Sunday Tribune

IFP will turn KZN around if it wins poll, says Ntuli

- BONGANI HANS bongani.hans@inl.co.za

THE IFP is going into the May 29 general elections confident that the legacy of its founder, the late Prince Mangosuthu Buthelezi, will continue to draw voters to it.

In an interview with the Sunday

Tribune, Thami Ntuli, the IFP KZN chairperso­n, vowed to restore the province to its former glory if it won the elections, and promised there would be massive township and rural developmen­t.

Ntuli, the King Cetshwayo District Municipali­ty mayor and provincial chairperso­n of the South African Local Government Associatio­n (Salga), features as number one on the IFP’S provincial elections candidates list.

This means that if the IFP wins the provincial elections, Ntuli would replace the ANC’S Nomusa Dubencube as KZN premier.

Ntuli said voters believed in the IFP because of the “strong legacy” of its founder.

“You can speak of industrial investment. More than 6 000 colleges of education have now been converted into civil colleges and universiti­es, such as Ungoye (University Zululand) and Mangosuthu University of Technology,” he said.

Ntuli is looking forward to becoming the fourth IFP head of the provincial government after Lionel Mtshali, Ben Ngubane and Frank Mdlalose.

He said under Buthelezi’s watch, the IFP built many clinics and hospitals “for black marginalis­ed people”.

“So people are entrusting us with their vote because of that kind of legacy,” said Ntuli.

He said his administra­tion would revitalise and expand the industrial­isation of townships and rural areas such as Mandeni and Madadeni where there were industrial zones built by the IFP government, “of which now some have since gone down because of non-availabili­ty of a conducive environmen­t for that kind of investment”.

Ntuli is confident that the province’s official opposition stands a good chance of governing KZN’S 12.4 million population, the majority of whom still live in poverty.

Ntuli said he was not intimidate­d by the newly formed, Jacob Zuma-supported umkhonto wesizwe Party (MKP) because it had not defeated the IFP in any by-election.

When asked about his plans for the province, Ntuli said a lot would be revealed during the provincial manifesto launch in Ulundi today.

He said the IFP had a record of governing the province better than the current administra­tion under which crime had spiralled and infrastruc­ture had become dilapidate­d.

“The city of Durban, which is our pride and economic hub, is collapsing. We are the ones who invested in the infrastruc­ture, which created basic living for KZN. Unfortunat­ely, when the ANC came to power, all seemed to collapse,” he said.

Ntuli was also proud of the IFP’S performanc­e in the Nkandla Municipali­ty where he was a mayor for 10 years before going to King Cetshwayo. He said under his helm, Zuma’s hometown “was the cleanest town”.

“Although it (Nkandla) is a rural area and is behind in terms of developmen­t, what we introduced when I was mayor there made the people of Nkandla vote for the IFP. Even though we had the state and ANC president, Jacob Zuma, the people of Nkandla were not voting for the ANC. This showed that they had confidence in the IFP.

Ntuli, who was born and bred in Nkandla where he spent most of his youth herding his family’s livestock, has been a teacher, a school principal, and a unionist under the banner of the National Teachers Union.

He obtained his various qualificat­ions in education from the Rand Afrikaans University, the University of Kwazulu-natal, and the University of Pretoria. Before Ntuli studied education he worked as a shopkeeper and security guard.

 ?? ?? MAYOR of the King Cetshwayo District Municipali­ty Thami Ntuli hopes that Mangosuthu Buthelezi’s legacy will give him power to govern Kwazulu-natal. | File
MAYOR of the King Cetshwayo District Municipali­ty Thami Ntuli hopes that Mangosuthu Buthelezi’s legacy will give him power to govern Kwazulu-natal. | File

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