Cape Times

‘I urged her to accept ANC’s resolve to fire her’

- BONGANI HANS name.surname@inl.co.za

FORMER KwaZulu-Natal legislatur­e deputy speaker Meshack Radebe has revealed that he pleaded with former eThekwini mayor Zandile Gumede to accept the ANC’s decision to fire her from the city’s top position.

Speaking to Independen­t Media yesterday at his retirement homestead of Maqongqo village outside Pietermari­tzburg, Radebe said he was concerned about the direction the ANC was taking. He said it started at the party’s elective conference in Nasrec in 2017. He said this is where he witnessed leaders giving away cash in exchange for votes.

Radebe and Gumede are known staunch supporters of former president Jacob Zuma and they had campaigned for Nkosazana Dlamini Zuma to win against President Cyril Ramaphosa.

He said when he spoke to Gumede on Monday morning, he noticed that she was not angry but she was confused about the provincial executive committee (PEC)’s decision to recall her.

“If the ANC say she must step aside, she must step aside.

“Even this (Monday) morning I was talking to Zandile as I (normally) speak to Zandile. I do advise Zandile, saying ‘sisi cool down’,” said Radebe.

Radebe was reacting to the PEC’s decision to fire Gumede after it had conducted an assessment which concluded she had performed poorly as the mayor.

Gumede’s supporters are vehemently opposed to the firing of Gumede who, on the other hand, issued a statement last week saying she was seeking political and legal advice on how she should react to the decision.

Radebe, who celebrated his 70th birthday two weeks ago, said he spoke to Gumede in his capacity as an elder brother to her.

“I say, No, you cannot do that, you can do that,” said Radebe.

Radebe said he had on many occasions intervened in eThekwini Region to “put out fires”.

He said every time he had to intervene he would first consult former president Jacob Zuma for advice on how to tackle the situation. He insisted Gumede was not angry. “It is confusion more than anything. She is saying ‘what is the problem, where is the problem, where did I go wrong”?

“If there is something wrong why was I not told earlier? Why was I allowed to do all these things that I am now accused of?” he said.

Reacting to allegation­s that leaders used money to win support at the Nasrec conference, which Ramaphosa won against Dlamini Zuma, Radebe said what he witnessed at the conference left him concerned about the future of the ANC and he decided to quit working for the government.

“When I returned from Nasrec I said I am resigning because what I saw there I could not stomach, but the leadership, including Nxamalala (Zuma) pleaded with me not to leave until after the elections,” he said.

He said there are shocking levels of cash being exchanged for votes.

“In the hotel where I was staying, the cash was given out at the foyer. People would come in buses to collect cash.

“One of the people who was giving out money is now a minister.

“People were each counting R5 000, R3 000, R4 000. Others were complainin­g that the money they received was not enough,” said Radebe.

 ?? DOCTOR NGCOBO ?? FORMER KwaZuluNat­al MEC Meshack Radebe at his home in Maqongqo, outside Pietermari­tzburg, unpacking his journey in politics. Radebe said he was concerned about the direction the ANC was taking, which he said started at the party’s elective conference in Nasrec in 2017.
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African News Agency (ANA)
DOCTOR NGCOBO FORMER KwaZuluNat­al MEC Meshack Radebe at his home in Maqongqo, outside Pietermari­tzburg, unpacking his journey in politics. Radebe said he was concerned about the direction the ANC was taking, which he said started at the party’s elective conference in Nasrec in 2017. | African News Agency (ANA)

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