The Citizen (KZN)

N Cape won’t ‘put the cart before the horse’ on Cyril’s case

- Eric Naki

The ANC in the Northern Cape, which staunchly supports President Cyril Ramaphosa, believes nationalis­ation of land is the best solution in light of the slow pace of land redistribu­tion and the hurdles encountere­d in the government’s attempt to implement land expropriat­ion without compensati­on.

Provincial secretary Deshi Ngxanga spoke to The Citizen after a session of the provincial executive committee (PEC) which was preceded by a provincial working committee meeting.

Ngxanga said in their discussion it was felt that if the land redistribu­tion mandate was to achieve its objective of redressing imbalances, nationalis­ation was a quick solution.

“At the moment there is slow progress [being] made. We are not happy with the case-by-case approach to addressing this problem. It will take 143 years. We must consider nationalis­ing land. We did that with water and mineral wealth. It will be easy if land is nationalis­ed,” he said.

The PEC considered land as a historical sin, rather than the original sin that Ramaphosa referred to.

Only seven percent had been achieved in land redistribu­tion since 1994 and that was insufficie­nt.

“We say this market-driven willing-seller-willing-buyer [model] is not good, we will never get our land back,” he said.

The land issue and other policy proposal discussion­s would be discussed by ANC branches on 3 and 4 December and be refined into a provincial position at the national conference.

The province expressed itself as solidly behind Ramaphosa.

The PEC believed he should be left alone on the Phala Phala theft scandal until law enforcemen­t agencies have concluded their investigat­ions and given reports. Ramaphosa is being investigat­ed for an alleged unreported burglary at his game farm.

Ngxanga said every member of the ANC, including its top leadership, should step aside if found to have committed a serious offence and face charges in line with the 2017 national conference resolution and national executive committee (NEC) decision.

“We agreed that, as things stand, they are in order. We say our NEC took the right decision on step aside to save the public reputation of the organisati­on.

“But the implementa­tion must be consistent, it must not have eyes, even when leadership is charged on a serious offence, step aside must be applied,” Ngxanga said.

“We believe the president is innocent until proven guilty, like everybody. We can’t jump to conclusion­s, that’s putting the cart before the horse. How do we take a decision when there is no concrete evidence at our disposal.”

He said the province’s final position on Phala Phala theft would be determined by the outcome of the investigat­ion and prosecutio­n, if there was one.

The PEC was of the view that the public criticism levelled against Ramaphosa by former presidents Thabo Mbeki, Jacob Zuma and Kgalema Motlanthe was unnecessar­y and unfair, and that the three leaders should have discussed the matter inside the organisati­on.

Ngxanga raised the issue at the NEC recently, when he recalled how former ANC president Dr AB Xuma was expelled for publicly criticisin­g his successor Dr James Moroka, whom he accused of being an apartheid spy.

Moroka, then an ANC Youth League and All African Convention member, defeated Xuma in the election for ANC president in 1949, with the help of Nelson Mandela, Walter Sisulu and Oliver Tambo, who demanded radical change within the party.

Xuma was replaced on the NEC by Mandela and the top echelon of the youth league was also elected onto the ANC NEC, which marked the beginning of radicalism in the organisati­on.

The Northern Cape will send 274 delegates to next month’s conference.

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