The Citizen (KZN)

ANC leaders ‘targeted’

FEAR: CHAIR HIJACKED – AND SPEAKER FINDS DEAD CAT ON HER DOORSTEP Tension in council over new chief financial officer charged with fraud.

- Eric Naki – ericn@citizen.co.za

Members of the ANC Bojanala regional executive committee (REC) in North West are living in fear after a deputy regional chair was hijacked along with two passengers, while another REC member found a dead cat on her doorstep.

The party’s regional spokespers­on, Thabo “Arafat” Molamu, expressed alarm at the rising incidents of violence targeting REC members in Bojanala.

Kagiso Moleko and two passengers were held at gunpoint by 10 armed men while returning from an ANC meeting in Mahikeng on Tuesday. The hijackers robbed them of their personal belongings before they drove with them to Soshanguve, north of Pretoria, where they dumped them.

A case of hijacking, robbery and theft of a vehicle was opened at the Rietgat police station.

And Gugulethu Mtshali, also a member of the party regional working committee, found a dead cat outside her house.

Molamu said Mtshali, who is council speaker at the Moses Kotane municipali­ty, was traumatise­d. The cat was cut in half “with unnatural precision”, but there was no link between the incident and the hijacking, he said.

Mtshali now feared she was being targeted for an attack.

Recently, some councillor­s boycotted a council meeting after they refused to rescind their decision to hire a chief financial officer charged with fraud and corruption.

The council approved Mzwandile Mkhize’s appointmen­t despite knowing that he was facing charges emanating from his time as a senior official at Gauteng’s West Rand Municipali­ty.

Mkhize and two others were implicated in investing municipal funds into a VBS Bank account in contravent­ion of the Municipal Finance Management Act.

Mtshali was caught in the middle of ongoing tension within the ANC at party and council levels.

“A clear intent had already been demonstrat­ed by rogue elements inside the ANC caucus to ensure that the ANC election victory would be undermined and disregarde­d,” Molamu said.

“We are deeply angered by the conduct of these councillor­s involved in this matter for their appalling and unacceptab­le behaviour, which is clearly an act of defiance and a calculated effort to bring shame and embarrassm­ent to the ANC.”

It is understood from other ANC sources that the boycotting councillor­s were defiant because they believe the ANC could not afford to expel so many ward councillor­s. If the councillor­s were to be expelled, by-elections would be called and the ANC would be wary of that at the time of a crucial national election campaign.

Molamu also condemned “the recent incidents of violence against its leaders”. “These deplorable violent acts against the leaders have reached alarming levels and we hope that law enforcemen­t agencies will do everything in their power to apprehend these treasonous elements.”

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