The Citizen (Gauteng)

Mmusi misses DA five’s legal deadline

- Chisom Jenniffer Okoye

The leader of the Democratic Alliance (DA), Mmusi Maimane, said he will see the five ex-DA councillor­s targeting him for alleged defamation in court.

The five former party members said they had instructed an attorney to institute legal action against Maimane.

The members want him to withdraw comments made suggesting their resignatio­ns were because they were implicated in the Bowmans report.

“I will see them in court, those people. My lawyers will deal with those people, I don’t have time for … so we will deal with that issue,” Maimane said.

But the DA issued an updated version of Maimane’s newsletter, titled Bokamoso, with the following disclaimer: “Friday’s Bokamoso contained a factual inaccuracy regarding the role of the five former DA councillor­s in Cape Town, an error for which we apologise. Please find below the corrected version.”

Friday’s version read that the five had not thought the party was racist in the previous months until “a credible forensic investigat­ion by a credible legal firm has allegedly implicated them in tender irregulari­ties”.

At a press briefing on Sunday, the five – Shawn August, Suzette Little, Siya Mamkeli, Thulani Stemele, and Greg Bernado – said they were to take on Maimane.

Little dismissed allegation­s that their exit was a result of the Bowmans report.

“Let me just state this report has been coming since last year when the council decided there had to be an investigat­ion. At no time was any one of the five mentioned; at no time was any of the five interviewe­d. At no time were we accused of any corruption or any participat­ion.”

The group gave Maimane a deadline of 6pm yesterday to issue an apology for his claims.

August, former Cape Town chief whip, told The Citizen yesterday they had not received a response from Maimane and would consult their lawyers to discuss legal action for defamation.

Following report of a split in the DA, August said he and his fellow councillor­s have been consulting interested parties around the country, after their exodus from the DA. This included former members of the Independen­t Democrats, outgoing Cape Town mayor Patricia de Lille’s party, that merged with the DA in 2009.

“Give us a few weeks. We are consulting with our ex-colleagues. We have received messages from Mpumalanga, Limpopo, North West and the Eastern Cape from DA members and former members,” said August.

“That consultati­on process must then go its route and then we will take a decision. I can’t say more than that.”

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