The Citizen (Gauteng)

Zuma ‘confusing youth’

NZIMANDE: MISLEADING TO TELL STUDENTS STATE IS NOT CAPTURED

- Eric Naki ericn@citizen.co.za

‘As the SACP we are, therefore, not surprised at all about political plots.’

Cosatu’s national congress appears to be a gathering point for the people striking back at those accused of plotting Cyril Ramaphosa’s demise, with South African Communist Party (SACP) general secretary Blade Nzimande criticisin­g former president Jacob Zuma for confusing young people with his ongoing lectures to university students.

Without naming him, Nzimande yesterday said it was misleading to tell students the state is not captured, simply because certain arms of the state were not captured. “We cannot wait until all the state is captured before we complain,” Nzimande said.

The SACP boss was addressing delegates on the second day of Cosatu’s 13th national congress in Midrand, north of Johannesbu­rg.

His comments were in apparent reference to Zuma, who has been campaignin­g to students at university campuses around the country, lecturing them on free education and trying to discredit the state capture inquiry, in which he is allegedly implicated.

Nzimande criticised the fightback campaign by some leaders within the ANC, allegedly plotting to oust Ramaphosa. He said his party had warned against the tendency and “we even pointed out where this fight could possibly be emanating from”.

He continued: “As the SACP we are, therefore, not surprised at all about political plots as we have already warned about these. This fightback campaign has also been accompanie­d by some of the most regressive and reactionar­y tendencies that should not be allowed to find space in our movement, like tribalism, black chauvinism and racist slurs.”

The fightback was carried out under the pretext of advancing “radical economic transforma­tion”.

Nzimande said: “This false version of radical economic transforma­tion is synonymous with a campaign to defend the parasitic capturers and those complicit in their corrupt deeds. As the SACP and as the working class as a whole, we must refuse to be intimidate­d on these matters.”

He said the fightback campaign was essentiall­y not only directed at Ramaphosa or an ANC trying to renew and cleanse itself but was, in essence, an attack on the working class, the poor and all South Africans who would like to see progress and movement.

“Defeating this reactionar­y fightback is an essential part of defending the gains of the first phase of the national democratic revolution,” he said.

Nzimande said the parasitic networks around the state capture must be dismantled and the working class must never allow the scourge to happen again.

The SACP supported the commission that is probing state capture and urged it must finish its task timeously to save the country’s scarce monetary resources.

“The commission must assist us through its findings and recommenda­tions to deal with both the rot that has occurred and put in place appropriat­e legislativ­e and other measures to tackle private and corporate state capture,” Nzimande said.

Those responsibl­e for waging the fightback campaign must be isolated, he said. “We need to properly characteri­se those who fight back.”

He echoed the call by the party and the left, including Cosatu, to reconfigur­e the ANC-led tripartite alliance. Although the ANC was the leader of the alliance, all the major decisions could not be taken by the ANC alone.

“We therefore need to reconfigur­e the alliance ... at all levels,” Nzimande said.

He warned workers to interrogat­e what the impact the industrial revolution would have on the future.

“We have to grapple with this reality,” he said. –

Those responsibl­e for waging the fightback campaign must be isolated.

Blade Nzimande SACP general secretary

 ?? Picture: Gallo Images ?? WOMAN IN CHARGE. Zingiswa Losi is the first female president of trade union federation Cosatu.
Picture: Gallo Images WOMAN IN CHARGE. Zingiswa Losi is the first female president of trade union federation Cosatu.

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