Sunday Times

Tiny party torn apart as two leaders suspend each other

- By ANDISIWE MAKINANA

Gumede said she was addressing a platform of the women’s league and was encouragin­g women to nominate women during the coming list conference­s, but denied mentioning the name of Dube-Ncube.

She said any claim that she was part of a plot against Zikalala was an attempt to divide the leadership of her region, the province, and a means to isolate her in order to weaken the eThekwini region.

“I support Zikalala and respect him as my leader and my mentor, I fully support the leadership and presidency of Baba Cyril Ramaphosa both in the ANC and the country,” Gumede said.

“The decision of who becomes a premier or mayor of the ANC doesn’t rest with me or any lower structure, it will be taken by the ANC higher structure. I can’t give myself the powers I don’t have, I will support whoever the ANC decides [upon],” she said. ● The tiny African Independen­t Congress (AIC) party has been plunged into turmoil by a power struggle between its leader and his deputy — and the ANC’s control of Ekurhuleni could be at risk as a result.

The AIC became the kingmaker in the Ekurhuleni metro council after the local elections in 2016, when the ANC fell three seats short of a majority.

Sources say the four AIC councillor­s in Ekurhuleni who formed a coalition with the ANC are split between the two camps that have emerged in their party — one led by party president Mandlenkos­i Galo and the other by his deputy, Lulama Ntshayisa.

The AIC’s unravellin­g came to light this week after Galo’s camp wrote to the office of National Assembly Speaker Baleka Mbete to say Ntshayisa had been suspended from the party and should be removed as an MP.

But Ntshayisa immediatel­y hit back, writing a similar letter to Mbete telling her

that it was Galo who should be removed because it was he who had been placed on precaution­ary suspension by the party.

Letters have also been sent to the speakers of councils where the AIC has councillor­s.

The AIC has one other MP in the National Assembly, Mahlubandi­le Jafta.

Mbete’s office this week told Ntshayisa that Galo could not be removed from the business of parliament on the basis of internal party disciplina­ry processes.

Speaking to the Sunday Times, Ntshayisa said he was running a parallel leadership structure that he put together after he and his supporters were allegedly sidelined at a party congress in April.

Ntshayisa said he did not recognise Galo’s structure and he wanted it to be disbanded.

“That is why we also called our people and formed our own interim structure so that it runs parallel and we can challenge them and, when they suspend us, we can also suspend them,” he said.

Circumvent­ing the process

Galo referred queries to AIC spokespers­on Mxolisi Koom, who said problems started in December last year when the party tried to hold an elective conference.

Koom, who is in the Galo camp, said Ntshayisa’s supporters rejected the adoption of credential­s when they realised the numbers favoured Galo.

He said the Ntshayisa group then launched a failed court applicatio­n to stop the party’s April congress.

“They tried to interdict the conference but the applicatio­n was struck off the roll because it lacked material reasons for it to be entertaine­d …

“They wanted to circumvent the democratic processes because they were defeated in terms of numbers,” said Koom.

Aubrey Mhlongo, an AIC councillor in the Johannesbu­rg metro council who is aligned to Ntshayisa, said the Ntshayisa group had questioned the credential­s of the elections agency that ran the December conference.

“Their credential­s were suspect. We discovered that they had never run an election before.”

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