History has no blank pages... This is what Fikile Mbalula wrote in 2009:

OPEN LETTER TO FORMER PRESIDENT THABO MBEKI


Dear Cde Mbeki,

The events that came to pass in our country in the last week have left me very 
little option, but to address you directly on the matters at hand.

I am certain that you are painfully aware that the release of the transcripts 
of the conversations between Ngcuka and McCarthy, not only sent shockwaves 
through the nation, but through our movement. The NPA briefing finally bought 
closure to a painful episode of your reign both as President of the Republic 
and of the ANC. An episode one hopes will never come to pass ever again in the 
history of our movement.

It is a sad reality that the phenomenon we are dealing with today is a result 
of your actions of conniving, manipulating people and advancing politics of 
patronage.

Despite the fact that you were a democratically elected President, you chose to 
run both the organisation and the country with a cabal which sought to 
commandeer everyone along your thinking and vision, which at times ran contrary 
to what the ANC stood for.

Mandela led the ANC with distinction, and acknowledged at all times that he 
will always be subject to its authority and directives, even after he left the 
office of ANC President. His leadership at the helm of the ANC continues to 
inspire our forward momentum and his wisdom will remain a point of reference 
for generations to come.

Mandela's wise words, an icon of our liberation struggle, an embodiment of the 
ANC's values, continue to reverberate to this day. At the time of your 
acceptance of your election as President of the ANC at the Mafikeng Conference 
in 1997, Madiba said, "...here are the reigns of the movement - protect and 
guard its precious legacy; defend its unity and integrity as committed 
disciples of change; pursue its popular objectives like true revolutionaries 
who seek only to serve the nation... As an ordinary member of the ANC I suppose 
that I will also have many privileges that I have been deprived of over the 
years: to be as critical as I can be; to challenge any signs of 'autocracy from 
Shell House'; and to lobby for my preferred candidates from the branch level 
upwards... I look forward to that period when I will be able to wake up with 
the sun; to walk the hills and valleys of Qunu in peace and tranquillity. And I 
am confident that this will certainly be the case because, as I do so, and see 
the smiles on the faces of children which reflect the sunshine in their hearts, 
I will know, comrade Thabo and your team, that you are on the right track; you 
are succeeding. "

Having reflected on Mandela's words, I am certain that you either did not hear 
his wise words, or you deliberately elected not to take heed of them. His 
challenge to you to defend the unity and integrity of the ANC was central to 
his message and should have been a beacon in your leadership of the ANC. The 
smiles on the faces of the children are yet to reflect the sunshine in their 
hearts, because that moment is yet to come.

Mandela handed you a vibrant and united ANC, yet at the twilight of your 
Presidency, you chose to betray everything that Mandela and those that came 
before him stood for, struggled for, and laid down their lives for. In a moment 
of intoxication with power, you forgot Madiba's wise counsel and allowed our 
glorious movement to stumble on the edge of an abyss.

When your cabal was finally defeated in Polokwane because of its actions and 
underhanded tactics at securing a third term for you as a President of the ANC, 
they went into an elaborate conspiratorial mode, famously dubbed "the fightback 
strategy,"which clearly carried your blessing. It is one's considered view that 
it was the failure of this strategy that led you and your lieutenants to spawn 
the so-called Congress of the People as a vehicle to fight the ANC and 
undermine its hegemony and legacy.

It is a sad day in our nation that one has to allude that your legacy, at its 
pinnacle, has only brought us shame and disgrace, overshadowing what would have 
otherwise been a commendable political career. It is not my place to pass 
judgement, but I am convinced that history will judge you very harshly for what 
you have come to represent in the latter day.

I find it rather instructive that in your reaction to the release of the 
Ngcuka/McCarthy transcripts you chose to pose the question as to how did the 
tapes come to be in the possession of the ANC President's lawyers. The more 
fundamental issue which I would have expected would be your primary 
preoccupation would be how did you fail the nation so badly such that the chain 
of events over the last nine years landed us in the position we find ourselves 
in today. How did the state apparatus become so embroiled in partisan politics 
that sought to rip our movement apart such that not even the highest office in 
the land had the political will to put brakes on the rot that was settling in?

While the movement may take collective responsibility for the actions of our 
government as a ruling party, however, my heart bleeds that the relationship of 
trust the ANC conferred on you in Mafikeng was broken. The mantra of your 
Presidency, "the rule of law" was betrayed in the most vulgar way possible.


