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MK veterans to send 600 ‘combat ready’ soldiers to defend Luthuli House

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Themba Mavundla.
Themba Mavundla.

The ANC’s military veterans wing in KwaZulu-Natal is deploying 600 “combat ready” former guerrillas to “defend” the governing party’s Luthuli House against the “enemy” marching to demand President Jacob Zuma’s resignation.

The former liberation movement soldiers, led by Umkhonto weSizwe Military Veterans Association KwaZulu-Natal chairperson and provincial public safety ministry head Themba Mavundla, also threatened to take up arms should a Parliamentary vote of no confidence in Zuma be successful.

Addressing a media briefing in Durban earlier today, Mavundla lashed out at senior ANC leaders who had been critical of Zuma’s recent Cabinet reshuffle, saying they and ANC members who were joining the outcry against the president had “literally sold their souls and abandoned our national revolution for a small frame in the anti-government media”.

“Perhaps unwittingly these comrades are turning into unpaid supporters of the enemy forces that are opposed to the popular ANC agenda of radical economic transformation and that are unfortunately assisting the visionless opposition to sabotage our democratic dispensation,” Mavundla said.

Flanked by other KwaZulu-Natal and regional military veteran leaders, Mavundla also slammed the ANC’s alliance partners – Cosatu and the South African Communist Party – for their calls for Zuma to step down, saying that they should be raising their issues in the alliance liaison structures rather than in public.

“We were shocked when our comrades overnight took over the programme of the DA of wanting to divide, destroy and annihilate our time-tested movement,” Mavundla said.

Pressed on what action they wanted against ANC leaders like secretary-general Gwede Mantashe and treasurer-general Zweli Mkhize, who had publicly questioned Zuma’s decision to fire finance minister Pravin Gordhan and his deputy Mcebisi Jonas, Mavundla said that they were satisfied that those who had spoken out had been “handled” at the party’s national working committee meeting.

“It is not too late for them to return to the movement and live within the disciplines of our movement,” Mavundla said.

“If we have got challenges, let us resolve them internally without any public breast-beating and grandstanding. Otherwise history will judge them harshly.”

Mavundla refused to say if the 600 KwaZulu-Natal MK members being sent to Luthuli House would be armed or what action they would take, beyond saying that they were “combat ready” and would “do what we do best”.

Mavundla said that marchers would not be allowed to enter or come “anywhere close” to Luthuli House or the ANC’s KwaZulu-Natal provincial headquarters on Friday.

Anti-Zuma marchers are expected to meet on the Durban beachfront on Friday morning and proceed to the City Hall in the CBD. They have not indicated if their route will take them past the ANC office, which is opposite the Inkosi Albert Luthuli International Convention Centre.

The outcome would be “not nice” if marchers did target the ANC headquarters, Mavundla said.

Other attempts to pass a vote of no confidence in Zuma had been “thwarted” and ANC MPs would continue to “do what they were sent to Parliament to do”, he added.

Describing the vote as “wishful thinking” Mavundla said that should the opposition succeed, “we will do what we do best, defend the people of South African and the ANC”.

Meanwhile, at another briefing in Durban, Cosatu provincial secretary Edwin Mkhize said opposition parties should also call for the DA Premier of the Western Cape, Helen Zille, to step down.

“If they are genuine about their call they must do like us, Cosatu, while calling for the president of the ANC to resign, Zille must also step down as well,’’ he said.

Mkhize said Cosatu’s leadership would continue to engage with the ANC to have Zuma resign.


Paddy Harper
Durban bureau chief
City Press
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w:www.citypress.co.za  e: Paddy.Harper@citypress.co.za
      
 
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