I agree with you 101%. One Apla cadre onced told me just after the 1994 election that we only give ANC twenty years and people will realise what kind of an enimal ANC is.I just hope and wish that as PAC we put our house in order or we just rest our difference now and focus more in educating our massess an explain all this development which are not new to us for we have been anticipating them since our break away from the charterists. Lets carry forward where the Status Campaign could not. Apla sticks to its guns no matter what we are ready.
Viva PAC Viva APLA ________________________________ From: Snow Mokgalabone <[email protected]> To: [email protected] Sent: Tue, March 9, 2010 12:15:15 PM Subject: Re: [PAYCO] a charade of betrayal Well it has been a long time waiting to hear or read this kinds of comments from the same people who claim liberation. I can boldly say that, all this issues of corruption, mismanagement, malema's, vavi's and the alliance in particular are as a results of the negotiated package that gave birth to the rainbow nation. I am just emotionally touched that still today a liberation movement by the name of PAC cannot elaborate this matters to its own masses rather we have the same people who are angry about their own system to re-occupy the center stage the party was supposed to be. It is well known fact that our disgruntlement cannot be singled out from organisational crisis which might be a cooked anticipation like our democracy. I am smelling a civil war within the ruling party and the alliance immediately after the FIFA world cup, and then it will be cascaded down to civil societies. My reasons are as follows: * the continuing service delivery protests as a result of greed by Government officials * infighting of economic resources by the ruling party echelons * the upcoming NGC of ANC to vilify each other or remove certain individuals from offices of power and authority * the increase in electricity price which will eventually leads to increase in basic food and other amenities The civil war I am referring to, will be funded by the same comrades who are currently funded by other institutes to cause chaos, once chaos is caused, a new interim administration will be installed by the same people to continue serving their interests in a diverse format. Our people will be excited of a regime change but with no tangible economic changes at heart but with few economic indicators to make ourselves patient for another 20 years. While all this is taking place, HIV/AIDS will be rive, the government officials not serving the people anymore but chowing each other through polotiking as usual. There is just a PAC that is needed to address all this things.....look at what is taking place in other countries here in AFRIKA the same things I attempted to allude to. Thanks On Tue, Mar 9, 2010 at 10:49 AM, Mawande Jack <[email protected]> wrote: > > > > > > > > Mandela let us down, says Winnie > March 09 2010 at 07:32AM Get IOL on your >mobile at > m.iol.co.za > > >By Colin Fernandez > >Nelson Mandela has been > accused by his former wife of betraying South Africa's black > population. > >In a savage attack, Winnie Mandela said he had done > nothing for the poor and should not have accepted the Nobel peace prize > with the man who jailed him, FW de Klerk. > >The 73-year-old said her > ex-husband had become a "corporate foundation" who was "wheeled out" > only > to raise money for the ANC party he once led. > >She said Archbishop > Desmond Tutu was a "cretin" and claimed the sacrifices of Steve Biko and > others in the fight against apartheid were being overlooked. > >The > comments were apparently made in an interview on Monday with Nadira > Naipaul, the wife of novelist V S Naipaul. > >Mrs Mandela became notorious in 1991 when she was > jailed for six years for the kidnap of Stompie Moeketsi - a sentence > later > cut to a fine. > >Stompie, 14, had been murdered three years earlier > by members of Mrs Mandela's bodyguard, the Mandela United Football > Club. > >She also caused outrage by endorsing the punishment of > apartheid collaborators with "necklacing" - putting burning tyres around > their necks. > >On Monday she said: "This name Mandela is an albatross > around the necks of my family. > >"You all must realise that Mandela > was not the only man who suffered. There were many others, hundreds who > languished in prison and died. > >"Mandela did go to prison and he > went in there as a young revolutionary but look what came > out. > >"Mandela let us down. He agreed to a bad deal for the blacks. > Economically we are still on the outside. The economy is very much > 'white'. > >"I cannot forgive him for going to receive the Nobel with > his jailer De Klerk. Hand in hand they went. Do you think De Klerk > released him from the goodness of his heart? > >"He had to. The times > dictated it, the world had changed." > >The Mandelas, who divorced in > 1996, were married for 38 years - although together for only > five. > >Mrs Mandela criticised her country's Truth and Reconciliation > Committee - which she appeared before in 1997 and which implicated her > in > gross violations of human rights. > >She said: "What good does the > truth do? How does it help to anyone to know where and how their loved > ones are killed or buried? > >"That Bishop Tutu who turned it all into > a religious circus came here. He had a cheek to tell me to > appear. > >"I told him that he and his other like-minded cretins were > only sitting there because of our struggle and me. Look what they make > him > do. The great Mandela. He has no control or say any more. > >"They put > that huge statue of him right in the middle of the most affluent white > area of Johannesburg. Not here (in Soweto) where we spilled our > blood. > >"Mandela is now like a corporate foundation. He is wheeled > out globally to collect the money." > >She said her daughters, Zenani, > 51, and Zindzi, 50, had to struggle through red tape to speak to their > 91-year-old father, who led South Africa from 1994 to 1999. - Daily Mail > > >17 Minutes ago Desmond Cape Town wrote : >Mama Winnie, even if the timing is out >(because commentators would know say that with the world cup around the >corner) >we shouldn't address issues. Life doesn't stop because of some event. The >lives >of the poor has been on hold since the Nats and others took control. Winnie is >right in saying that former President Mandela are being milked by his >foundations and yes if they had negotiated a better deal for the majority of >the >people (Black) then this would've been a different country. We neede >socio-economic freedom and not only political from the oppressors. My 5c worth >in response to Winnie is that the negotiating team with Pres Mandela sold us >out. Our struggles were for nothing and we still have our predominantly >townships with no wealth sharing in sight. > > > > > >>Winnie >Mandela has slammed her ex-husband - saying that Nelson Mandela has done >nothing >for the poor. Photo: AFP > > > Related Articles > > > >> > > > > > > > > > >-- >>Sending your posting to [email protected] >> >>Unsubscribe by sending an email to [email protected] >> >>You can also visit http://groups.google.com/group/payco >> >>Visit our website at www.mayihlome.wordpress.com -- Sending your posting to [email protected] Unsubscribe by sending an email to [email protected] You can also visit http://groups.google.com/group/payco Visit our website at www.mayihlome.wordpress.com -- Sending your posting to [email protected] Unsubscribe by sending an email to [email protected] You can also visit http://groups.google.com/group/payco Visit our website at www.mayihlome.wordpress.com

