Hofmeyr sponsorship questioned

Screengrab: Twitter

Screengrab: Twitter

Published Oct 30, 2014

Share

Johannesburg - Supermarket group Pick n Pay and Land Rover found themselves the subject of a war on Thursday over whether they should be sponsoring an Afrikaans music festival at which Steve Hofmeyr will perform.

This followed a column in The Times by ventriloquist and comedian Conrad Koch titled “Dear white supremacists...” in which he questioned the retailer and Land Rover sponsoring the “Afrikaans is Groot” festival.

Hofmeyr recently had a sponsored bakkie withdrawn by Williams Hunt in Port Elizabeth after he tweeted that in his opinion black people were the architects of apartheid.

Williams Hunt said it had received calls urging it to withdraw the bakkie meant for use during the singer's Port Elizabeth gigs, after somebody started a campaign. The company wanted to remain neutral and Hofmeyr had to hand the bakkie back a day earlier than planned.

On Thursday, Pick n Pay responded to Koch's call with a terse: “Pick n Pay's reputation for publicly and strongly opposing racism speaks for itself.

“We are a contracted sponsor of AIG and support Afrikaans music, not individuals. We are not involved in the event management or the artist selection process.”

Koch, known for his interviews with politicians using his puppet “Chester Missing” replied: “Have associated yourselves with an apartheid denialist. It gives his views credibility, @PicknPay: support Afrikaans music, not individuals”.

Comment was not immediately available from Land Rover SA.

Singer and actor Hofmeyr meanwhile was busy on Twitter, quoting a Bible verse about God loving him, reminding his followers that it was the birth date of the late opera singer Mimi Coertse's first husband Dawid Engela and encouraging people on Twitter to sing “Die Stem”.

The song was composed by poet CJ Langenhoven but is better known as the apartheid-era national anthem. A reworked excerpt was included in the new national anthem after the 1994 democratic elections.

He also linked to a www.netwerk24.com cartoon of himself handing back the keys to the Williams Hunt bakkie with the dealer singing: “Sorry Steve, but as your song goes, take the train to Bloemfontein”.

Hofmeyr is expected to be among the performers at lobby group AfriForum's Afrikaans music festival at the Voortrekker monument in Tshwane on Saturday. - Sapa

Related Topics: