The Citizen (Gauteng)

SACP takes a leap out of the alliance

- Nkululeko Ncana

The South African Communist Party (SACP) will no longer support an ANC-led alliance and is calling for an intensifie­d campaign by its partner Cosatu to install a new structure that will see a new political centre emerging.

The party’s decision comes in the wake of leaked e-mails that paint a grim picture of an ANC that is incapable of reining in its president and ministers, who have allegedly ceded state power to the Gupta family.

SACP general secretary Blade Nzimande says the blame for the alleged state capture by the Guptas should be placed squarely at the doorstep of President Jacob Zuma and his son, Duduzane.

“Sadly, and even more concerning, the central role of President Zuma and his son Duduzane in this auctioning off of our national sovereignt­y is also increasing­ly apparent,” said Nzimande yesterday at a media conference after the party’s central executive committee meeting.

He said revelation­s of the reach that the Guptas have into government department­s and stateowned companies was distressin­g and that the “sheer scale of corporate capture and of parasitic plundering of public resources by the Gupta network becomes more and more evident”.

The SACP says failure to urgently realign the alliance will lead to certain defeat at the 2019 polls and the beginning of a downward spiral and the ultimate destructio­n of the ANC.

Nzimande said the next few months will see the emergence of a reconfigur­ed alliance.

“It is no secret that the ANC is now in deep crisis. At the highest national leadership level it is paralysed by deep divisions.

“It is incapable of undertakin­g the decisive corrective measures that the great majority of ordinary ANC members and supporters now clearly recognise as imperative, beginning with the stepping down of President Zuma,” he said.

Nzimande’s comments come in the wake of a cancelled alliance political council meeting, which was abandoned by the ANC at the last minute.

Nzimande, along with his deputies, Jeremy Cronin and Solly Mapaila, said the leaked Gupta e-mails revealing the extent to which the family controls key sectors of the state, appeared to be authentic and that law enforcemen­t agencies should place implicated officials behind bars.

Cronin said the criminal prosecutio­n of individual­s should run parallel to a judicial commission of inquiry that the SACP said should be immediatel­y set up.

Cronin suggested that former communicat­ions minister Faith Muthambi had potentiall­y committed a criminal offence by sharing Cabinet meeting secrets with the Guptas.

“There are criminal cases that should be actively pursued. The Hawks and the NPA [National Prosecutin­g Authority] should wake up and get over their factional tendencies,” Cronin said.

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