Malema, ANC Youth League spokesperson Floyd Shivambu, deputy president
Ronald Lamola, treasurer general Pule Mabe, secretary general Sindiso
Magaqa and deputy secretary general Kenetswe Mosenogi were found guilty by
the ANC's national disciplinary hearing of ill-discipline and undermining
ruling party leadership.

The youth league leaders were found guilty and each handed a sentence of a
two-year suspension from the party. The sentence itself, was in turn
suspended for three years.

*Floyd's rap*
Additionally League spokesperson Floyd Shivambu found guilty of bringing
the party into disrepute by publically condeming ANC national executive
committee member and South Africa's minister of public enterprises, Malusi
Gigaba.

For this he was sentenced to an 18-month suspension from the party, which
in turn was suspended for three years. He was also ordered to make a public
apology to Gigaba within five days.

The announcement of the committee's finding is still under way.

The first charges followed the league's announcement earlier this year that
it would send a team to Botswana to consolidate local opposition parties
and help bring about regime change in that country.

In the face of ANC outrage over what it said was a breach of its
constitution, the youth league retracted the statement and apologised, but
barged into a meeting of the ruling party's leadership to press its case.
The disciplinary process was begun soon thereafter.

Malema has 14 days from the date of his sentencing to appeal the party's
verdict, and will continue in his position as the youth league's leader
until then.

*Everything above board
*Announcing the ANC's national disciplinary committee's decision,
chairperson Derek Hanekom insisted the disciplinary process had been
properly initiated and followed. He underscored the importance of
discipline within the party as "non-negotiable", and said the committee had
rejected arguments, put forward by witnesses at the hearing -- including
Winnie Madikizela-Mandela -- that the youth league was autonomous and
independent from the ANC, its constitution and its processes.

Hanekom said the committee had also rejected suggestions that the
disciplinary hearing might be used to settle political
scores<http://mg.co.za/article/2011-10-05-sexwale-dont-use-malema-hearing-to-settle-scores>
.

Malema's first appearance before the ANC disciplinary committee took place
at Luthuli House at the end of August. It was moved after violence erupted
in the Johannesburg CBD.

Youth league members and supporters threw rocks, bottles and bricks at
journalists and police, and burnt ANC flags and T-shirts bearing the image
of President Jacob Zuma.

*History of discipline*
This is not Malema's first time in front of the ANC's disciplinary
committee. In May last year, he was hauled over the coals for accusing
President Jacob Zuma of being worse than former president Thabo Mbeki for
berating him in public.

After a bungled prosecution, Malema was eventually ordered to apologise to
Zuma, to pay a R10 000 fine, and was sent to a political school and to
anger-management classes.

The national disciplinary committee at the time said should Malema be found
guilty of provoking serious divisions or a break-down of unity in the
organisation within the next two years, his ANC membership would be
suspended

*Out in force*
A huge metro police contingent was deployed outside Luthuli House in
central Johannesburg on Thursday morning, ahead the announcement of the
hearing's decision.

President and Sauer streets were closed for security reasons by 7am, said
Johannesburg metro police spokesperson Chief Superintendent Wayne Minnaar.

"Our officers have been deployed to monitor the situation around Luthuli
House," said Minnaar.

"They will be there for the rest of the day," he said. -- Sapa, Staff
reporter

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