*        When spy allegations were levelled at Bulelani Ngcuka, then National 
Director of Public Prosecutions, you were swift in your appointment of the 
Heffer Commission to probe those allegations as an attempt to protect him;

*        When the infamous off-the-record briefings conducted by Bulelani 
Ngcuka came to light, where Ngcuka is alleged to have made libellous remarks 
about Jacob Zuma, who was the Deputy President of the Republic at the time, you 
conveniently turned a blind eye and failed to act;

*        When Bulelani Ngcuka, flanked by then Minister of Justice, Pennuel 
Maduna addressed a media briefing wherein he suggested that Cde Zuma had a case 
to answer, but he will not prosecute him, you once again conveniently failed to 
act on what was a blatant violation of Cde Zuma's rights;

*        You then proceeded to appoint Phumzile Mlambo-Ngcuka as Deputy 
President of the Republic as a reward to the loyalty of the Ngcukas;

*        When the Public Protector pronounced on the violation of Cde Zuma's 
rights, his findings were met with scorn, and again, no action was forthcoming 
on your part;

*        When the National Intelligence Agency expressed alarm about the 
unlawful activities of the Scorpions, once again you did nothing;

*        When the Browse Mole report came to light, which was produced by the 
Scorpions, you were quick to dismiss it as work of counter-revolutionary 
forces, and proceeded to ignore the recommendations of Parliament's Joint 
Standing Committee on Intelligence. In an interesting twist or irony, McCarthy, 
who was the head of the DSO at the time was rewarded with a handsome golden 
handshake and a recommendation for a high ranking job with the World Bank, at a 
time when he and those who were responsible for the Browse Mole report should 
have been under investigation;

*        You did not hesitate to destroy a relationship that spanned decades 
between yourself and Billy Masetlha when he raised concerns about the allegedly 
hoax emails that were making rounds, and you defined your relationship with him 
as irretrievable.

*        You continued to protect Jackie Selebi, the National Police 
Commissioner and did not hesitate to suspend Vusi Pikoli, the National Director 
of Public Prosecutions when he sought to arrest Selebi, for reasons known only 
to yourself;

*        You dismissed Cde Zuma, then Deputy President of the Republic, on the 
basis of inferences in the Shabir Shaik trial. Interestingly, you were quick to 
cry foul when Justice Nicholson made far reaching findings in his judgements 
and drew inferences on your perceived interference with due processes of law;

*        You failed to take the nation into confidence and confirm that you 
were the author of the now famous letter to the Standing Committee on Public 
Accounts (SCOPA) on the arms deal, a letter which was a central piece of 
evidence at the Shaik trial;

*        You conducted briefings to ANC structures, religious community, 
opposition parties (particularly the DA) on how corrupt Cde Zuma was, in an 
attempt to garner public support and sympathy, and whereby you arrogated 
yourself the role of being a judge in Cde Zuma's persecution;

*        You were highly implicated as a central player in the compilation of a 
dossier which sought to defame Cde Zuma in the run-up to Polokwane, which was 
distributed among ANC delegates at conference;

*        You failed to engage the leadership of the ANC in a face to face 
engagement, and you reduced your relationship with Cde Zuma to an exchange of 
letters, whose contents you leaked to Terror Lekota;

*        You flatly refused to campaign for the ANC, despite your assertion 
that you remain a loyal member of the ANC, and demanded that a letter be 
written to you in this regard. It was the first time ever that a cadre of the 
ANC had to be written a letter in order for them to campaign for the ANC. Not 
even Mandela ever made such a demand on the ANC. Such practice is foreign to 
the tried and tested traditions of the ANC and can best be described as 
anti-ANC.

It is therefore my considered view that you left the state apparatus in 
absolute disarray and the state machinery completely paralysed.

It is equally interesting that you believe the Inspector-General will save the 
day in what has become public humiliation of Ngcuka and McCarthy. The 
fundamental question that must preoccupy the Inspector-General is not how the 
tapes found their way to the ANC President's lawyers, but rather how deep did 
this conspiracy ran and to ensure that relevant organs of state act swiftly to 
bring the perpetrators to book.

What happened to the values of the ANC, which at some point in your political 
career embodies and taught others? What happened to the ethos that says the ANC 
is bigger than all of us, we are but humble servants of this revolutionary 
movement? What happened to the pursuit of the founding ideals of the ANC, which 
the giants of our revolution who include Cdes Langalibalele Dube, Sol Plaatjie, 
Walter Sisulu, Moses Kotane, Oliver Tambo, Nelson Mandela and many others 
personified?

There remains little doubt that the establishment of COPE has your blessings 
and you continue to encourage them to swear by your name because you do not 
believe that the ANC can advance the age of hope under the stewardship of Cde 
Zuma, and that it will survive without you.

I doubt if today you were president, this conspiracy that has come to light 
would have been uncovered.


Fikile Mbalula
Head of Organising and Campaigns and Member of the ANC NEC and NWC

"...in his personal capacity"







































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