South African Communist Party

15 February 2016

 

Statement on the factional rantings of Thabo Mbeki

 

The South African Communist Party (SACP) notes former president Thabo Mbeki’s 
continued factional obsession involving provocative attacks on the Party’s 
General Secretary, Comrade Blade Nzimande and other ANC leaders.  Mbeki 
published a letter on his Facebook Page today, 15 February 2016, isolating our 
General Secretary for having commented, welcoming the court ruling that 
declared, on 12 September 2008, the National Prosecuting Authority’s (NPA’s) 
decision to prosecute President Jacob Zuma invalid. The court’s decision was 
taken on the basis of evidence. Further evidence emerged, including telephone 
records indicating the existence of manipulation in the process that was 
followed to charge President Zuma. The NPA, on its own independent accord, thus 
dropped the charges. 

 

The SACP stands by the positions it adopted in welcoming the court ruling and 
the NPA’s decision to drop the charges. In no particular manner shall the SACP 
allow Mbeki’s factional attempts to isolate its General Secretary. Comrade 
Blade Nzimande was correctly representing the Party’s positions. He was not 
acting as an individual representing nothing but self-centred rantings of a 
bitter person aloof from his organisation. 

 

The SACP challenges Thabo Mbeki to refute the contents of a serious nature 
suggesting interference in the work of the NPA, manipulation and corruption on 
his part, contained in the story published by the Times Live on 17 January 
2016: 

 

“Back in 2003, former ANC president, Thabo Mbeki offered Jacob Zuma millions in 
return for him resigning following an announcement by former NPA head, Bulelani 
Ngcuka that there was a Prima Facie case against Zuma.

 

“This was revealed in papers filed by Zuma’s lawyer, Micheal Hulley last week 
[before 17 January 2016] which were published by the Mail & Guardian. 

 

“‘It is correct that Mbeki asked Zuma to resign prior to the Ngcuka 
announcement in 2003,’ Hulley said in the documents.

 

“‘This was a request purportedly based on a huge case [volumes of data] against 
him [Zuma]. If Zuma left quietly, he would not be prosecuted and he would be 
well looked after financially [a R20m amount was mooted].’

 

“Hulley said Zuma, however, refused to resign and informed Mbeki and the former 
minister of justice, Penuell Maduna, that his understanding was that there was 
no case against him.

  

“‘I simply point out that Mbeki again asked Zuma to resign in June 2005. He 
again refused and Mbeki dismissed him in Parliament stating Zuma is to still 
have his day in court,’ Hulley added.”

 

The SACP reiterates its call on our national liberation movement, the 
tripartite alliance in particular, to unite behind the perspective of placing 
our democratic transition on to the second, more radical phase and not be 
distracted, among others by self-centred fellows who want modify history. The 
alliance must focus on addressing the primary problems facing millions of our 
people, majority of whom is the working class, who were ravaged by the 
post-1996 liberalisation shock therapy. 

 

Issued by the SACP

 

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