The Citizen (Gauteng)

TWO FACES OF ZUMA

RECONCILIA­TORY: ‘SOUTH AFRICA WOULD BE A BORING COUNTRY WITHOUT THEM’ EFF leader remains defiant on call for party’s supporters to occupy land.

- Rorisang Kgosana rorisangk@citizen.co.za

In true Jekyll and Hyde form, Jacob Zuma transforme­d from being reserved and nervous in the KwaZulu-Natal High Court in Durban yesterday to a swaggering, confident man in front of his supporters outside.

Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF) leader Julius Malema thinks South Africa would be a “boring country” without white people and would hate to see them go.

Malema addressed scores of EFF supporters outside the Bloemfonte­in Magistrate’s Court yesterday, refuting the perception that he is inciting a “white genocide”.

The EFF commander-in-chief faces charges of contraveni­ng the Riotous Assemblies Act for urging people to occupy any unoccupied land of their choice.

Civil rights group AfriForum initially laid the charges against Malema following his calls for land invasions during the party’s 2014 elective conference in Bloemfonte­in.

The matter was postponed to July 27, pending the outcome of Malema’s applicatio­n challengin­g the constituti­onality of the Act, which is to be heard before the High Court in Pretoria on April 23.

And though Malema stuck to his guns yesterday regarding land invasions and expropriat­ion, he also struck a reconcilia­tory tone, saying there was “no need for whites to be scared” since the EFF manifesto did not say white people should be driven out of the country.

“South Africa would be a boring country without white people. We compliment one another. They have naturalise­d here. It means they are like the trees and the mountains. Can you imagine one day you wake up and there are no trees? That will not be the South Africa we know. We want to live with them. We want them to excel, not because they are white, but because they have a particular skill,” he said.

Several buses were parked on streets around the court, which were used to transport supporters dressed in their signature red EFF regalia. They sang and cheered in support of their leader.

The sea of red members applauded and whistled when Malema again encouraged them to occupy vacant land, as outlined by the Freedom Charter, saying he was not afraid of jail.

Malema was accompanie­d by EFF spokespers­on Mbuyiseni Ndlozi, general secretary Godrich Gardee and chairperso­n Dali Mpofu.

“We are not killing anyone,” Malema said. “We are not creating genocide. What we want is to occupy the unoccupied land, as a demonstrat­ion of our seriousnes­s to return land into the hands of the landless masses of our people.

“For that, I am prepared to go to prison. They can lock me up for having said the poor must have a roof over their heads and have a place called home,” he said to the cheering supporters. –

Whites are like the trees and the mountains

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 ?? Picture: Nigel Sibanda ?? SHOW OF FORCE. Economic Freedom Fighters members outside the Bloemfonte­in Magistrate’s Court yesterday after the case against EFF leader Julius Malema, in which he faces charges of inciting people to take unoccupied land, was postponed to July.
Picture: Nigel Sibanda SHOW OF FORCE. Economic Freedom Fighters members outside the Bloemfonte­in Magistrate’s Court yesterday after the case against EFF leader Julius Malema, in which he faces charges of inciting people to take unoccupied land, was postponed to July.
 ?? Picture: Nigel Sibanda ?? ALL SMILES. EFF general secretary Godrich Gardee, left, leader Julius Malema, centre, and national chairperso­n Dali Mpofu.
Picture: Nigel Sibanda ALL SMILES. EFF general secretary Godrich Gardee, left, leader Julius Malema, centre, and national chairperso­n Dali Mpofu.

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