Mayor sent packing from Soshanguve

Tshwane mayor Solly Msimanga is whisked away by police from a rowdy crowd during a community meeting in Soshanguve on Saturday. Picture: Oupa Mokoena

Tshwane mayor Solly Msimanga is whisked away by police from a rowdy crowd during a community meeting in Soshanguve on Saturday. Picture: Oupa Mokoena

Published Mar 6, 2017

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Pretoria - Executive mayor Solly Msimanga remained committed to serving the people despite being sent packing from Soshanguve on Saturday, where he and Cooperative Governance and Traditional Affairs MEC Paul Mashatile were engaging the community on service delivery.

“He will do that no matter how difficult it proves,” his spokesperson Samkelo Mgobozi told the Pretoria News on Sunday.

“We are making progress despite resistance often rooted in nefarious party political considerations and not in the best interests of the people who need services.”

Msimanga had to be whisked off by police after angry crowds booed him off stage and prevented him from speaking at the KT Motubatse Community Hall.

In contrast, Mashatile received a standing ovation, and so did ANC councillors.

The same crowd, the majority of them singing pro-ANC songs, warmly received MECs Panyaza Lesufi and Jacob Mamabolo when they opened the Soshanguve East Secondary School on Sunday.

But, a day earlier, they had greeted Msimanga with thumbs-down gestures and rotating hand movements used to signal a time for change.

A week ago, the DA-led council Speaker Katlego Mathebe and MMC Michael Mkhari were rescued by police from people wearing ANC T-shirts while opening the Klip-Kruisfontein Cemetery.

The mob made it clear that city officials were not welcome in Soshanguve and had no business taking the glory for a project initiated by the former ANC administration.

And, on Saturday, the group claimed it was angry because Mathebe’s car hit a resident while fleeing from the cemetery. The alleged victim was also present, sitting in a wheelchair.

Mashatile seemed visibly startled, but managed to keep his composure and asked the angry protesters if the meeting could continue.

“We must have high discipline and high morals, comrades; we are both here to serve the community. Give us a chance,” Mashatile pleaded.

But they were having none of it and continued to boo the mayor each time he tried to speak.

He was eventually taken away under heavy police presence.

The disruptions followed numerous rowdy scenes in council, as well as protests by Vat Alles workers - part of the Expanded Public Works Programme - during which the DA-led administration was

ridiculed.

However, Mgobozi said the DA had anticipated the challenge after wrestling control of the city from the ANC in last August’s polls.

“We never thought for a second that the task ahead of us would be easy, but we knew we would make progress, which we are and will continue to make,” he said.

Mgobozi stated the leaked baseline document to destabilise the new administration was evidence that the ANC had not taken lightly to losing power in the city. The party’s conduct in council and misinformation peddled in the media were clear evidence it had not, he explained.

He said feuds were normal after a change of power.

“This is the first time we have taken over the city but, following the DA’s takeover of Cape Town, the ANC also attempted to cause this kind of chaos for at least a year.

“So yes, it is normal, but it doesn’t have to be.”

ANC Tshwane spokesperson Teboho Joala said the party had nothing to do with the disruptions at the cemetery nor over the weekend.

He said the DA-led city government was merely diverting attention away from the dire need for service delivery in Tshwane, where there was a serious absence of service in the townships.

“We don’t have a strategy to disrupt the functioning of the city, the mayor or the executive,” he said.

“These people could have been sent in order to hide the incompetence of the city with regards to provision of services. We suspect they could even have been hired to deliberately tarnish the image of the ANC.”

Joala said the current administration did not enjoy popular support in the townships, as shown by the polls. The ANC received the most votes in those areas and ANC councillors were making appearances regularly without a problem, he added.

“We are dealing with a stubborn administration that is anti-development in the townships and is trying to undo what the ANC achieved over the years.

“We conceded, as the ANC, and have taken our position as opposition in council, where we continue to represent our communities.

“We are not in denial about losing power, but are working hard to reclaim the city to continue with the transformation agenda.”

Mashatile, meanwhile, called for tolerance. “I told the community that, when we work as government, we have to work with the municipalities - and that is why I came with the mayor. Some of the things that have to be done in municipalities have to be done by them,” he said.

“We do not encourage that communities must not listen to government leaders, that is why I tried to plead with them, but it was clear that people did not want him.”

Mashatile added that service delivery issues raised by the people would receive the utmost attention from him and Msimanga.

Additional reporting by Sakhile Ndlazi

Pretoria News

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