We will never be diverted

We accepted the responsibility of leading the ANC YL fully aware that young
people in South Africa, particularly the unemployed and poverty-stricken
youth look up to the Youth League with justifiable hope that one day their
lives will change for the better because of what the Youth League does. We
were fully aware that Youth League generations before us had the greatest
impact in shaping history and are today the world most celebrated freedom
fighters, icons and beacons of hope for the oppressed. We were also aware
that one of the former Presidents ofthe ANC YL, Patrick Moloao died in
combat, fighting for the liberation of the people of Zimbabwe and
subsequently South Africa in the Wankie Spolile Campaigns in the late 1960s.

When we accepted the responsibility to lead the African National Congress
Youth League two years ago, we were under no illusion that
being President of the ANC Youth League will be an easy task. We were
totally aware that we are stepping into the shoes of former ANC YLPresidents
Anton Lembede, Ashby Peter Mda, Nelson Mandela, Robert Resha, Joe Mathwes,
Patrick Moloao, Peter Mokaba, and Fikile Mbalula. We were also bound
with the responsibility to continue with the ideals of Oliver Tambo,
Congress Mbatha and Walter Sisulu. These are heroic and courageous former
leaders of the ANC YL who stood firm and never compromised principle even
when the prize for such courage was death.

The conditions of struggle have definitely changed and present to
us the most dynamic and possibly most complicated platform to fight for
social and economic emancipation of the black majority and Africans in
particular. The founding generation of the ANC Youth League proclaimed
Freedom in their lifetime and they did everything possible to realise
freedom in their lifetime. They literally took up arms, were arrested,
exiled, tortured, labelled criminals and terrorists, and isolated from their
loved ones, yet they never surrendered the struggle to
emancipate the oppressed and exploited people of South Africa. As this
generation of youth, we are inspired by the founding generation
of the ANC YL and carry upon us a responsibility to usher in economic
freedom in our lifetime. Economic freedom means the total realisation of the
Freedom Charter objectives, and we are under no illusion that such will be a
easy task.

Like in all revolutions, we expected the sort of opposition and diversions
we experienced overthe past week, where the profit driven media spread
damaging rumours and sought to question our integrity as leadership
of the ANC YL. All sorts of slander was spread associated with thekind of
work we do, somewhat with an undertone that wanted to link us to corrupt
practices. In more than one instance, our principle and values have always
been anti-corruption and our fight against corruption is not conducted in
Newsrooms, but through open confrontation of corrupt tendencies. We have in
more than one occasion called upon those who know corrupt individuals, both
on the private and public sector to approach the leadership of the Youth
League so that we expose them and report them to law enforcement agencies.

When two Sunday Newspapers published stories they both believed were
exclusive and convinced were great exposition of myself in my responsibility
as President of the ANC Youth League, the leadership collective decided to
rapidly respond in order to dismiss the undertones that linked us to
irregular and corrupt practices. Our rapid response was never about
accounting to the media, but using the media as a channel to speak to our
many members and supporters of the ANC so that they are not victims of
profit driven media propaganda. We vigorously dealt with all the issues that
were presented to us and when satisfied with the response of Youth League
members and millions of supporters of the ANC, we closed the whole chapter
to focus on other important tasks of the organisation.

Certain revelations came out in the process of engaging the entire discourse
of media conducted lifestyle audits. First is the racist notion and
supposition expressed by both black and white people that the success and
progress of black youth in the post democratic dispensation is automatically
a consequence of corruption. This notion should be openly confronted and
exposed as it has potential to undermine our hard won freedom to participate
actively in theeconomy.

Second is the notion that seeks to criminalise all entrepreneurs that
provide services to government as inherently corrupt and unethical, and
labelled tenderpreneurs who have no brain and skill to do anything
productive. The question we should ask is who should provide services
to the State if all black entrepreneurs who put up consulting and
construction firms are going to be rubbished as inherently corrupt
tenderpreneurs.

Thirdly is the possible reality that our friends in the struggle are not
always our friends and have potential to donate one of their own
to the opponents of change. The reality of the situation is that a
insignificant and potentially dangerous group within the alliance was
celebrating the fact that media scavengers as portrayed us as corrupt
individuals. This tendency is reflected within calls to
infiltrate the ANC in order to misguide it to something it is not. This
calls upon all of us, particularly youth to be more vigilant and
defend the national democratic revolution and the ANC.

As a concrete way forward, we have already mentioned that we will never
allow young entrepreneurs to be intimidated out of doing legitimate and
corrupt-free business, including through proving services to the State.
These opportunities were denied to the African majority inthe past and
in the democratic dispensation, white dominated corporations in civil,
construction and other vital sectors continue to treat qualified black
people as non-entities and juniors to less qualified children of white
owners of the means of production. Entrepreneurs should be more vigorous,
more innovative and daring to bid for bigger projects from the State as a
way of ensuring that majority of our people are properly skilled and enjoy
economic opportunities that came with freedom. No one should ever be
apologetic for providing quality service to the State when called upon to do
so.

The confusion that we should categorically clarify though is that young
people's involvement in business activities is in no way opposed to our call
for the Nationalisation of Mines. TheFreedom Charter guarantees all people's
entry into professions and trade of their own choice inthe context where
Mines, banks and monopoly industries are transferred to the ownership
of thepeople as a whole. We will never allow any sort of Right-wing and
Left-wing distraction to overcome our determination to
influence the nationalisation of Mines in our lifetime. Whilst not opposed
to the lifestyle audits, our conviction is that the capitalist system
is the one that should be audited and checked as how is it useful
in the empowerment of our people and improvement of their living conditions.
We will never loose focus and fight over insignificant amount of resources,
whilst we have a bigger struggle to fight.

Aluta Continua.

Julius Malema ANC YL PRESIDENT

On Sun, Jul 24, 2011 at 5:53 PM, <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> Sent via my BlackBerry from Vodacom - let your email find you!
>
> ________________________________
> From: "Patrick Craven" <[email protected]>
> Sender: [email protected]
> Date: Sun, 24 Jul 2011 17:32:14 +0200
> To: <[email protected]>
> ReplyTo: [email protected]
> Subject: [COSATU Press] COSATU calls for probe into Malema investigations
>
>
>
> COSATU calls for probe into Malema investigations
>
>
>
> The Congress of South African Trade Unions has noted the media reports
about the financial affairs of the President of the ANC Youth League, Julius
Malema. We call for an investigation by the ANC’s  Committee on Ethics and
Members’ Interests, the SA Revenue Service and the Special Investigations
Unit into the allegations. As well as investigating possible tax evasion,
the SARS investigation should institute a lifestyle audit to discover the
truth about the financial affairs of the ANCYL President.
>
>
>
>
>
> Patrick Craven (National Spokesperson)
>
> Congress of South African Trade Unions
>
> 1-5 Leyds Cnr Biccard Streets
>
> Braamfontein
>
> 2017
>
>
>
> P.O.Box 1019
>
> Johannesburg
>
> South Africa
>
>
>
> Tel: +27 11 339-4911/24
>
> Fax: +27 11 339-5080 / 6940
>
> Mobile: +27 82 821 7456
>
> E-Mail: [email protected]
>
>
>
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