Fire rogue minister, stop inquiry into banks, DA urges Zuma

The DA has urged President Zuma to fire Mineral Resources Minister Mosebenzi Zwane. Picture: Siyabulela Duda

The DA has urged President Zuma to fire Mineral Resources Minister Mosebenzi Zwane. Picture: Siyabulela Duda

Published Sep 3, 2016

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Cape Town – The Democratic Alliance on Saturday urged President Jacob Zuma to shut down the task team looking into the termination of banking relationships with the politically-connected Gupta family’s holding company Oakbay Investments and fire Mineral Resources Minister Mosebenzi Zwane.

The DA welcomed the news that Zuma had distanced himself from Zwane’s statement recommending a judicial commission of inquiry into the termination of banking relationships with Oakbay Investments, DA spokesman David Maynier said.

“However, the statement does not go far enough – it leaves the political door open for some of the bizarre recommendations, supposedly made by the minister in his personal capacity, to be considered in the future,” he said.

Maynier said the fact was that the inter-ministerial task team should never have been established and the Guptas should never have been allowed to effectively “contract” the executive to carry out a “political hit” on the banking sector, the National Treasury, and the South African Reserve Bank.

“What we need is President Jacob Zuma to step up and act decisively by immediately shutting down the task team looking into the termination of banking relationships with Oakbay Investments (Pty) Ltd, and firing the Minister of Mineral Resources Mosebenzi Zwane from Cabinet. The minister’s head should be on the ‘chopping block’ and the axe should be allowed to fall without delay,” Maynier said.

Ealier on Saturday, the South African Communist Party said Zuma needed to consider further action following Zwane’s statements and the presidency’s subsequent “distancing the Cabinet from those utterances”.

The SACP noted the statement by the presidency on Friday clarifying that the utterances made by Zwane on Thursday represented his personal views and not those of the Cabinet, the SACP said in a statement.

“The minister said a Cabinet inter-ministerial committee in which he is involved recommended to the president to establish a judicial commission of inquiry into the decisions taken by various financial institutions to cut business ties with the Gupta-owned Oakbay Investments.

“This directly contradicted a public outcry and call to the president, including by the SACP, to establish a judicial commission of inquiry into corporate state capture not limited to but including allegations levelled against the Guptas.

“Minister Zwane’s utterances effectively fed into the use of our Cabinet to advance the private business interests of the Guptas while ignoring public outcry and call for a judicial commission into corporate state capture.

“It also shows how an individual Cabinet minister can use his position to serve private business interests, break policy coherence, and cause the confusions such as the presidency had to clarify regarding Zwane’s utterances. Such wrongful things must come to an end. The president needs to consider further action to achieve the objective,” the SACP said.

African News Agency

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