Mbalula in hot water over tweets

Fake news whatsapp
Fake news whatsapp
Police Minister Fikile Mbalula seems to have landed himself in hot water over his tweets yet again – this time for tweeting pictures of bags of cash that had allegedly been destined to buy votes at the ANC national elective conference this weekend.

However‚ national police spokesman Brigadier Vish Naidoo told TimesLIVE on Tuesday evening he had yet to make enquiries on the matter and on Wednesday morning Naidoo referred queries to Mbalula’s spokesman‚ Vuyo Mhaga.

Four calls and texts to Mhaga on the matter on Wednesday morning went unanswered‚ while Mbalula himself also did not respond to calls and text messages.

Mbalula hit back‚ saying it was purely for “illustration purposes”. But did the minister tweet fake news?

On Tuesday‚ a screenshot was widely circulated on WhatsApp among journalists and editors‚ showing a picture with the same bag of money and two messages that read:

"Mchana we must make sure we give delegates that money by Thursday as instructed by uBaba."

"Leadership I will be meeting the coordinators around 15:30 at Birchwood‚ come join us if available."

Caption: This screenshot was widely circulated on WhatsApp late on Tuesday.

The screenshot was widely dismissed as being an obvious attempt to dupe the media and others as it was cropped to exclude the date and the names of the two people in the conversation. Mbalula would later Tweet the exact same image with his claim that money had been seized.

Mbalula said multiple units and intelligence operatives had pounced on a vehicle and arrested suspects who were linked to weekend shootings in Marikana in the Western Cape‚ where 11 people were killed.

Mbalula arrived at the scene of the arrests to make his own road-side interrogations. He later posted pictures of the men on Twitter and boasted about the "midnight criminal space shake up" to his one million Twitter followers.

But The Times established - through interviews with six of the "suspects"‚ all of whom have been released without charge - that they are all members of a family transporting a coffin containing a dead relative to his funeral in the Eastern Cape.

The suspects said they were made to lie on the ground for three hours while the police waited for Mbalula to arrive.

Now the men are vowing to sue the police for wrongful arrest and humiliation.

The detained men said Mbalula's tweets had put their lives in danger.

-TimesLIVE

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