The Citizen (KZN)

Threat of legal action

- Eric Naki

Four ANC members in the Northern Cape are demanding that the ANC provincial executive committee (PEC) postpone the party’s upcoming provincial conference or face being taken to court.

They demand that the elective conference should not happen because membership audit reports are flawed and must be corrected before the conference, which is scheduled for May 11-15.

However, the audit reports were signed by party secretary-general Gwede Mantashe after a verificati­on process.

The four members, Richard Nxamashe, Eric Kgotseng, Andrew Samson and Nombulelo Modise, have instructed lawyers to demand that the PEC postpone the conference until all duplicatio­ns or cloning of membership­s is corrected.

Kgotseng told The Citizen that all four of them were concerned about ordinary ANC members exercising their democratic rights in the party.

“We believe that we are not taking the ANC to court, but we are challengin­g people who manipulate things in the run-up to the provincial conference,” Kgotseng said.

He accused ANC provincial secretary Zamani Saul of ignoring all PEC resolution­s regarding how the flaws should be corrected.

In response, Saul yesterday said Kgotseng and his colleagues had no standing to force the PEC to postpone the conference.

They were not part of the PEC that took the decisions and did not belong to any leadership in the party.

“They are not members of the PEC, not even the branch executive committee or region executives.

“Kgotseng doesn’t have any standing to challenge us,” Saul said.

The conflict symbolised the bursting of the bubble in the ongoing infighting between two ANC factions in the province – one allegedly led by Saul and PEC member Deshi Ngxanga, called Zamdesh, and the other led by treasurer Sylvia Lucas and Alvin Botes, known as Silvin.

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