Cosatu is really divided and I think is a struggle of position
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From: VC <[email protected]>
Sender: [email protected]
Date: Sun, 11 Mar 2012 08:07:36 
To: <[email protected]>
Reply-To: [email protected]
Subject: [YCLSA Discussion] Sidumo Dlamini - Julius Malema should not have
 been allowed to address COSATU march


The Times


*No JuJu, no Zille, no split, says Cosatu*


*Sibusiso Ngalwa, Sunday Times, Johannesburg, 11 March 2012*

EXPELLED ANC Youth League leader Julius Malema should not have been 
allowed to address Cosatu's march on Wednesday, says the labour 
federation's president, Sdumo Dlamini.

He also wants disciplinary action against anybody who invited DA leader 
Helen Zille to any of the marches organised by Cosatu to protest against 
labour broking and e-tolling.

Cosatu should have avoided having Malema speak, because the youth leader 
is still fighting his expulsion from the ANC, he said.

"We don't want to be seen to be involved and taking sides in these 
internal processes in the ANC.

"I know the youth league said they were there to support the workers' 
demand, which we appreciate - and, indeed, the youth league is affected 
by the labour brokers. It is a victim of unemployment. But .. we should 
be careful and avoid Cosatu structures being used to foment factional 
battles within the ANC or the alliance. Cosatu must always protect 
itself from that all the time," said Dlamini. He added that Cosatu would 
have a discussion to "understand how it happened".

Dlamini said the youth league had sent a request to participate in the 
march to Cosatu in Gauteng, instead of to the national office.

He said the labour organisation "has taken a conscious decision that we 
shall respect the internal disciplinary processes in the ANC".

But Dlamini's statements do not chime with the actions of Cosatu general 
secretary Zwelinzima Vavi, who shared the stage with Malema.

Dlamini said that while the ANC had not raised the issue formally, he 
had received calls from individual leaders seeking an explanation.

There are growing signs of divisions within the federation over support 
for President Jacob Zuma, who will seek a second term as ANC president 
in Mangaung in December.

But Dlamini said: "Jacob Zuma has done nothing to divide Cosatu. It will 
be the conduct of the individual different leaders that ... [would be] 
causing divisions in Cosatu because of the Mangaung conference of the ANC.

"The last [Cosatu] central executive committee warned, yet again, that 
all Cosatu leaders ought to desist from making public statements that 
will foment tensions and divisions within Cosatu and within the alliance.

"It reminded us once more: we are not engaged in the succession debates 
of Cosatu and the alliance partners."

Dlamini insisted that Zille was never invited: but the DA leader claimed 
Cosatu withdrew an invitation to her after internal wrangling over the 
issue.

"If there is anybody in Cosatu who would have extended an invitation to 
the DA that person must be disciplined. Helen Zille ... was not 
invited," the federation president said.

While Vavi shared the stage with Malema on Wednesday, Dlamini was 
leading the Durban leg of the protest, alongside SA Communist Party boss 
Blade Nzimande. The Cosatu leaders' choices of partners at the marches 
have been interpreted as a sign of where their allegiances lay.

But Dlamini said there was nothing untoward about his sharing a platform 
with Nzimande, one of Malema's fiercest critics.

Asked if he would seek re-election at Cosatu's congress in September, 
Dlamini it was not his place to decide his future in the federation.

"I don't comment on those matters ... I believe in a pure democratic 
process. I believe leaders do not announce themselves, whether they are 
available or not. You don't do that: you allow members to discuss, with 
you not even being aware that they are talking about you," he said.

In an interview with Business Day this week, however, Vavi, confirmed 
his availability for re-election as the organisation's general secretary.

However, Vavi said in Cape Town yesterday that Cosatu was not divided 
over Zuma's re-election

"There are no pro- or anti- Zuma factions within the federation. Cosatu 
has taken a firm decision not to discuss the ANC leadership issue and 
has indeed not discussed whether it will or will not support anybody. We 
remain fully committed to our alliance with the ANC and SACP," the 
statement said.

**
*From: 
http://www.timeslive.co.za/sundaytimes/2012/03/11/no-juju-no-zille-no-split-says-cosatu*
 

**
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