The Citizen (KZN)

Maimane gets backing

‘WHITE PRIVILEGE AND BLACK POVERTY’ MUST BE CONFRONTED Eastern Cape party boss says Mmusi right to raise matter as it is relevant.

- Raahil Sain

The DA’s Eastern Cape leader, Nqaba Bhanga, supports his leader Mmusi Maimane’s comments on “white privilege and black poverty”. This follows a City Press report on Sunday that Maimane came under fire from three senior MPs – chief whip John Steenhuise­n, his deputy Mike Waters and MP and deputy chair of the federal council Natasha Mazzone – at a parliament­ary caucus meeting.

The three reportedly voiced concerns that Maimane’s remarks may alienate white voters ahead of next year’s general election, after which the party seeks to take control of Gauteng. Maimane last month told a Freedom Day rally in Soshanguve, north of Pretoria, that “white privilege and black poverty” must be confronted.

Bhanga said Maimane was right to raise the matter and that the legacy of apartheid continued to determine who had access to opportunit­ies.

“Apartheid was a system designed to benefit white South Africans and disadvanta­ge black South Africans,” he said. “The privilege associated with that system lives on and can never be denied or be swept under the carpet. I therefore agree with the DA’s federal leader, Mmusi Maimane, when he says that the time has come for South Africans to confront ‘white privilege and black poverty’.”

Bhanga said that nowhere was the historical imbalance clearer than in the spatial developmen­t of the country, which placed white people in a privileged position and black people in a disadvanta­ged position. “The DA’s position is to redress the imbalances by building a South African society in which individual­s can compete in the same space with equal opportunit­ies.

“Unfortunat­ely, current social and economic reality is that access to opportunit­ies is still defined by the haves versus the have nots.”

In the meanwhile, the DA has dismissed reports that senior leaders are at loggerhead­s over Maimane’s remarks.

Mazzone has told media that the party’s top brass didn’t attack the party leader for his comments, but had engaged in a healthy discussion on the subject.

Mazzone has tweeted that she herself was a privileged individual. “I use myself as an example, I was extremely privileged. My father however, arrived here with NOTHING, was not privileged. My job is to ensure that we create an equal South Africa where we ALL have the same opportunit­ies! We mustn’t be scared to talk about these things. My father arrived from Naples in Italy, he was dark and could not not speak English or Afrikaans ...” – ANA

Apartheid was designed to benefit the whites.

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