Malema Nkandla stunt backfires - family had two others

 

 

Bongani Mthethwa and Matthew Savides, 26 January 2014

 

Julius Malema's grand stunt of building a house for a poor family in Nkandla
has turned sour - because the family is anything but destitute.

 

Two weeks ago, Malema and his Economic Freedom Fighters handed over a
two-bedroom house to S'thandiwe Hlongwane.

 

She is married to a senior state official who earns about R250000 a year and
owns at least two other homes.

 

Hlongwane and her husband, Lucky Nene, 60, who tied the knot in July last
year, also own a VW Polo and a Hilux bakkie.

 

But Malema said on Friday that he was convinced that Hlongwane was an
unmarried mother with two children, aged three and five.

 

The party was inspired to help Hlongwane after seeing newspaper photographs
of what it thought was her house. The photographs were taken when the
Democratic Alliance attempted to visit President Jacob Zuma's R208-million
homestead in November 2012.

 

Hlongwane, who shares a house with her husband and their children elsewhere
in the village, last year took Malema to the dilapidated home where she was
raised.

 

"Hlongwane showed us the house she was staying in before we built her the
new house. What we saw for ourselves was extremely touching. We could not
have allowed our black sister with her children to stay in that situation,"
said Malema.

 

According to the EFF, the mud house was unstable and had gaping cracks.

 

Asked why she had accepted the EFF's offer and whether the party was aware
that her family was not cash-strapped, Hlongwane said: "They just wanted to
help a poor family."

 

Nene, who until recently worked for the Ulundi municipality before starting
his new post as a senior archivist for the provincial department of arts and
culture, denied his family had misled the EFF into believing they were
poverty-stricken.

 

The couple also own a 338m² house in Ulundi, bought for R122000 in 2008.

 

Nene said when his wife was offered the house, he tried to consult his
neighbour, Zuma. "We wanted to ask the president for advice, but
unfortunately he was not at home," he said.

 

The couple then tried to speak to Zuma's wife Sizakele MaKhumalo. "We were
expecting her to say that she would consult Zuma for his opinion," said
Nene.

 

Hlongwane also consulted local ANC councillor Sibongiseni Bhengu and local
chief Bhekumuzi Zuma before accepting the EFF offer.

 

Asked why they eventually accepted the EFF's offer, Nene said: "It was clear
that she [Hlongwane] was not going to get any help from anyone [to rebuild
her family's home] and so had no other choice but to accept the offer. I
supported her decision."

 

During the handover, Malema and his supporters were pelted with rocks. The
police intervened, using truncheons, a water cannon, tear gas and rubber
bullets.

 

 

From:
http://www.timeslive.co.za/politics/2014/01/26/malema-nkandla-stunt-backfire
s---family-had-two-others

 

 

 

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