‘Juju wants to turn soldiers against state’

085 18/08/2012 Julius Malema heightened the emotion of mineworkers in Wonderkop outside Rustenburg when he told the crowds that 36 people were killed in the area to protect the mining interest of ANC NEC member Cyril Ramaphosa in Lonmin Mine. Picture: Motshwari Mofokeng

085 18/08/2012 Julius Malema heightened the emotion of mineworkers in Wonderkop outside Rustenburg when he told the crowds that 36 people were killed in the area to protect the mining interest of ANC NEC member Cyril Ramaphosa in Lonmin Mine. Picture: Motshwari Mofokeng

Published Sep 12, 2012

Share

 

Johannesburg - Expelled ANC Youth League leader Julius Malema seemed bent on turning soldiers against the state, Defence Minister Nosiviwe Mapisa-Nqakula said in an SABC radio interview broadcast on Wednesday morning.

“You can't just go on and on and on, and be going around mobilising funeral gatherings and agitating people to become ungovernable,” she said.

She was reacting to Malema's plans to address members of the SA National Defence Force in Lenasia, Johannesburg on Wednesday.

“What are the consequences? - I wish I knew. What I do know is that any responsible citizen in South Africa cannot associate him or herself with a person who wants to agitate and mobilise members of the SANDF against the state because they have concerns,” said Mapisa-Nqakula.

SANDF members should use the current structures in place if they wanted to raise concerns.

She said it was not clear in what capacity Malema would address soldiers.

“I do not know and I don't see what value he is going to add in trying to resolve their problems. I don't see in what way he can do that.”

The minister said Malema had been “instigating people” in the past few weeks, in an apparent reference to his address to mineworkers at the volatile Lonmin Platinum mine in Rustenburg, and, more recently, his call to Gold Fields miners to strike until National Union of Mineworkers leaders step down.

Forty-five people have died at Lonmin mine in Marikana in labour unrest in the past month.

“It cannot be allowed to happen in the SANDF,” said the minister.

“It cannot be that we allow an ordinary citizen to stand up and want to instigate and want to agitate members of the SANDF, which is what has happened in Marikana, which is what has happened in the mining industry amongst those workers.

“It's not acceptable, it is wrong, it is incorrect and it is not going to be right. My view is that they are all traits... they are all indications that this is counter-revolutionary, I'm sorry,” said Mapisa-Nqakula.

She warned soldiers attending the Malema address that there would be consequences if they did not report for work on Wednesday.

“Our memory is very short and we would probably have forgotten where we come from. People died for this freedom... people died for this country, it's been very, very costly.

“I think it is too risky for anyone who wants to agitate members of SANDF to turn against their own government because they have concerns - because effectively that is what it means.

“Judging by what he has been saying in the past few weeks, that is exactly what it means, that people are going into a meeting to agitate members of the SANDF and I'm saying no, it can't be correct.”

The Friends of the Youth League said Malema would address the soldiers after being invited by them to listen to their grievances. - Sapa

Related Topics: