The Independent on Saturday

Zulu king ‘did not incite violence’

- STAFF REPORTER

ALTHOUGH Zulu King Goodwill Zwelithini’s comments were harmful to foreign nationals, he did not call for violence against migrants, an investigat­ion by the SA Human Rights Commission has found.

Commission chairman Lawrence Mushwana told a media briefing yesterday that Zwelithini’s utterances, made during a speech he delivered at a meeting on moral regenerati­on in Pongola in March last year, did not actively incite violence, but engendered discrimina­tion.

“From an analysis of the utterances of the respondent in the transcribe­d version of his speech, the commission is of the view that at no point did the respondent issue a call to take arms or any call for violent attack against migrants,” Mushwana said.

“His utterances fall short of incitement to violence as he did not actively encourage or pressurise the audience to commit violent acts.”

He said, however, that Zwelithini’s statement created an environmen­t in which foreign nationals could be discrimina­ted against by society.

“Telling people that they’re criminals and that they’re here to steal the country’s wealth is harmful. Such psychologi­cal conditioni­ng could ultimately lead to acts of discrimina­tion and fuel a climate which leads to violence.”

In his speech, Zwelithini accused foreign nationals of making “streets dirty”. He also called on foreign nationals to pack their bags and go home. Mushwana said a Zulu language expert, who assisted the commission in its investigat­ion, concluded that these statements did not incite violence.

“In the history of the Zulu nation, the king can express his views in a blunt and sometimes crude way without meaning to offend a particular individual. In regard to his request for ‘foreign nationals and their luggage to be sent back home’ the expert found that the reference to luggage is made on the assumption that hawkers are in South Africa illegally,” said Mushwana.

The complaint against the king was laid by African Diaspora Forum, Lawyers for Human Rights and other individual­s. They charged that Zwelithini’s statement incited violence against foreign nationals and had resulted in an eruption of xenophobic attacks last year.

Seven people were killed and thousands displaced as violence against foreign nationals swept through large parts of the country.

Mushwana said Zwelithini had, during his speech, also criticised locals for inflicting violence on foreign nationals.

Zwelithini argued that he was quoted out of context through “inaccurate reporting” and that the media did not understand the Zulu language.

He asked the commission to investigat­e the media reports for its role in “misusing” the speech he delivered.

Mushwana said the Press Ombudsman was the correct platform to address the king’s concerns.

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