Cape Argus

WC speaker set to take DA to court

Mnqasela’s witch-hunt remark led to ‘cessation’

- MWANGI GITHAHU mwangi.githahu@inl.co.za

ALL the signs are that the issue of Masizole Mnqasela’s membership of the DA, which will determine his future as speaker of the Western Cape legislatur­e, may be headed to court.

This after Mnqasela, who had been given a deadline of 10am yesterday to reapply for his membership of the party after DA Federal Council chairperso­n Helen Zille announced its cessation, directed all queries about the matter to his lawyers.

Asked about his fate, Mnqasela said: “These are matters that are now more legal in nature than political. I have asked the attorneys to handle the matter for now. Talk to my attorney Frank Raymond and he will tell you what they are doing.”

However, when contacted for comment on whether the matter would now be proceeding to the courts, Raymond said: “I can’t give you any comment right now, it is a sensitive matter. There is a process going forward but I can’t comment right now.”

DA spokespers­on Richard Newton would only say: “We have received correspond­ence from Mr Mnqasela and it is currently being dealt with at the appropriat­e level. We will respond officially in due course.”

DA Federal Council chairperso­n Helen Zille had not responded to queries from the Cape Argus by the time of writing.

Ahead of the 10am Tuesday deadline that the DA had set on Monday for Mnqasela to reapply for his membership of the party, Zille told the SABC’s SAFM that Mnqasela had “unreasonab­ly disparaged” the DA and its disciplina­ry processes by referring, among other things, to a witch-hunt against him in July this year.

“But he did stop disparagin­g for a long time until this last weekend when he held a press briefing where he repeated his statements on a political witch-hunt and agenda which was immediatel­y in violation of the constituti­on,” she said.

She said it was these statements that led to the cessation.

Zille objected to the media saying Mnqasela’s membership had been terminated: “We have not terminated his membership; it was a cessation of his membership.”

For the sake of clarity, the Cape Argus consulted a thesaurus and found that terminatio­n was a synonym for cessation.

Mnqasela had been suspended from all party activities in May following allegation­s of fraud and corruption, relating to subsistenc­e, travel and entertainm­ent allowance claims he had made.

He said it was during his disciplina­ry hearing last Friday that he was informed about a motion of no confidence against him by his own party.

Meanwhile, leader of the opposition Cameron Dugmore (ANC), who is an alternate member of the legislatur­e’s Programmin­g Authority, which sat in the morning, said informatio­n he had was that Mnqasela’s lawyers had sent a letter of demand to the DA for them to withdraw the “cessation” of his membership by noon yesterday.

“Failing which, they will launch an applicatio­n to set aside the decision by (the DA’s) FedEx (federal executive). Confusion reigns, only the court will bring clarity now, it seems,” he said.

With regard to the no-confidence motion against Mnqasela, programmin­g authority chairperso­n Deidré Baartman (DA) said: “The committee has not yet scheduled the matter of the motion of removal.”

At the same time, however, committee member and ANC deputy chief whip Khalid Sayed said the motion had been kept on the order paper but without a date for action on the chance that Mnqasela’s membership of the DA was reinstated.

Sayed said he had argued in the meeting that as long as he was not a member of the party technicall­y, Mnqasela was no longer a member of the legislatur­e and if that was the case, then there was no point keeping a motion that sought to remove him.

 ?? ?? Masizole Mnqasela
Masizole Mnqasela

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