Hallo,
In navolging op mijn ‘rant’/posting over die gast die 3 dagen gemartelt is in Zim, en nu vreest voor z'n leven omdat datgene wat hij naar buiten heeft gebracht, heb ik gezegd dat het huidige ANC regime precies dezelfde agenda heeft als die in ZImbabwe.
Ongeloof en afschuw was (mede) mijn deel, en ik moest vooral dit vooral op tourisme gerichte forum het kwetsbare equilibrium niet verstoren.
Voor de volledigheid cut-n-paste ik hier een artikel waarin Malema, in verdediging voor Zuma, Engeland ( of all places ) als een donkere imperialistische macht neerzet, en andere, verder zeer herkenbare geluiden uit braakt.
Ik verklaar en durf te stellen dat de ondersteuning, verdediging van het huidige aanstormend dictatoriale regime in Zuid Afrika niet alleen gelijk is aan het ondersteunen van het oude apartheids regime, maar nog erger; want onder apartheid hadden de gewone mensen nog te eten.
Een ding heeft Malema wel gelijk; Zuma gaat president worden van SA; en wat voor 1.
Ter Info,
Aryan
Ps: ja, nee, het valt nog wel mee, etc. ik weet 't ja… niet dus.
http://www.sowetan.co.za/News/Article.aspx?id=919089
Beware the dark forces - Malema
Louise McAuliffe, reporting for Sowetan Online
15 January 2009
Julius Malema burst back onto the political scene today in defence of Jacob Zuma
- and a rant against “the dark forces” he says are trying to take over in South Africa and other African countries.
He cited Britain - home of the “imperialists” - as the place they all came together.
The African National Congress Youth League president made the comments at a press conference called in reaction to the Appeal Court’s ruling this week, which effectively reinstates the on-off-on-again corruption trial against Zuma, dating back to the arms deal.
Malema, reading from a statement, said he was confident that Zuma’s name would be cleared by the courts, and that his march to the Presidency was unstoppable.
“(ANC) President Jacob Zuma will be President of the Republic of South Africa after the 2009 General Elections, and after the ANC has won more than 75% of the votes”. (The party won 69.69% of votes in the 2004 elections)
“The ANCYL has repeated this reality many times and whoever doubts that (ANC) president Zuma will be president of this country has problems,” said Malema.
In commentary after reading out the formal press statement, Malema said there were dark forces working against Zuma and the ANC.
“Those that have left this organisation were working against us from within. They failed and are now doing it from outside because they think they can mobilise our people against the glorious movement,” he said.
"They are working with the imperialists - the former colonisers who try to de-stabilise this country.
"They are not only here - they are doing it everywhere else in Africa to do away with former liberation movements.
"They are found in Namibia, Kenya and here in Zimbabwe.
"Much as we do not agree with what Robert Mugabe is doing in Zimbabwe - equally we do not that puppets must take over Zimbabwe.
“The forces which have oppressed Africa still want to micro-manage Africa through installing puppets in positions of responsibility and power - so that they come again in a so-called democratic way to exploit the minerals of this continent. That is why the ANC saw the need to revive the former Liberation Forum in Africa. We are all victims.”
There was an obvious commonality to these dark forces, Malema said:
“The first trip that they make when they leave their movements is to go to London. Check all of them. Check their passports. Which other country have they visited most? They follow each other to Britain. What they do there I do not know, but these forces are working together.”
Malema fired off a broadside at Mosiuoa ‘Terror’ Lekota, the erstwhile ANC leader who broke away from the movement last year to form the new Congress of the People party (Cope).
“Terror went to meet with the breakaway group from Swapo in Namibia. He also went to meet with Odinga in Kenya (former opposition leader Raila Odinga, who became Kenya’s prime minister under a power-sharing deal following disputed elections). We know that! It is an agenda to de-stabilise the ruling parties and especially the liberation movements in Africa. Those are the forces. I don’t know why you see them and decided not to conclude that these are forces opposed to us.”
Malema issued a thinly veiled warning to anyone within the ANC who may be considering joining former comrades in the new Cope movement.
“Some are still inside. They are weighing up their options. We want to make it clear that they must go - they must leave the ANC. The ANC is not the home for agents of the imperialists. The ANC is the organisation of South African people,” he said.
Additional comments by Julius Malema on Jacob Zuma’s court saga:
“We don’t think that our President will be in and out of court when he becomes the President of the Republic. But then what is wrong with the President of our country going in and out of court. There is nothing wrong. He is a citizen of this country. If there is any issue he must answer. For as long as there is an allegation we don’t see anything wrong. Not at all."
Malema said that the only difference between the president and ordinary citizens is that the president occupies the highest office in the country. He added: “He is just like you. We drink the same water and we drive on the same roads and everything else. He can commit mistakes“.
Malema stated that If current President Kgalema Mothlante commits a mistake he will be required to go to court. Even former president Nelson “Mandela went to court when he was the State President. Did the roof come down when Mandela went to court? No! He answered in court and we proceeded. We are still a country that is united”.
Malema expressed the wish that by the time Zuma has won the Presidency and assumed office, the case would be over and his name would have been cleared.