Daily Dispatch

Oscar: disbanding PEC a step toward anarchy

Disruption no solution when figures don’t tally

- By ZINE GEORGE

EFF deputy president Floyd Shivambu says he regrets his “impatience” and will write a formal apology after a confrontat­ion with a journalist got physical outside parliament in Cape Town yesterday.

The assault sparked widespread condemnati­on and calls on the party to distance itself from its deputy president’s behaviour.

Shivambu was caught on camera assaulting Adrian de Kock‚ from Media 24‚ who was waiting with other journalist­s outside the building where Cape Town mayor Patricia de Lille’s disciplina­ry hearing is taking place.

De Kock saw Shivambu‚ asked if wanted to comment about the hearing and took pictures of the politician. Shivambu then insisted that De Kock delete the images because he had not given consent for them to be taken.

He held De Kock by the neck and tried to grab the camera‚ and two unknown men also approached the journalist.

“Floyd grabbed my throat saying ‘you don’t have permission’‚” said the visibly shaken journalist.

He told reporters he would lay assault charges with police.

In a statement issued by the EFF a few hours later‚ Shivambu admitted to being involved in “a scuffle” but said he did not regard it as an “assault” on De Kock nor on media freedom.

His statement read: “The scuffle was a result of circumstan­ces which included taking of photograph­s and persistenc­e to speak to me while receiving documents from staff members in order to attend the standing committee on finance (SCOF). While I was in a hurry to attend the committee meeting‚ I accept that my impatience with the gentleman was inappropri­ate.

“I take full responsibi­lity and apologise for engaging in a scuffle with a person I discovered after the incident is a journalist. I will write and e-mail an official apology on the scuffle because I believe it was not supposed to happen.” —

THE ANC would set the wrong precedent if it decided to disband its Eastern Cape leadership structure.

This is the view of Oscar Mabuyane, who was elected in October to chair the provincial executive committee (PEC) that is now under the national microscope.

In an interview with the Dispatch yesterday, Mabuyane said a decision to disband his executive would be succumbing to anarchy.

However, if that was the ruling of the national executive committee (NEC), “we will accept the outcome”, he added.

He was speaking as ANC members in the province await the outcomes of an NEC meeting this coming weekend which will scrutinise the report of a team, led by Sbu Ndebele, that was tasked with investigat­ing the legitimacy of Mabuyane’s PEC.

This is where the four-member task team will table its report on events leading to such a turbulent elective conference in October that one of two factions abandoned the conference.

The report will guide the NEC on whether it was constituti­onal for Mabuyane’s supporters to continue with electing leaders after some delegates were rushed to hospital with injuries from the fight that broke out on day three of the meeting.

“The ANC cannot succumb to anarchy. The ANC cannot set a precedent that when you go to a conference and realise that your numbers are not tallying, you must disrupt the conference.

“If you do it once, that will be a terrible precedent that the ANC will have to grapple with moving forward,” said Mabuyane.

The tabling of the report to the ANC’s highest decision-making body comes on the heels of the ANC’s filing of papers last Monday at the Constituti­onal Court to oppose an applicatio­n to nullify a high court ruling that found Mabuyane’s PEC legitimate.

The faction supporting premier Phumulo Masualle’s bid to serve a third term as chairman against Mabuyane asked the Grahamstow­n High Court in December to nullify the outcomes of the conference, but the applicatio­n failed.

“The only thing that is not going to help the ANC is to impose leadership on members of the ANC. The democratic nature of the ANC cannot be subverted to please those with factional interests,” said Mabuyane. However, he stressed they would accept the outcome of the NEC.

“We are not entitled to any leadership positions. We respect ANC processes. That is why we have been concerned about people who go and challenge ANC processes in courts of law because you paralyse the internal processes and the ANC’s capacity to resolve its own issues. The ANC will be stuck with this [Concourt] case because the NEC cannot undermine a court ruling in a constituti­onal democracy. That is what the ANC has to deal with,” said Mabuyane.

 ?? Picture: SINO MAJANGAZA ?? COMRADES ON COLLISION COURSE: ANC chairman Oscar Mabuyane and premier Phumulo Masualle each head a faction with a different view of October’s elective conference
Picture: SINO MAJANGAZA COMRADES ON COLLISION COURSE: ANC chairman Oscar Mabuyane and premier Phumulo Masualle each head a faction with a different view of October’s elective conference

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