News24white.png

 

 

President Zuma speaks to ANC Cadres

 

 

SA became disliked after it joined BRICS

 

Pietermaritzburg - President Jacob Zuma on Friday said South Africa was not
liked globally because it was independent and chose to join the BRICS group.

 

"[When we were in the struggle] We did not even go to that bank called the
IMF and the World Bank to ask for money," he told a cadres' forum at the
Pietermaritzburg City Hall.

 

"Most people do not like this because we cannot be told what to do.

 

"That is not all. When the BRICS group was formed, it was BRIC in the
beginning: Brazil, Russia, India and China. We joined later and it became
BRICS, it is a small group but very powerful."

 

He said the group had interfered with the global balance of forces, and
western countries "did not like BRICS."

 

"China is going to be number one economy leader. In fact they are number one
currently, they are scared to announce it."

 

He said the five countries were a threat to western countries, and there was
a balance of forces in the new global formation.

 

Russia and China are members of the UN Security Council, and the group was
in the process of creating its own bank.

 

Zuma said these were the reasons why South Africa was not wanted.

 

"They want to dismantle this BRICS," he continued.

 

"We have had seven votes of no confidence in South Africa. In Brazil, the
president was removed. They like to talk bad about the Chinese economy. What
is important is that the relationship between these countries is growing.

 

"The reason why they are in relations with us is to forge good relations,
not because they previously colonised us."

 

Nene firing

 

Zuma also alluded to the firing of former Finance Minister Nhlanhla Nene in
December 2015.

 

"Maybe you have forgotten, many people like to talk about what happened last
December," he said.

 

"Can you remember? You do everything according to the Constitution and then
people that control the economy tell you to drop everything, they want to
burn the country and you can see that if you don't change your decision,
they will really burn the country.

 

"Most of you did not even know what happened. Let me leave it there."

 

Nene was replaced by little-known ANC MP Des van Rooyen. After the rand
dived, Zuma replaced Van Rooyen with former finance minister Pravin Gordhan.

Zuma also said that political power without the control of the economy did
not mean anything.

 

It was important that South Africa controlled the economy, he added.

 

News24
<http://www.news24.com/SouthAfrica/News/sa-became-disliked-after-it-joined-b
rics-zuma-20161119> 

 

 

 

One day I will tell you the truth

 

When President Zuma retires, he will write a tell-all book about his tenure
as the president of the country, he said on Friday.

 

Speaking at the cadres forum in Pietermaritzburg, KwaZulu-Natal on Friday he
suggested that it was former friends, and not his enemies, that are
threatening his presidency.

 

"One day when I am retired I will write my book and you will realise why I
said what I said," he told more than 3000 ANC supporters at city hall.

 

"This is because I know where things went wrong.

 

"I know who are the witches at work. It is fine when the enemy is at a
distance, but when it is your friend, it is not easy because they know your
weaknesses."

 

Zuma said enemies were dangerous because "they knew where your ancestors
were buried."

 

"At least I know who [my enemies] are and what they are doing. I am not
worried. If I was crazy, I would make the whole of South Africa crazy as
well.

 

"As you can see, I am not bothered. People can say whatever they want. I
know what it means, where it comes from and where it is going."

 

'No regrets'

 

Zuma said he joined the ANC at a very young age and he had no regrets.

 

"I told you one day that when I retire, when I am on pension and no longer
earning a salary, I will become an ANC volunteer and I will work like a
madman.

 

"No one will say we are fighting for positions because I won't want anyone's
position. I have never wanted a position in the first place."

 

Zuma said he had already identified two departments he was going to
volunteer in. He did not reveal them however.

 

"I will tell you when you are doing something wrong. When there is a [ANC]
congress and things are not going right and I am among the delegates, I will
raise my hand and say things are not going right."

 

Zuma said the ANC was faced with a huge challenge but this was not the first
time for the party.

 

"The question is how are we going to get out of it? Are we going to be like
other liberation movements or are we going to be different? I trust the ANC
because it knows how to get itself out of a tight corner."

 

He said the party knew how to adapt to changes.

 

"Don't leave everything to the leadership. Sometimes leaders appear as
though they know what they are doing but they don't. You must help them and
fix the ANC, build the ANC."

 

'Stop hating your comrades'

 

He encouraged the supporters to study politics.

 

"Unity was the secret of the life and success of the ANC. Stop hating other
comrades. Where will you find another, if you hate this one? It is not easy
to find comrades, do not get rid of them so easily. Keep them close,
especially for the tough days.

