Sowetan

‘Gordhan is the real president’

● Malema says ‘useless’ Ramaphosa has allowed minister to be all-powerful ● EFF leader claims Pravin was behind his personal tax woes

- By Isaac Mahlangu

EFF leader Julius Malema says Public Enterprise­s Minister Pravin Gordhan is “the real president of South Africa”.

Malema, who has had a strained relationsh­ip with Gordhan from his days as the ANC Youth League president, said Gordhan was more powerful than President Cyril Ramaphosa.

The firebrand leader made the remark at the party’s head offices in Braamfonte­in yesterday during a press briefing on a wide range of issues.

His previous tax troubles also started when Gordhan was finance minister.

Malema claimed he was slapped with a huge tax bill following his disagreeme­nt with the appointmen­t of Gordhan as finance minister during former president Jacob Zuma’s tenure.

Malema was the youth league president at the time.

“I became corrupt the day I challenged Pravin’s appointmen­t, when I said to Zuma; ‘Why do you keep on appointing minorities into the economic cluster to the exclusion of the black Africans?’

“That day I was declared an enemy, and stupid enough, I had my problems of SARS, that’s where they got me... that’s how my taxes landed on your desks,” he said.

Malema cited the filing of an affidavit by Gordhan in the disciplina­ry action against suspended SARS head Tom Moyane to illustrate Gordhan’s alleged undue powers.

EFF chairman Dali Mpofu represents Moyane – a Zuma acolyte – in his ongoing legal battles with Ramaphosa, who wants him removed as SARS commission­er.

Malema also accused Gordhan of making “illegal” appointmen­ts to boards of stateowned entities without consulting cabinet or the ANC’s deployment committee.

“He does as he wishes, we cannot allow that. We’ve never elected Pravin and he will never be an official president of South Africa,” Malema said.

Malema said Ramaphosa was “useless” for allowing a minister to be “powerful the way Pravin is”.

The Department of Public Enterprise­s said Gordhan would not respond to Malema’s allegation­s.

Ramaphosa’s spokeswoma­n, Khusela Diko, said: “We cannot dignify such rants with a response.”

Malema’s frontal attack on Gordhan was similar to how his deputy, Floyd Shivambu, had also taken aim at National Treasury deputy director-general Ismail Momoniat, who is known to be close to Gordhan.

Shivambu accused Momoniat of being part of an Indian cabal and “a neo-liberal technocrat who doesn’t respect African leadership”.

Malema said he wished to be invited to give evidence at the ongoing commission of inquiry into how SARS was used as a political weapon.

“My houses were taken by Pravin, I was humiliated by Pravin,” he said.

Meanwhile, earlier in the briefing Malema struck a reconcilia­tory tone as he surprising­ly defended Zulu King Goodwill Zwelithini’s right to contribute to the land debate.

The king has dared the government to even think about taking away land held under the Ingonyama Trust, of which he’s the sole trustee.

“What the king has said [is] a contributi­on to the land debate... why does everyone else speak but the king can’t,” Malema said.

Malema said far worse contributi­ons had been made to debates on land expropriat­ion by “boers who declared civil war” if their land was touched.

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/ T H ULANI MBELE. Julius Malema savages Pravin Gordhan.

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