#SONA2016: Zuma mocks opponents

Prsident Jacob Zuma delivers his State of the Nation Address in the joint sitting of the house in Parliament, Cape Town, 11/02/2016, Elmond Jiyane, GCIS

Prsident Jacob Zuma delivers his State of the Nation Address in the joint sitting of the house in Parliament, Cape Town, 11/02/2016, Elmond Jiyane, GCIS

Published Feb 12, 2016

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Parliament - President Jacob Zuma on Friday mocked the opposition, dismissing it as “useless” and ignorant after Cope and EFF MPs disrupted his State of the Nation Address and walked out.

“They are showing how useless they are, people will never vote for them,” Zuma said.

“They don't understand democracy, how it works.”

“They just move with the wind when it goes this way, that way, shame on them,” said Zuma.

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Congress of the People leader Mosiuoa Lekota, who was the first MP to be ejected from the House ahead of the EFF, said Zuma was no longer suitable to address Parliament. "This is a man who has broken his oath. He has lied to the people of his country," said Lekota. "He is no longer honourable.”

Julius Malema and his fellow Economic Freedom Fighters MPs, dressed in their uniforms of red workers' overalls and hard hats, noisily interrupted Zuma’s speech for an hour before being ordered out of the chamber on Thursday night.

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“Zuma is no longer a president that deserves respect from anyone,” Malema yelled at the president while the EFF group chanted "Zupta Must Fall" as they left the chamber

But Zuma said if the opposition were true democrats, they should know better how to deal with the government when it errs.

“If the party or the president commits a mistake, there is a process how you deal with that,” said Zuma in his first reaction to his heckling by EFF members of parliament.

“You are really not doing good for your country. You are making this country look bad out there, which means you don't think,” he said after the speech was broadcast live on television.

He said the opposition's rowdy behaviour was actually working to the ANC’s advantage.

The “problem with other parties is (that) as soon as they open their mouths they talk about the ANC not about themselves.”

“They are actually doing our job, they are not convincing people.”

AFP

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