Mail & Guardian

ANC fears violence at meetings

Party secretarie­s have beefed up security as tensions at branch general meetings rise

- Lizeka Tandwa & Paddy Harper

Violence in three of the ANC’S biggest provinces has disrupted branch general meetings (BGMS). In the past weeks, ANC secretarie­s in Kwazulu-natal, Eastern Cape and Limpopo have had to boost security as the regions prepare to elect new leaders.

There are now concerns in the party that the violence may escalate as the process to select candidates gains momentum and that the wave of deadly attacks that marred the process in Kwazulu-natal in 2015 and 2016 may be replicated in other parts of the country.

This week, the ANC reported that two people were shot, and 16 others injured during meetings in Limpopo’s Waterberg region. This compelled the ANC in Waterberg to call off all its activities in the Lephalale sub-region until security is stabilised.

Waterberg regional spokespers­on Matome Taueatsoal­a described the incident as resembling the storyline of a Hollywood movie, saying that they received reports that the attackers followed their victims to the Witpoort Hospital, where nurses and doctors had to run “for dear life”.

The Mail & Guardian has, in recent weeks, reported that branches in Kwazulu-natal have warned the ANC national leaders that the instabilit­y in the party would result in violence during the branch general meetings, at which members have to select delegates to represent them in regional conference­s and as councillor­s for this year’s local government elections.

At the weekend, five men with a variety of unlicensed firearms were arrested by police at Isipingo, south of Durban, allegedly while on their way to attack an ANC branch general meeting at Mkhambathi­ni, near Pietermari­tzburg.

The ANC’S Harry Gwala region, which includes Mkhambathi­ni, Richmond, Pietermari­tzburg and Howick, was particular­ly badly hit by killings of ANC leaders at branch level during the ANC candidate selection process ahead of the 2016 local government elections.

The political killings in Harry Gwala and other ANC regions claimed 19 lives in less than a year and sparked the appointmen­t of the Moerane commission into political violence in the province in 2017, at which the causes of the spike in preelectio­n were ventilated.

The Moerane report warned that the underlying causes of the killings, which were similar to incidents in other provinces, were “potentiall­y present in all provinces”.

“The commission therefore recommends that this report be referred to the national cabinet so that the evidence and findings can be studied and the recommenda­tions can be implemente­d nationally.

“The culture and network of patronage and impunity does not stop provincial­ly but stretches nationally and the problem must therefore be prioritise­d provincial­ly but eventually addressed nationally,” it concluded.

Limpopo provincial secretary Soviet Lekganyane said this was not the first time the province had experience­d spates of violence during branch general meetings in the past weeks.

“You would understand that we have also attracted wrong elements in the organisati­on. We have a problem with people who join the ANC because they are self-seeking. That is why when those people arrive at a meeting of the ANC. If the meeting does not go the way they want, they want to fight. One other important thing is that the standard of an ANC member has also gone down,” he said.

The Limpopo secretary said that their success at this past weekend’s regional conference in the Norman Mashabane region — its largest region with 129 branches — meant the party was “doing something right”.

“We are not entirely worried that people will come to the conference and disrupt the conference but we also have mechanisms as an organisati­on. Members know they have to conduct themselves properly and must be exemplary,” Lekganyane said.

President Cyril Ramaphosa has raised concern about violence at ANC meetings, saying that the party should strive to root out the negative tendencies in the movement where

“thugs” are rented to disrupt meetings, intimidate and kill members of the ANC.

“Clearly, we still have members with an abiding sense of entitlemen­t.

When their desires cannot be realised, everything should stop. Part of renewal is to disallow such people in the ranks of the movement. The prestige of the ANC should not be sacrificed on the altar of political expediency,” he said.

Ramaphosa’s comments came after a series of branch general meetings were disrupted in Mpumalanga during March, causing the party to halt the process in the ehlanzeni region, where shootings took place at several meetings.

Eastern Cape secretary Lulama Ngcukayito­bi believes the party should have anticipate­d unrest at its meetings. “It’s something that we should have been well prepared for given the seriousnes­s of the process. People have taken a serious premium on those who must be elected as their candidate,” he said.

Some Eastern Cape branch meetings have been disrupted by people using tear gas.

Ngcukayito­bi said the provincial leadership had identified three areas in the Eastern Cape as hot spots.

In East London, members had complained of intimidati­on and harassment outside meetings, and others had been harassed in their homes.

Other areas of concern are the Amathole region, the Ngqushwa local municipali­ty and the Raymond Mhlaba municipali­ty, which have a history of antagonism between ANC members because of how the process of nomination at branch general meetings is managed.

“There are opportunis­tic elements from people who are not residing in those particular wards who will bring spray guns to disturb meetings,” Ngcukayito­bi said.

“There are nefarious elements that are plotting the collapse of the ANC nomination­s for their nefarious intention. The management of these BGMS is something that we have to visit as the ANC.

“There is a necessity to up the security of those BGMS in those particular areas.”

To curb warring factions, Ngcukayito­bi said the province had decentrali­sed all branch general meetings and community meetings. These ward-based meetings will now be held at a voting district level.

“We are worried about it. It’s damaging and it’s causing a lot of strain also to us as the leaders that there would be people that will be harassed or physically assaulted because they are associated with a BGM. It’s something that we did not anticipate,” he said.

High levels of mistrust between members and those running the selection process had fuelled the disruption­s.

“Once they do not trust those that are presiding over the process they begin to rebel against the process,’ he said. “In Rhubusane for instance, the regional executive committee admitted that they mismanaged the process. To avoid this, the process should be transparen­t and reliable too.”

 ?? Photo: Delwyn Verasamy ?? Like a Hollywood movie: The ANC in the Waterberg region of Limpopo has had to strengthen its security measures after two people were shot and 16 injured at a general branch meeting.
Photo: Delwyn Verasamy Like a Hollywood movie: The ANC in the Waterberg region of Limpopo has had to strengthen its security measures after two people were shot and 16 injured at a general branch meeting.
 ??  ?? Wrong elements: Limpopo provincial secretary Soviet Lekganyane has confirmed violence at recent general branch
meetings
Wrong elements: Limpopo provincial secretary Soviet Lekganyane has confirmed violence at recent general branch meetings

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