Sunday Times

Malema: EFF will ‘double social grants’

Pledge revealed at launch of party’s election manifesto

- By ZIMASA MATIWANE

● Social grant payments such as child support, pensions and disability will more than double under an EFF government.

This is according to EFF leader Julius Malema, who was delivering the red berets’ electoral manifesto at the Moses Mabhida Stadium in Durban yesterday.

Malema said the child support grant will increase from R510 to R1,020 a month, and pensions from R2,090 to R4,180. But he did not explain how his government would finance the increases. Taxpayers are already paying more than R22bn a month towards social grants.

On the economic front, Malema said an EFF government will look to Africa, Russia and China for improved trade. It will also recommissi­on coal power stations and bring nuclear energy onto the grid to curb load-shedding.

“At the centre of our job creation strategy is reindustri­alisation, using state funding and not relying on the private sector. We don’t need the world to reindustri­alise, we must expand our trading with Africa.

“Those companies [in South Africa] from Britain, America and Europe can leave with immediate effect; we will get companies from Africa, from Russia, from China — we will rebuild this economy,” he said.

Top of the EFF’s plan, according to Malema, is a decentrali­sed economy and incentives for businesses operating in areas outside economic hubs such as Gauteng.

“Those [businesses] opening factories and creating jobs outside economic hubs like Gauteng will get tax incentives and their factories will be subsidised if they open, especially in rural areas, because we want production of goods.”

He added that factories producing items for everyday use, including for the agricultur­al sector, will be protected by the state against foreign competitio­n under an EFF government.

Malema said an end to load-shedding, which he claimed is possible under an EFF government, will contribute 9-million jobs.

“Through industrial­isation we can create jobs, but not with load-shedding. Therefore the government of the EFF is committing to end load-shedding within six months in government because we know it is possible.

“We have assembled a group of engineers who are waiting for the EFF to take over; they will be integrated into Eskom to make sure that we provide reliable electricit­y,” he said.

This would be made possible, he said, through reactivati­ng all coal power stations and operating them to full capacity, while “introducin­g more than 600 megawatts of nuclear energy and a non-negotiable maintenanc­e plan for all coal power stations”.

“These will ensure that we secure electricit­y generation and supply for the next 20 years without loadsheddi­ng, using our coal to the maximum in addition to other sources,” he said.

Malema said his party is committed to expropriat­ing land without compensati­on to end the “economic apartheid” that “replaced” apartheid after 1994. “When we get the majority we will amend the constituti­on for land expropriat­ion without compensati­on. Fifty percent of the land will be redistribu­ted before 2025.”

Despite South Africa having been democratic for 30 years, the EFF believes the political inclusion has hardly translated into observable economic benefits for the majority of the people who had been oppressed and exploited under colonialis­m-cum-apartheid.

“Black people remain landless, they remain on the margins of economic production and outside life-enhancing economic participat­ion. The majority of those that participat­e in the economy do so as suppliers of cheap and easily disposable labour. Landlessne­ss and joblessnes­s among black South Africans are at crisis levels, posing the biggest challenges that confront South African society today,” he said.

Those companies [in South Africa] from Britain, America and Europe can leave with immediate effect; we will get companies from Africa, from Russia, from China — we will rebuild this economy Julius Malema

 ?? Picture: Sandile Ndlovu ?? EFF president Julius Malema speaks during the party’s election manifesto launch at Moses Mabhida Stadium in Durban yesterday.
Picture: Sandile Ndlovu EFF president Julius Malema speaks during the party’s election manifesto launch at Moses Mabhida Stadium in Durban yesterday.

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