 

"When we are divided, the enemy can destroy us."

 

Zuma said also South Africa was not completely free.

 

He said the party should use political power to control the economy.

 

"Let us stop complaining over nothing."

 

He said he would always be there, "In good and bad times."

 

News24
<http://www.news24.com/SouthAfrica/News/one-day-i-will-tell-you-the-truth-zu
ma-20161119> 

 

 

 

They record you without you even knowing

 

In a jibe believed to be aimed at former Public Protector, Thuli Madonsela,
President Jacob Zuma on Friday said it was important to know your enemy.

 

"They even tape [record] you and play the tapes and tell others what you
said about them because you don't have money to buy recorders. They have
everything," Zuma said at the cadres forum at the Pietermaritzburg city
hall.

 

Although Zuma did not talk about the incident directly, it was believed that
Zuma was referring to Madonsela's recently released private recording of an
interview with Zuma and his lawyer Michael Hulley. The recording was made
while she was investigating allegations of state capture.

 

The president complained to the public protector's office after the
recording was released to the media.

 

Madonsela's report was released earlier this month after a high court order
and the recordings were apparently leaked to eNCA.

 

"The Presidency has sought clarity from the office of the public protector
on the policy of the institution regarding the release of audio recordings
of interviews conducted during the course of investigations," spokesperson
Bongani Ngqulunga told the media previously.

 

Speaking on Friday, Zuma said, "They call you to come and have dinner with
them meanwhile they are recording you and they ask critical questions. You
don't even know that you are selling yourself out".

 

"Then they turn and play it back and say, you can hear whose voice it is.
Then you realise how dangerous the comrade is. They have recorded everything
you said to them."

 

Opposition 'disrupting' Parliament

 

Zuma also hit back at opposition parties in Parliament, saying there were
people these days who liked to delay proceedings.

 

"They stand up all the time and say nothing. They learnt an English word
called 'order', 'point of order'. This is what delayed us."

 

Zuma was referring to an incident that occurred in the National Council of
Provinces meeting on Friday morning where EFF members reportedly tried to
disrupt Zuma's speech in East London, Eastern Cape.

 

The SABC reported that EEF members said the President has broken his oath of
office and therefore has no right to address the sitting. They walked out.

 

News24
<http://www.news24.com/SouthAfrica/News/they-record-you-without-you-even-kno
wing-zuma-hits-back-20161119> 

 

 

 

I am no thief, I am no dog

 

President Zuma also told more than the 3 000 ANC supporters at the cadres
forum in Pietermaritzburg that he was no thief.

 

"You can spread lies as big as Durban. I don't care," Zuma told the
supporters at city hall.

 

He said he always laughed at people who called him a dog.

 

"I am not a dog. I am a human being. It is like people who are stealing
today, they say I am stealing but they are the biggest culprits.

 

"Abantshontshi go," said Zuma in IsiZulu.

 

"They have been investigating me over and over but they cannot find anything
because I am not doing anything. If they had found anything, a lot would
have gone wrong.

 

"The same people that are accusing me, are the ones that are stealing and I
know exactly what they are stealing. I know exactly who they are."

 

He told members not to be alarmed when people make accusations against the
ANC.

 

Zuma was welcomed by thousands of supporters at Pietermaritzburg city hall
on Friday to deliver his speech, in which he addressed many topics.

 

He said that when retires, he will write a tell-all book about his tenure as
the president of the country.

 

He also took jibes at former Public Protector Thuli Madonsela and the EFF,
without naming anyone directly, and said it was important to "know your
enemy".

 

Zuma said though his biggest enemies now were those he once considered
friends.

 

He also said South Africa was not liked globally because it was independent
and chose to join the BRICS group, which has unsettled the "Western"
balances of forces in global politics.

 

News24
<http://www.news24.com/SouthAfrica/News/i-am-no-thief-i-am-no-dog-zuma-20161
119> 

 

 

 

When you are asked to step down, smile and do so

 

President Zuma said if leaders are asked to step down from their positions,
they should do so without putting up a fight.

 

"When the leadership says step aside, smile and do so. Support the comrade
that has been elected and show them the ropes.

 

"Don't go to a witch doctor and ask for muti to remove them because if you
remove them, they might be replaced by another cadre. You will finish
[Inkosi Albert] Luthuli's people," said Zuma.

 

"If you are like me and you know that positions are not important, you are a
good member.

