ANC Youth League leader Julius Malema was suspended from the league and has
to "vacate his position", the party's national disciplinary committee has
announced

The respondent shall vacate his position as the president of the ANC Youth
League," committee chairman Derek Hanekom told a press conference in
Johannesburg.

Malema was suspended for an effective five years.

"Malema damaged the standing of the ANC and South Africa's international
reputation," said Hanekom.

His statements on Botswana were "reckless" and brought the African National
Congress into disrepute, Hanekom said.

This was after Malema said earlier this year the ANCYL would send a team to
Botswana to consolidate local opposition parties and help bring about
regime change there. Malema later apologised for the remarks, but they were
widely believed to have caused serious diplomatic embarrassment for the ANC.

Malema, who was "busy writing exams" in Limpopo today, has 14 days to
appeal against the ruling.

He will remain on full pay until all the appeal processes are completed,
African National Congress spokesman Jackson Mthembu said.

Hanekom said Malema had made himself guilty several times in the past two
years of sowing divisions within the ANC. Malema was found guilty of
criticising Zuma in another ANC disciplinary hearing last year. The
national disciplinary committee warned at the time that 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.

OTHER SANCTIONS:

Earlier today, he was also found guilty of interrupting a meeting of
national ruling party officials that included President Jacob Zuma.

That guilty finding related to Malema, ANCYL deputy president Ronald
Lamola, treasurer general Pule Mabe, secretary general Sindiso Magaqa and
deputy secretary general Kenetswe Mosenogi.

On that charge, the group was suspended from the ruling party for two years
on Thursday. The sanction was suspended for three years.

Hanekom said the ANCYL’s “arrogant” spokesman Floyd Shivambu also had to
vacate his position in the youth league.

He was found guilty of two charges relating to swearing at a journalist and
his press statement about regime change in Botswana.

The ANC’s national disciplinary committee noted his “arrogance and
defiance”.

Shivambu’s ANCYL membership was suspended for three years.

Furthermore, ANCYL secretary-general Sindiso Magaqa was found guilty of
misconduct for comments he made about Public Enterprises Minister Malusi
Gigaba. On this count, he was suspended for 18 months and this sanction was
suspended for three years.

Magaqa was also ordered to make a public apology to Gigaba.

Magaqa had accused Gigaba of "pleasing imperialists" when he criticised the
African National Congress Youth League's campaign for the nationalisation
of mines in August.

Hanekom said Magaqa's comments were an "unwarranted attack" against Gigaba,
which "undermined his position as a minister". Magaqa's offence was of a
"serious nature". The comments could pose a risk to foreign investment.

-- 
You are subscribed. This footer can help you.
Please POST your comments to [email protected] or reply to this 
message.
You can visit the group WEB SITE at 
http://groups.google.com/group/yclsa-eom-forum for different delivery options, 
pages, files and membership.
To UNSUBSCRIBE, please email [email protected] . You 
don't have to put anything in the "Subject:" field. You don't have to put 
anything in the message part. All you have to do is to send an e-mail to this 
address (repeat): [email protected] .

Reply via email to