EFF has 25 reasons Guptas must go

EFF CIC Julius Malema greets learners onroute to the Constitutional Court. EFF marched to the Constitutional Court to hear the outcome regarding their challenge to President Jacob Zuma to 'Pay back the Money' for over expenditure at his Nkandla homestead. Picture: Antoine de Ras, 09/02/2016

EFF CIC Julius Malema greets learners onroute to the Constitutional Court. EFF marched to the Constitutional Court to hear the outcome regarding their challenge to President Jacob Zuma to 'Pay back the Money' for over expenditure at his Nkandla homestead. Picture: Antoine de Ras, 09/02/2016

Published Feb 10, 2016

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Cape Town – The Economic Freedom Fighters on Wednesday reiterated that the Gupta family “must leave the country” and listed 25 reasons for their call.

This comes despite the Gupta family scoring a major victory over Julius Malema and the EFF on Tuesday afternoon, when he and his party were interdicted from badmouthing, threatening or inciting violence against the family and their employees.

Read: EFF stands firm on ‘Zuptas’ threat

The first allegation on the EFF’s list on Wednesday was that the Guptas, whom President Jacob Zuma acknowledges as friends and are business partners of his son, was influencing decision-making on the country’s contested nuclear power expansion programme.

“The Guptas are influencing Zuma on the R1 trillion nuclear deal: after they acquired uranium mines, they stand to benefit greatly from the deal through supplying uranium. Zuma has been advised that the country cannot afford this nuclear deal, but because the Guptas family stands to benefit, it is being forced through,” EFF spokesman Mbuyiseni Ndlozi said.

“The nuclear deal will plunge South Africa into a massive fiscal crisis, collapsing South Africa’s currency, ratings, and ability to provide basic services to its people.”

Ndlozi went on to claim that Zuma axed Nhlanla Nene as finance minister late last year “because the Guptas said so” and that the family exerted control over key parastatals including Eskom, Transnet, South African Airways and, of late, Denel.

A spokesman for the Gupta family this week confirmed that they have a minority interest in a joint-venture partnership that the state-owned arms manufacturing company has in Asia.

The EFF claimed that the Guptas’ influence extended to the awarding of mining licences by government.

“In their network of influence, they have premiers of the Free State and North West provinces, ministers, chairpersons and chief executive officers of state-owned enterprises. They also have control over many critical decisions that they, and the puppets they control, financially benefit from,” Ndlozi said.

On Tuesday afternoon, Judge Johan Louw, in granting the gag order in favour of the Guptas, said he would later give reasons for his decision.

Malema’s lawyer, Tumi Mokoena, said they would study the findings, but was almost certain that they would return to court to appeal the ruling. They have 14 days in which to lodge an appeal.

In terms of the order, Malema and his party members may not refer to the Gupta family ever again in a threatening or derogatory manner.

African News Agency

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