 

"It is not the position that makes you a person. It is being a member of the
ANC that makes you a person. Positions are a 'by the way' thing when
comrades can see that you are a hard worker.

 

"Don't, when you are elected, tell yourself that you have arrived. No one is
entitled to any position here. You are not given a position forever and when
you are told to step down you put up a fight."

 

Facing challenges

 

Zuma admitted that the ANC was facing challenges with the movement
infiltrated by hatred, the buying of votes, jostling for positions and the
looting of state funds.

 

"You should ask yourselves why there are comrades that hated one another.
They hate each other in the most unimaginable way."

 

Zuma said the party did not notice the challenges back in 2007 when Mosiuoa
Lekota broke away from the party to form the Congress of the People.

 

"We thought it was just a mistake when a breakaway party called Cope was
formed. The time had come. Opinions had changed so much but these were the
same people that were prepared to die with you. These are the same people
that loved the ANC and said they would die members of the party. They left
us, they launched the organisation.

 

"Comrades left and never came back. Problems in organisations do not start
in the masses, they start in the leadership. That is where problems begin,"
he said.

 

Zuma took a jibe at those who were controlling the economy, saying they
believed that they could buy people.

 

"They buy people like they are blazers. They make you an offer you cannot
refuse, they give you millions and say that your children should never
suffer."

 

He said this is how politicians handed over their political power because
they could be dictated to by those who have money.

 

"Some of us that don't have money are promised prominent positions and then
ask you for political favours in return for positions. Then you find
yourself in a trap."

 

'Save SA from what?'

 

Zuma also took had strong words for the veterans and civil rights groups who
had called for his resignation.

 

In a veiled statement aimed at Save South Africa leader and businessman
Sipho Pityana, and other party stalwarts, the president said, "There are
comrades that have changed. We last saw them in 1994, but all of a sudden
they are up in arms".

"[The] majority of them are not in structures in their branches, they have
even forgotten how we deal with challenges in the ANC.

 

"They are encouraging the same thing that they condemned. You need to deal
with ANC matters inside the ANC and there are procedures that need to be
followed.

 

"These people called the veterans, they have forgotten what our Constitution
says. They are saying whatever they want, they are encouraging people to do
what is not done, something that they should go to jail for. Some call press
conferences in order to relay a message directed at you. You hear in the
media that so and so has said this about you.

 

"Others say SaveSA, Save South Africa from what?"

 

Zuma also criticised opposition parties, saying that they made it difficult
to govern.

 

"The opposition parties in parliament, they don't want to talk. They know
that if we talk, we will beat them. They are busy making noise in parliament
and preventing debate. All they say is 'point of order'. They want political
matters to be resolved in courts."

 

He said opposition parties were quick to go to court.

 

"They go to court in the blink of an eye. What should be a political
argument turns into a legal matter. This is the problem that our democracy
faces."

 

He said the ANC did not have money to challenge cases in court.

 

"You have political power, but they bring the sharpest lawyers money can buy
and you bring the dumbest lawyers to represent you."

 

Take over the economy

 

He said while the ANC had political power it needed to take over the economy

 

"We have a problem because in the alliance and the COSATU we knew, we lost
trusted comrades, they left. These are the same comrades you thought you
would die with."

 

Zuma said South Africa was not free yet. "We need to be strong, know where
we are and how we are going to get past it."

 

He told members to stop fighting among one another and unite.

 

"Let us not be divided by the enemy. Let us not be fooled by money. Till
this day, I say that it is the ANC that will liberate the South Africa.

 

"All those that are making noise are like fires made out of paper, it does
not last. Where have you seen in parliament people with six percent [of the
vote], but they make more noise than those with two-thirds?"

 

News24
<http://www.news24.com/SouthAfrica/News/when-you-are-asked-to-step-down-smil
e-and-do-so-quietly-zuma-20161119> 

 

 

From:
http://www.politicsweb.co.za/news-and-analysis/i-know-who-are-the-witches-at
-work--jacob-zuma

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 



__________ Information from ESET NOD32 Antivirus, version of virus signature
database 14472 (20161119) __________

The message was checked by ESET NOD32 Antivirus.

http://www.eset.com

-- 
-- 
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] .
--- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"YCLSA Discussion Forum" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
To post to this group, send an email to [email protected].
Visit this group at https://groups.google.com/group/yclsa-eom-forum.
To view this discussion on the web, visit 
https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/yclsa-eom-forum/000601d242f8%2403ba0150%240b2e03f0%24%40com.
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

Reply via email to