Comrades
 
This is very disturbing indeed. Renegades in the PAM can not be the
advocates of the cause and party they had deserted. It's even worse to
falsify the date of Uncle Zeph's untimely death. The PAC president did
not die in 1993. He died while some of these quislings who last year
"established" PAM, like Philemon Tefu who ingloriously accepted De
Klerk's condition to renounce violence (armed struggle) to secure his
release from Robben Island were conniving with an American imperialiast
deployeed Nickel to hoodwink and cajole the party into a pre-arranged
imperialist-backed detente at the World Trade Centre.
How can he and those charlatans who had ocherstrated the systematic
death of The Lion of Azania want to be heirs of the name of this
collosal revolutionary known for his "A Nation Without Arms Is No
Nation" Only we of the Pan Africanist Congress of Azania who despite the
hardships and suffering we endured had dared not desert the party no
matter what, can legitimately uphold and promote the rich legacy
bestowed to the party, its cadres and the Azanian masses at large by
Mothopeng.
The truth is, it was only after Mothopeng's death that some of those
mostly in PAM who chose to flirt with the settler-colonialists and its
imperialist backers found it opportune to lead the PAC astray. There are
numerous remnants of these elements with the party whose only mission is
to corrupt by evil machinations the rich glorius history and political
heritage of the PAC. Let's fight this organ grinder.     

________________________________

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf
Of Mavela Mavela
Sent: 12 October 2009 10:58 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [PAYCO] Confusion





MEMBERS of the Pan Africanist Movement held a memorial anniversary for
the second president of the then Pan Africanist Congress of Azania in
Zwelitsha at the weekend.

The party's Eastern Cape publicity secretary, Mlindeli ka Majama, said
the event coincided with the birthday of their late president, Zephaniah
Mothopeng, who died in 1993 shortly after he was released from prison. 

"This is something that we as the party had always wanted to do, to
remember and honour our leaders, and now we are able to do that.

"Uncle Zeph, or the Lion of Azania as he was affectionately called by
his comrades in the underground movement, is one of the people that
played a very vital role in the freedom that we enjoy as a country
today," he said.

Although the party's president, Thami ka Plaatjie, was scheduled to give
the keynote address, he could not attend due to a family death. 

Ka Majama said the few people who attended made the event successful.

"We were very pleased with the attendance considering that we are a new
party and it was our first time to host such an important event with our
former president, Clarence Makwetu, present," he said. 

The celebration included laying wreaths at the graves of struggle heroes
Steve Biko and human rights lawyer Griffiths Mxenge . - By SIBONGILE
MKANI - [email protected]




Copy and paste on the link below to see the original article.

http://www.dispatch.co.za/article.aspx?id=351352 





Confusion







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