The Citizen (KZN)

Zille faces music today

APPEARS BEFORE DA’S LEGAL COMMISSION OVER TWEETS Party leader Maimane says today is just the preliminar­y investigat­ion process.

- Yadhana Jadoo – yadhanaj@citizen.co.za

Western Cape Premier and former Democratic Alliance leader Helen Zille is to appear before the party’s federal legal commission today for utterances she made on social media related to colonialis­m in South Africa.

Zille came under fire for her recent tweets in which she asked that if colonialis­m had not taken place, would there been progressiv­eness in the country.

“For those claiming legacy of colonialis­m was ONLY negative, think of our independen­t judiciary, transport infrastruc­ture, piped water,” she said.

“Would we have had a transition into specialise­d health care and medication without colonial influence? Just be honest, please.”

She later said: “Getting onto an aeroplane now and won’t get onto the wi-fi so that I can cut off those who think EVERY aspect of colonial legacy was bad.”

Later apologisin­g for the post, Zille said her utterances “may have come across as a defence of colonialis­m”. “It was not,” she added. DA leader Mmusi Maimane yesterday declined to comment on the matter.

“[Saturday] is just the preliminar­y investigat­ion process,” he said.

Following Zille’s tweets, Maimaine took to the social network, stating: “Let’s make this clear: Colonialis­m, like apartheid, was a system of oppression and subjugatio­n. It can never be justified.”

Zille, in turn, retweeted Maimane, who took over as leader from her after being elected in 2015.

DA MP Glynnis Breytenbac­h, who is responsibl­e for the investigat­ion into Zille’s tweet, said yesterday the party’s federal executive council would make the decision on what is to happen next.

“It’s a difficult investigat­ion to describe,” she said.

“There are not a lot of people to see, purely based on media issues, so there’s a lot of documentat­ion.”

“I am seeing Ms Zille [on Saturday] to get her version and then we will more or less wrap it up.”

Zille is known for her controvers­ial utterances on Twitter. In 2016, she sparked outrage for her tweet related to racial classifica­tion at restaurant­s.

In the tweet, which has now been deleted, she said: “Why is it OK to racially classify ppl for jobs but not to identify ppl at a table by their race?”

I am seeing Ms Zille [on Saturday] to get her version and then we will more or less wrap it up. Glynnis Breytenbac­h DA MP

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