’s adoption of a motion on land expropriat­ion without compensati­on.

Malema told scores of EFF supporters that the restoratio­n of land will heal the pain of black people. He said any ownership of property by black people was a threat to whiteness.

“Land in South Africa was taken through genocide. No one left the country when the land was [taken] from black people. Now we say, let us take from white people.”

Meanwhile, Internatio­nal Relations and Cooperatio­n Minister Lindiwe Sisulu yesterday called on the internatio­nal community not to panic over the land issue.

“There is a parliament­ary process under way and all stakeholde­rs, domestic and internatio­nal, must respect that process and also take advantage of that process to make their input.

“The president remains committed to engage all stakeholde­rs during this process,” Sisulu said.

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 ?? /VELI NHLAPO ?? Julius Malema addressing his supporters at the Standard Bank Arena in Johannesbu­rg yesterday.
/VELI NHLAPO Julius Malema addressing his supporters at the Standard Bank Arena in Johannesbu­rg yesterday.

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