The Citizen (Gauteng)

Cyril ‘can be my sidekick’

Like Hollywood star Angelina Jolie – who said she’d much rather play Bond than a Bond girl – presidenti­al hopeful Lindiwe Sisulu has turned the tables on Cyril Ramaphosa, asking him to be her deputy.

- Eric Naki ericn@citizen.co.za

Men have dominated the ANC for 105 years, and that must now stop, says female candidate for leader.

Hollywood bombshell Angelina Jolie once famously said that she’s not interested in playing a Bond girl as she would much rather play Bond. Similarly ANC presidenti­al hopeful Lindiwe Sisulu says it’s time for women to play the lead role in the ANC. She has therefore approached Deputy President Cyril Ramaphosa to be her deputy at the ANC elective national conference in December.

Previously she had been identified as a possible deputy candidate for Ramaphosa.

Sisulu, who entered struggle politics at a very tender age, also believes that the [ANC] president’s power should be curtailed and diversifie­d into the collective. And, if elected, she would ensure that happened.

“There isn’t any single power that can be vested in the [ANC] presidency and I think it’s wrong.

“Partly where it was wrong was that our constituti­on was not adjusted to ensure that there was a collective power. The only time that we take collective responsibi­lity is when something has gone wrong,” Sisulu said.

Variably, ANC decisions were taken by a few people and the time to change this has arrived, she said.

“I think [...] one of the things that we can change is to make sure that we can diversify the power of the president into a collective,” she said.

Sisulu blamed the problem on the ANC constituti­on for this failing.

On the issue of sexist leadership, Sisulu said men had dominated throughout the ANC’s 105year history and that has to come to an end. Men are egoistic, while women are natural nurturers of society that would take the ANC and the country forward, she said. In an interview with The Citizen on the sidelines of the Umkhonto we Sizwe Military Veterans conference at Nasrec south of Johannesbu­rg at the weekend, Sisulu confirmed that she had been approached by the Ramaphosa campaign team to become his running mate. But instead of agreeing, she turned the tables and invited Ramaphosa to deputise her.

“We firmly believe that this is the time for women to actually take their rightful place in society and lead society. I believe in women, most of us believe that they are the anchors of our society, of our families and all of those institutio­ns that we hold dear,” Sisulu said.

This is an opportune time for the ANC to elect a woman or women at the top, especially from the current qualitativ­e female candidacy, she said.

“The ANC has groomed enough women – any of the women who are standing – to be able to take us forward. For 105 years of the ANC’s existence, men had been at the helm and I don’t see right now why it should not be a woman.”

Sisulu vehemently dismissed as “malicious” some claims that her campaign relied on her famous Sisulu name, saying that she in her own right suffered oppression at a young age through imprisonme­nt, being forced into exile and she even joined MK.

But observers believe that Sisulu and Ramaphosa are playing a political mind game with the public. “The fact that Sisulu is in Ramaphosa’s slate is a clear indication that they are [already] working together,” an ANC member said. –

It’s time to break the ANC’s sexist approach to leadership

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