ANC must act against poo-throwers

This picture shows part of the scuffle outside a Stanger community hall at the weekend, where a fundraising event was disrupted by individuals identified as ANC Youth League members, who dumped buckets of faeces at the entrance to the hall and threw stones at the building.

This picture shows part of the scuffle outside a Stanger community hall at the weekend, where a fundraising event was disrupted by individuals identified as ANC Youth League members, who dumped buckets of faeces at the entrance to the hall and threw stones at the building.

Published Nov 28, 2017

Share

There was a time, not so long ago, when the ANC fought against the existence of no-go areas.

How unfortunate, then, that the party has now come to be associated with people who want to turn certain areas into no-go areas, as was the case on Sunday when former finance minister Pravin Gordhan was interrupted while he was about to address a gathering in KwaDukuza, north of Durban.

Protesters dumped buckets of faeces at the entrance of the Stanger Siva Sungum Hall before Gordhan arrived at the venue and when he started addressing the gathering, the protesters broke down a door, grabbed food meant for those attending the gathering and threw it around. Some of the protesters even got involved in scuffles with people in the hall, forcing the fund-raising event to be abandoned.

Read more: WATCH: ANC protestors disrupt Pravin Gordhan talk

It is unlikely that the ANC itself organised the protest, but there were people protesting who wore ANC colours.

That should be enough for the party to investigate and take action against members guilty of action unbecoming of the organisation.

The ANC Nelson Mandela led would have strongly condemned the fact that faeces was thrown at a religious site. So, too, would the ANC under Thabo Mbeki and Kgalema Motlanthe.

Jacob Zuma has many faults, but there can be no doubt that he would not tolerate such behaviour.

So, the ANC must act. A failure to do so would mean the party condones such behaviour.

The police also need to answer for their inaction. They had ample warning that a protest was going to take place, but they failed to respond.

Those who showed up were a few traffic police and, later, a few low-ranking officers from the local station. None of them was trained for what they encountered, hence their reluctance to get involved.

The law is all that stands between us and chaos.

And Sunday chaos reigned supreme. It was a clear violation of the constitution, which grants everyone rights to association and to form civic groups, as Gordhan stated after his speech was interrupted.

As a country that prides itself in having one of the best constitutions in the world, we ought to protect these rights.

The Star

Related Topics: