The Citizen (Gauteng)

Fake news & shot credibilit­y

- Martin Williams DA city councillor in Johannesbu­rg

Upon release from prison in 2003, Kunene teamed up with fellow jailbird, bank robber Gayton McKenzie to amass a fortune by milking BEE.

Fake news is not new. Deception and falsehood are as old as humanity. So too are gullibilit­y and scepticism. Modern media, able to reach millions in seconds, have amplified all this. “Social media” is a misnomer. Much traffic is rather anti-social. Consider last week’s Kenny Kunene shooting incident. Tweeps didn’t believe Kunene. Twitter was awash with jibes, some hilarious, some defamatory.

Ouch. Why don’t Twitter users believe Kunene? The short answer is that they have had more than enough of him. Kunene’s craving for publicity, abetted by friends in the media, has not gone unnoticed. Additional­ly, in February AmaBhungan­e investigat­ive journalist­s linked him to Gupta fans Mzwanele Manyi and Black First Land First’s Andile Mngxitama. Not good for credibilit­y.

Sometimes described as a socialite or “sushi king”, Thapelo Kenneth Kunene is alternativ­ely an ex-con fraudster. Upon release from prison in 2003, Kunene teamed up with fellow jailbird, bank robber Gayton McKenzie to amass a fortune by milking BEE.

To understand how Kunene and McKenzie benefitted from Gold Fields and Central Rand Gold, a good starting point would be a 2011 Moneyweb article by Lindo Xulu and the late Barry Sergeant, “Gold Fields, an advocate and two convicted criminals”. The two convicts were allowed to influence who profited from the Gold Fields carve-up.

No one should accuse Kunene of being consistent. His political loyalties over the past four years have flitted from the ANC, to the EFF, to McKenzie’s Patriotic Alliance, and seemingly back to the ANC (Jacob Zuma faction), depending on whom you believe.

In June 2013 Kunene wrote to Zuma, criticisin­g not-my-president’s relationsh­ip with the Guptas. “The extent of how much the Gupta family controls you, and by implicatio­n this country, has not even begun to be understood”. Yes quite. At the time, Kunene said many within the ANC were “terrified” to speak out against Zuma because they feared him.

Those statements are rendered ironic by the latest Sunday Times front page, where McKenzie and Kunene are described as the new Guptas because of their perceived sway over Zuma: “Senior ANC leaders this week said the influence McKenzie and Kunene have over Zuma was being spoken about in hushed tones in the party because the two were feared”.

Previously Kunene said people feared Zuma. Now people say Kunene and his ex-con friend are feared Zuma cronies. What changed? Although there have been notable apologies to Zuma, I did not notice Kunene’s Damascene moment.

According to the Sunday Times, “Senior government sources said the two (Kunene and McKenzie) were the mastermind­s behind the e-mails published in last week’s Sunday Independen­t that purported to show marital infidelity on the part of … Cyril Ramaphosa”.

No proof is offered for this accusation, although Kunene and Mngxitama were present during court proceeding­s when Ramaphosa tried to gag the Sunday Independen­t.

Which brings us back to fake news. No doubt news is being manipulate­d to influence the ANC succession race. But whom should we believe, and why? Healthy scepticism is warranted.

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