Fire Xingwana over Calvinists remarks - CDP

Women, Children and People with Disabilities Minister Lulu Xingwana

Women, Children and People with Disabilities Minister Lulu Xingwana

Published Feb 27, 2013

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Johannesburg -

President Jacob Zuma has no option but to fire Women, Children and People with Disabilities Minister Lulu Xingwana after remarks stereotyping Calvinists, the Christian Democratic Party said on Wednesday.

“Many non-Afrikaners, black and white, are members of Calvinist churches and her latest statement could be considered as religious intolerance,” said CDP spokesman Rev Theunis Botha.

Xingwana made the remarks in an interview for an Australian Broadcasting Corporation segment on the arrest and murder charge against paralympian Oscar Pistorius following the February 14 fatal shooting of his girlfriend Reeva Steenkamp.

In the segment, which also looked at violence and gun ownership in South Africa, she said: “Young Afrikaner men are brought up in the Calvinist religion believing that they own a woman, they own a child, they own everything and therefore they can take that life because they own it.”

This prompted the CDP to say that: “This is also not the first time Xingwana stereotyped a community based on untruths.

“In her infamous Church Square speech, she accused farmers across the board of atrocities against farmworkers, based on a single Western Cape incident - by then already proven to be false by the police and reported as such to government months earlier.

“The country does not need demolishers in Cabinet or any other place in government, but bridge-builders.”

Earlier, the Afrikanerbond said Xingwana had “abused her office” and did not reflect honour or dignity in her position.

“This minister has proven beyond any doubt that she is not fit to hold office in a constitutional democracy,” Afrikanerbond secretary Jan Bosman said in a statement.

He noted that she had also said: “We also have cultural differences as well in our own communities where we have women who are forced into marriage and we are dealing with all those issues.”

In the ABC report, which aired on Monday, the focus was on how the Pistorius case highlighted gun violence in South Africa.

“I would ask him to tell the truth. I would ask him to respect women,” Xingwana said.

“I would ask him to get rid of all his guns. Because I believe if he did not have guns in his home, Reeva Steenkamp would be alive today.”

Bosman said Xingwana's statements were an “extreme verbal attack on the integrity of Afrikaners”.

“It is unwarranted, uncalled for and without any substance. At the very least the minister owes Afrikaners, men, women and children, an apology without any reservations,” Bosman said.

“We can only deduce that she chose to attack Afrikaners to create a smokescreen for her total lack of any programme of action whilst (minister) and to deflect from the serious allegations of corruption and mismanagement in her department and her failure to provide a report with details about these allegations to Parliament.”

The Afrikanerbond would take up the matter with Zuma's office for the president to “act against one of the most incompetent ministers in his Cabinet”, Bosman said.

Meanwhile, Afrikaner lobby group AfriForum said on Tuesday it was considering bringing a complaint before the Equality Court against Xingwana.

“Xingwana's remarks boil down to a blatant contravention of various sections of the Promotion of Equality and the Prevention of Unfair Discrimination Act,” spokesman Ernst Roets said in a statement.

“She has discriminated on the basis of race, faith and gender. On top of that, she clearly lacks the necessary expertise to talk knowledgeably on the topic.”

Roets said AfriForum had submitted the matter to its legal team. - Sapa

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